Bayada Home Healthcare v. Shaw-Hicks

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedDecember 23, 2024
DocketK24A-05-002 JJC
StatusPublished

This text of Bayada Home Healthcare v. Shaw-Hicks (Bayada Home Healthcare v. Shaw-Hicks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bayada Home Healthcare v. Shaw-Hicks, (Del. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

BAYADA HOME HEALTHCARE, : : C.A. No.: K24A-05-002 JJC Appellant, : : v. : : SHANEEDA SHAW-HICKS, : : Appellee. : : :

Submitted: October 10, 2024 Decided: December 23, 2024

ORDER

On this 23rd day of December 2024, having considered Appellant Bayada Home Healthcare’s appeal of the decision of the Industrial Accident Board (the “Board” or “IAB” or the “hearing officer,” who acted on behalf of the Board by stipulation in this case), the parties’ briefing, and the IAB’s record, it appears that: 1. Bayada Home Healthcare (“Bayada”) appeals a portion of an IAB decision ordering Bayada to pay retroactive total disability benefits (“TDB”) to its then employee, Shaneeda Shaw-Hicks. The TDB payments subject to the order spanned September 27, 2023, through March 6, 2024 (the “Period”). 2. Ms. Shaw-Hicks suffered an injury while performing her duties as a nurse for Bayada after a patient threw an iPad that struck her in the right eye.1

1 Opening Br. at 5 (D.I. 16). Thereafter, Ms. Shaw-Hicks began receiving TDB in connection with her injury.2 After several months, Bayada filed a petition to terminate her TDB (the “Termination Petition”).3 3. The IAB scheduled a hearing on the Termination Petition with a hearing officer.4 Bayada then filed a motion for summary judgment in connection with its petition.5 At the time for the scheduled hearing, the Board granted Bayada’s motion for summary judgment seeking termination of TDB because Ms. Shaw-Hicks had no expert medical evidence available to demonstrate an ongoing total disability. 6 The Board took no sworn testimony from the parties and conducted no evidentiary hearing in the matter. 7 A lengthy discussion on the record demonstrated a significant amount of confusion regarding who should pay retroactive benefits after Bayada filed the Termination Petition. A Department of Labor (the “Department”) employee appeared to address the Workers’ Compensation Fund’s obligation to pay.8

2 Id.; Shaw-Hicks v. Bayada Home Healthcare, No. 1541059, at 1 (Del. IAB Apr. 11, 2024) [hereinafter the Court will refer to the IAB’s decision as “IAB Order”]. According to Ms. Shaw- Hicks, she initially received only one TDB check from Bayada’s insurance carrier and then no other payments for the next five months. Answering Br. at 1 (D.I. 21). After much back-and-forth with the carrier, she received a second TDB check for those five months of lost time, along with a notice that Bayada and the carrier intended to file a petition for review to terminate her benefits. Id. The termination petition was filed on November 15, 2023. IAB Order, at 3. Thereafter, Ms. Shaw-Hicks received a third and final TDB check, which covered the period up until the Termination Petition was filed. D.I. 21, at 1. 3 IAB Order, at 3. 4 Id. at 1. By stipulation of the parties, the matter was heard and decided by a Workers’ Compensation Hearing Officer, in accordance with Title 19, Section 2301B(a)(4) of the Delaware Code. In a hearing by stipulation under this section, the hearing officer stands in the position of the IAB. 19 Del. C. § 2301B. 5 Bayada’s motion for summary judgment asserted that Ms. Shaw-Hicks was no longer totally medically disabled and that she was released by her initial treating physician to return to her pre- accident employment. D.I. 16, Ex. E. 6 IAB Order, at 2. 7 The transcript of the IAB hearing before the Court reflects that no proper evidentiary hearing, in the traditional sense, took place. See generally Certified Record, Tab 2 [hereinafter the Court will refer to the certified record of the hearing before the Board as “R. at . . .”]. 8 See R. at 38:23. 2 4. Thereafter, the hearing officer, on behalf of the Board, issued a written decision. She determined that Ms. Shaw-Hicks TDB should be terminated. She continued, however, by making at least one finding of fact outside the scope of Bayada’s summary judgment motion. Namely, she ordered Bayada to pay retroactive benefits for the entirety of the Period notwithstanding that Bayada had continued to pay benefits for a significant portion of the Period. The record demonstrates that (1) Bayada had ceased paying Ms. Shaw-Hicks TDB only after it filed the Termination Petition on November 15, 2023,9 and (2) the Workers’ Compensation Fund did not pay Ms. Shaw-Hicks continuing TDB benefits after Bayada filed the Termination Petition.10 Thus, the hearing officer granted Bayada’s motion for summary judgment, terminated Ms. Shaw-Hicks’ TDB, but found the appropriate termination date to be March 6, 2024.11 She ordered Bayada to pay Ms. Shaw-Hicks retroactive TDB spanning the entirety of the Period—from September 27, 2023, until March 6, 2024. Bayada then appealed the decision, in part, to the Superior Court. 5. On appeal, Bayada contends that the IAB committed an error of law when it ordered it to pay retroactive TDB to Ms. Shaw-Hicks for the Period.12 Bayada also challenges the propriety of the Board’s decision to decide factual

9 Bayada represented that a Department of Labor representative advised Bayada to stop making payments once the Termination Petition was filed. Certified Record, Tab 2 at 24:12 [hereinafter the Court will refer to the certified record of the hearing before the Board as “R. at . . .”]. The representative present during the Board hearing denied that the Department of Labor advises employers to stop issuing benefits, however. R. at 41:13. 10 See R. at 8:2–9:3; 23:4–25:25; 39:15–47:20. 11 Id. at 2–3. Despite Bayada’s assertions and proffered evidence that, (1) by September 14, 2023, Ms. Shaw-Hicks had been given a full duty release to return to work by both of her treating physicians, and (2) it made an offer for Ms. Shaw-Hicks to return to work in November 2023, the hearing officer set the TDB termination date as March 6, 2024