Physicians: 
          Chiropractors. Section 39-71-704(1), MCA (1993), and other statutory 
          and regulatory provisions, do not deny equal protection or due process 
          by providing that an insurer is not required to furnish maintenance 
          care. (Note: WCC was affirmed by the Supreme Court in an unpublished, 
          nonciteable opinion, Wieglenda v. State Compensation Insurance 
          Fund/Department of Labor and Industry, No. 97-045 (1997).)
      
        
          Introduction 
        
         This is a so-called appeal 
          from a decision of the Department of Labor and Industry (Department). 
          
         The appellant herein, Ruth 
          Wieglenda (claimant), petitioned the Department on April 11, 1996. The 
          petition was in the form of a letter from claimant's attorney, Don Edgar 
          Burris (Burris), accompanied by various exhibits. In relevant part, 
          claimant, through Burris, alleged that the exclusion of maintenance 
          and palliative medical care from covered medical expenses, § 39-71-704(1)(f), 
          MCA (1993), is unconstitutional. The petition further alleged that the 
          Department lacked jurisdiction over the constitutional challenge and 
          requested that the Department dismiss the petition so claimant could 
          appeal the constitutional issues to this Court. On May 20, 1996, a hearing 
          officer of the Department obliged, finding that the Department indeed 
          lacked jurisdiction over constitutional Issues. (Findings of Fact; Conclusions 
          of Law; and Final Order.(1)) On June 
          19, 1996, claimant filed a Notice of Appeal with this Court, asking 
          it to declare the exclusion unconstitutional.
         It is tempting to dismiss 
          the present appeal out-of-hand. The Department granted the relief requested 
          by claimant. While judicial review is available to examine the correctness 
          of the decision below, or the sufficiency of the process below, § 2-4-704, 
          MCA, claimant does not challenge the Department's decision or the manner 
          in which it was reached. Judicial review is available to persons "aggrieved" 
          by a final agency decision. § 2-4-702(1)(a), MCA. Claimant does not 
          satisfy that prerequisite. Thus, if this matter is treated as an appeal, 
          the Court must affirm the Department's decision, which claimant concedes 
          is correct, and go no further. § 2-4-704(2), MCA.
         It is apparent, however, 
          that the claimant seeks to invoke this Court's original jurisdiction 
          to decide constitutional issues. Administrative agencies, including 
          the Department of Labor and Industry, are powerless to declare a statute 
          or administrative regulation unconstitutional. "A judicial body, not 
          an administrative body, is the proper forum to decide constitutional 
          questions . . . ." Schneeman v. Department of Labor and Industry, 
          257 Mont. 254, 259, 848 P.2d 504, 507 (1993) (citing Jarussi 
          v. Board of Trustees, 204 Mont. 131, 135-36, 664 P.2d 316, 318 
          (1983)). The original jurisdiction of the Workers' Compensation Court 
          is not limited to determining specific benefits; it extends to other 
          matters which may affect benefits and encompasses requests for declaratory 
          rulings in such matters. State ex rel. Uninsured Employers' Fund 
          v. Hunt, 191 Mont. 514, 625 P.2d 539 (1981). Since claimant's constitutional 
          attack on section 39-71-704(1)(f), MCA, ultimately affects her entitlement 
          to medical benefits, this Court has original jurisdiction over her challenge 
          and will treat her appeal as a petition for declaratory judgment. Respondent 
          will not be affected by this treatment since it has responded to claimant's 
          constitutional contentions and has assumed that those issues are properly 
          before the Court.
         
          
            Constitutional Issues 
            Raised by Claimant  
          
        
         In her Notice of Appeal 
          the claimant alleges:
         
           The statutes (39-71-116(13) 
            to (16), 39-71-704 and Med. Service Rule 24.29.2004 are unconstitutional 
            on the grounds they deny due process and, equal protection of the 
            law and, constitute cruel and unusual punishment. [Sic.]
        
         
          
            The Statutes and Rule 
            at Issue  
          
        
         The laws in effect at the 
          time of the claimant's injury govern her right to benefits. Buckman 
          v. Montana Deaconess Hospital, 224 Mont. 318, 321, 730 P.2d 380, 
          382 (1986). Both parties agree that claimant's injury occurred in 1994 
          and that the 1993 version of the Workers' Compensation Act (WCA) applies 
          in this case.
         The 1993 statutes and administrative 
          rule challenged by the claimant are as follows:
         
           39-71-116 (13) 
            "Maintenance care" means treatment designed to provide the optimum 
            state of health while minimizing recurrence of the clinical status.
            39-71-116 
            (16) "Palliative care" means treatment designed to reduce or ease 
            symptoms without curing the underlying cause of the symptoms.
            39-71-704. Payment 
            of medical, hospital, and related services-fee schedules and hospital 
            rates - fee limitation.  (1) In addition to the compensation 
            provided under this chapter and as an additional benefit separate 
            and apart from compensation benefits actually provided, the following 
            must be furnished:
           (a) After the happening 
            of a compensable injury and subject to other provisions of this chapter, 
            the insurer shall furnish reasonable primary medical services for 
            conditions resulting from the injury for those periods as the nature 
            of the injury or the process of recovery requires.
           (b) The insurer shall 
            furnish secondary medical services only upon a clear demonstration 
            of cost-effectiveness of the services in returning the injured worker 
            to actual employment.
           (c) The insurer shall 
            replace or repair prescription eyeglasses, prescription contact lenses, 
            prescription hearing aids, and dentures that are damaged or lost as 
            a result of an injury, as defined in 39-71-119, arising out of and 
            in the course of employment.
           (d) The insurer shall 
            reimburse a worker for reasonable travel expenses incurred in travel 
            to a medical provider for treatment of an injury only if the travel 
            is incurred at the request of the insurer. Reimbursement must be at 
            the rates allowed for reimbursement of travel by state employees.
           (e) Except for the repair 
            or replacement of a prosthesis furnished as a result of an industrial 
            injury, the benefits provided for in this section terminate when they 
            are not used for a period of 60 consecutive months.
           (f) Notwithstanding 
            subsection (1)(a), the insurer may not be required to furnish, after 
            the worker has achieved medical stability, palliative or maintenance 
            care except:
           (i) when provided to a 
            worker who has been determined to be permanently totally disabled 
            and for whom it is medically necessary to monitor administration of 
            prescription medication to maintain the worker in a medically stationary 
            condition; or
           (ii) when necessary to 
            monitor the status of a prosthetic device.
           (g) If the worker's treating 
            physician believes that palliative or maintenance care that would 
            otherwise not be compensable under subsection (1)(f) is appropriate 
            to enable the worker to continue current employment or that there 
            is a clear probability of returning the worker to employment, the 
            treating physician shall first request approval from the insurer for 
            the treatment. If approval is not granted, the treating physician 
            may request approval from the department for the treatment. The department 
            shall appoint a panel of physicians, including at least one treating 
            physician from the area of specialty in which the injured worker is 
            being treated, pursuant to rules that the department may adopt, to 
            review the proposed treatment and determine its appropriateness.
           (h) Notwithstanding any 
            other provisions of this chapter, the department, by rule and upon 
            the advice of the professional licensing boards of practitioners affected 
            by the rule, may exclude from compensability any medical treatment 
            that the department finds to be unscientific, unproved, outmoded, 
            or experimental. [Emphasis added.]
           24.29.2004 
            WORKERS' COMPENSATION DOES NOT PAY (1) For maintenance 
            -- a regime designed to provide the optimum state of health while 
            minimizing recurrence of the clinical status.
           (2) Prevent treatment 
            -- procedures necessary to prevent the development of clinical status.
        
         
          
            Factual Background 
             
          
        
         The constitutional challenge 
          in this case is a legal one. No facts were developed below and claimant 
          does not attempt to lay any factual predicate here. Nonetheless, it 
          is helpful to understand the context in which this case arises. That 
          context is provided in the petition(2) 
          and exhibits filed with the Department.
         It appears that claimant 
          was injured on May 25, 1994. (Ex. A at 1.) She thereafter received chiropractic 
          treatments from Richard Vande Veegaete, D.C. (Exs. A and C.) 
         On December 19, 1995, the 
          State Fund wrote to Dr. Vande Veegaete advising him that its chiropractic 
          consultant had determined that "the treatments currently being provided 
          to" claimant are "maintenance in nature." (Ex. A. at 1.) The letter 
          then notified Dr. Vande Veegaete that the State Fund would not pay for 
          future maintenance treatments. (Id.)
         Claimant, either before 
          or after the State Fund letter, retained Burris. On January 7, 1996, 
          Burris wrote Dr. Vande Veegaete asking if he agreed his treatments were 
          maintenance in nature. (Ex. B.) The doctor replied in the affirmative 
          and confirmed that claimant had reached maximum medical improvement. 
          (Ex. C.) However, he went on to indicate that chiropractic treatment 
          was appropriate for claimant's continuing pain, that pain medication 
          was inappropriate because of claimant's prior drug addiction to them, 
          and that exercise was inappropriate because claimant was unable to tolerate 
          traditional exercise programs. (Id.)
         It is apparent from the 
          foregoing facts, and the present litigation, that claimant wishes to 
          continue chiropractic maintenance treatments. She does not challenge 
          the characterization of further treatment as "maintenance" or "palliative" 
          within the meaning of sections 39-71-704(1)(f) and -116(16) and (20), 
          MCA, but seeks to establish her entitlement to reimbursement for such 
          care.
         
          
            Discussion  
          
        
         In Appellants' Opening Brief 
          at page 1, the claimant restates the issue in rather colorful terms, 
          as follows:
         Whether the Legislature, 
          in an effort to grant largesse and political pork to insurance companies, 
          denies injured workers' due process and equal protection of the law 
          under the Montana Constitution and/or the United States Constitution 
          by requiring an injured employee to either (1) suffer from chronic and 
          intractable pain or (2) become addicted to pain medication in order 
          to mask the pain and (3) be financially responsible for maintenance 
          care as to the pain in all cases? (39-71-116, MCA; 39-71-704, MCA; Med. 
          Service Rule 24.29.2004.)
         Initially, the Court need 
          not consider the challenge to ARM 24.29.2004. That regulation merely 
          repeats what is already set forth in the statutes, §§ 39-71-116(13) 
          and (16), 39-71-704(1)(f), MCA, and is superfluous. If the statutes 
          are constitutional, then the regulation is too. 
         1. Claimant's Burden
         The standard for reviewing 
          a constitutional challenge is well established. "The constitutionality 
          of a legislative enactment is prima facie presumed, and every 
          intendment in its favor will be made unless its unconstitutionality 
          appears beyond a reasonable doubt." Ingraham v. Champion International, 
          243 Mont. 42, 47, 793 P.2d 769, 772 (1990). The party challenging 
          the constitutionality of a statue "has a heavy burden of proving a violation 
          of fundamental law." Harper v. Greely, 234 Mont. 259, 269, 
          763 P.2d 650, 657 (1988). 
         2. Equal Protection 
          and Due Process
         Initially, in passing upon 
          claimant's equal protection and due process arguments, the Court is 
          hampered by her counsel's failure to set forth basic legal principles 
          and cite legal authority. Appellant's Opening Brief at 5-6 contains 
          one citation, which is to Medora v. Colautti, 602 F.2d 1149 
          (1979). He cites that case for the proposition that "[w]here there is 
          disparate treatment involving 'denial of all aid, the courts will more 
          closely examine the rationality of the underlying classification.'" 
          602 F.2d at 1154. Even the single citation to Medora is inappropriate 
          since this case does not involve a "denial of all aid." 
         Burris' briefs are unacceptable. 
          If the issues raised by counsel are serious enough to warrant the Court's 
          consideration, then they are serious enough to require counsel to thoroughly 
          research and present them. In future cases, briefs which fail to apprise 
          the Court of applicable legal standards and which fail to supply citations 
          to basic authority will be returned to counsel and further briefing 
          will be required. 
         Equal protection of the 
          laws is guaranteed under both the United States and the Montana constitutions. 
          U.S. Const., amend IV, § 1; Mont. Const., art. II, § 4. In a general 
          sense the equal protection clauses of the two constitutions protect 
          persons against arbitrary and discriminatory state action. McKamey 
          v. State, 268 Mont. 137, 145, 885 P.2d 515, 521 (1994). Equal protection 
          does not preclude the classification and different treatment of persons 
          but does require, at minimum, that a classification have a rational 
          basis. State v. Sanders, 208 Mont. 283, 289, 676 P.2d 1312, 
          1315 (1984). 
         The right to workers' compensation 
          benefits is not a fundamental right, thus the minimal "rational relationship 
          test" of equal protection applies in analyzing the legislative classification 
          at issue in this case. Cottrill v. Cottrill Sodding Service, 
          229 Mont. 40, 43, 744 P.2d 895, 897 (1987); accord Eastman 
          v. Atlantic Richfield Co., 237 Mont. 332, 338, 777 P.2d 862, 865 
          (1989); Stratemeyer v. Lincoln County, 259 Mont. 147, 151, 
          855 P.2d 506, 509 (1993). That test requires the Court to determine 
          whether the classification at issue is rationally related to a legitimate 
          or proper government purpose. Cottrill, 229 Mont. at 
          43, 744 P.2d at 897; Eastman, 237 Mont. at 338, 777 
          P.2d at 865.
         However, equal protection, 
          as the words suggest, applies to legislation which results in different 
          treatment of similarly situated persons. State ex rel. Zander v. 
          District Court, 180 Mont. 548, 556-57, 591 P.2d 656, 661 (1979). 
          Subject matter distinctions, as distinguished from class distinctions, 
          are not subject to equal protection scrutiny. Id. In Zander 
          the Montana Supreme Court, put it this way:
         
           Determination or classification 
            of the subjects of legislation does not deny equal protection. If 
            all persons in the same class are treated alike, there is no violation 
            of equal protection. Here there is but one class and all persons within 
            that class are treated equally satisfying constitutional equal protection 
            requirements.
        
        Id. (citations omitted). 
          Zander involved an equal protection challenge to a statute 
          criminalizing marijuana cultivation. The defendant argued that tobacco 
          is as harmful as marijuana and that the legislature's failure to criminalize 
          tobacco cultivation therefore amounted to discrimination in violation 
          of the Equal Protection Clause. But the criminal statute applied equally 
          to all people, hence there was but one class of persons, all of whom 
          were treated equally, and there was no violation of the Equal Protection 
          Clause. 
         The statutes involved in 
          this case are similar to the statute in Zander in that they 
          are based on distinctions in subject matter and do not distinguish between 
          or among classes of persons. All persons covered by the WCA are subject 
          to the exclusion regarding maintenance and palliative care. Persons 
          not covered by the WCA are not entitled to any benefits whatsoever, 
          thus are equally denied maintenance and palliative care benefits. Thus, 
          there is but one class of persons, all of whom are treated equally. 
          The statutes do not violate the equal protection clauses.
         Although evading review 
          under equal protection, the statutes at issue herein are subject to 
          the rational relationship test under the due process clauses of the 
          United States and Montana constitutions. U.S. Const., amend. XIV, § 
          1; Mont. Const., art. II, § 17. In one writer's words, 
         
           [T]he standards for validity 
            under the due process and equal protection clauses are identical.
           The difference in the 
            method of analysis under the due process and equal protection guarantees 
            relates only to whether or not the governmental act classifies persons. 
            . . . When the governmental action relates only to matters of economics 
            or general social welfare, the law need only rationally relate to 
            a legitimate governmental purpose. If the law does not classify individuals, 
            it will be subjected to the due process guarantee. However, if the 
            means the law employs to achieve its end is the classification of 
            persons for differing benefits or burdens, it will be tested under 
            the equal protection guarantee.
        
        R. Rotunda & J. Nowak, 
          Treatise on Constitutional Law: Equal Protection, § 18.1 at 5-6 (2d 
          ed. 1992). 
         Due process, in its substantive 
          form, "bars arbitrary governmental actions regardless of the procedures 
          used to implement them, and serves as a check on oppressive governmental 
          action." Newville v. Department of Family Services, 267 Mont. 
          237, 249, 883 P.2d 793, 800 (1994). "[I]n order to satisfy guarantees 
          of substantive due process, a statute enacted by the legislature must 
          be reasonably related to a permissible legislative objective." Id. 
          at 250, 883 P.2d at 801 (citing Raisler v. Burlington Northern Ry. 
          Co., 219 Mont. 254, 263, 717 P.2d 535, 541 (1985)). 
         In determining the purpose 
          or object of a statute, the Court is not limited to those articulated 
          by the legislature, either in the statute itself or in legislative history, 
          but may consider any rational purpose which may have motivated the legislature 
          to enact the legislation. Stratemeyer, 259 Mont. at 152, 855 
          P.2d at 509. In this case, we need not look beyond the legislative history 
          of the statutes in question to find a legitimate, rational purpose for 
          the limitation on medical benefits. 
         The provisions at issue 
          herein were part of Senate Bill 347, enacted into law by the 1993 Legislature. 
          The minutes of both the Senate Committee on Labor and Employment Relations 
          and the House Select Committee on Workers' Compensation, which held 
          hearings on February 16, 1993 and March 10, 1993, respectively, reflect 
          that one of the purposes of S.B. 347 was to control medical costs. 
         The bill was sponsored by 
          Senator Harp. In his opening statement before the Senate committee, 
          the Senator stated that "SB 347 is built upon the principle of cost 
          containment . . . ." (Senate Minutes of 2/16/93 at 3.) Rick Hill, representing 
          the Governor's office, "stated that workers' compensation premiums are 
          increasing at a rate the Montana economy cannot afford." Id. 
          Pat Sweeney, then president of the State Compensation Insurance Fund, 
          testified:
         
           [T]he State Fund spent 
            almost $37 million on medical expenses in fiscal year 1992. He stated 
            medical expenses account for over half of the 20% rate increase the 
            State Fund experienced at the beginning of fiscal year 1993. Mr. Sweeney 
            stated medical cost containment is essential to managing workers' 
            comp.
        
        Id. Similar testimony 
          was given in the House committee hearings. (House Minutes, 3/10/93, 
          at 2.)
         In Stratemeyerthe 
          Supreme Court held that cost control over workers' compensation benefits 
          is a legitimate governmental purpose. Id. at 153, 855 P.2d 
          at 510. It specifically pointed out that in matters of economic regulation, 
          social and health issues, which by implication includes workers' compensation, 
          the legislature is in a much better position to make economic judgments 
          than a court. Id. 
         The constitutions of the 
          United States and the State of Montana do not mandate any specific level 
          of benefits for injured workers. In car terminology, they do not mandate 
          a Cadillac, or even a Chevy. In McClanathan v. Smith, 186 Mont. 
          56, 67-68, 606 P.2d 507, 513 (1980), the Montana Supreme Court said 
          with regard to equal protection:(3)
         Perfection in making classifications 
          is neither possible nor necessary. Neither is mathematical nicety or 
          perfect equality. Rather, where the goals of a classification are legitimate, 
          and the classification is rationally related to the achievement of those 
          goals, the statute should be constitutionally upheld.
         The legislative purpose 
          in this case -- cost control -- is a legitimate one. The provisions 
          which claimant attacks are reasonably calculated to cut medical costs. 
          They eliminate liability for certain medical services while preserving 
          essential medical services which assure that the claimant will be treated 
          until she reaches maximum medical improvement. The provisions do not 
          violate claimant's right to due process. 
         3. Cruel and Unusual 
          Punishment
         The claimant alleges in 
          her Notice of Appeal that the statutes at issue violate the prohibition 
          against cruel and unusual punishment. That prohibition is found in the 
          Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article II, Section 
          22 of the Montana Constitution.(4) 
         In her brief the claimant 
          devotes a one sentence paragraph to her cruel and unusual punishment 
          allegation, as follows:
         
           If criminal 
            law concepts were operative here, one could say without hesitation 
            that the rules/statutes relied on by Respondents and the options they 
            provide for Ruth clearly constitute an infliction of cruel and unusual 
            punishment for her temerity in getting injured on the job.
        
        (Appellant's Opening Brief 
          at 5, emphasis added.) The "if" in the sentence is dispositive of her 
          argument. The prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment applies 
          to sentences and penalties imposed with respect to crimes. State 
          ex rel. Hardy v. State Board of Equalization, 133 Mont. 43, 46, 
          319 P.2d 1061, 1063 (1958). The prohibition deals exclusively with criminal 
          process and punishments and is not applicable in other contexts. Ingraham 
          v. Wright, 430 U.S. 651, 664 (1977); Palmer v. A.H. Robins 
          Co., Inc., 684 P.2d 187, 217 (Colo. 1984). It has no application 
          in the present case.
         
          
            JUDGMENT  
          
        
         For the reasons set forth 
          in the foregoing discussion, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED AND ADJUDGED as follows:
        1. Sections 39-71-704(1)(f) 
          and -116(13) and (16), MCA (1993), do not violate the claimant's rights 
          to equal protection of the laws and due process of law, nor do they 
          violate the constitutional prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.
        2. The Notice of Appeal in 
          this matter is dismissed with prejudice.
        3. ThisJudgment is certified 
          as final for purposes of appeal. 
         DATED in Helena, Montana, 
          this 23rd day of October, 1996.
         (SEAL)
         /s/ Mike 
          McCarter 
          JUDGE
        c: Mr. Don Edgar Burris
          Ms. Susan C. Witte
          Submitted: September 10, 1996
        1. While 
          the hearing officer captioned his decision as Findings of Fact; Conclusions 
          of Law; and Final Order, the decision did not address any factual matters 
          and merely concluded that claimant was correct in her assertion that 
          the Department lacked jurisdiction over her constitutional challenges. 
           
        
2. Actually, 
          Burris' letter filed on April 11, 1996.  
        
3. As 
          discussed previously, due process analysis is similar to equal protection 
          analysis. Thus, statements made with regard to equal protection analysis 
          may be applied in the due process context.  
        
4. The 
          Eighth Amendment, provides, "Excessive bail shall not be required, nor 
          excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted." 
          U.S. Const. amend. VIII. The Montana provision is identical except it 
          substitutes the word "or" for the word "nor". Mont. Const. art. II, 
          § 22.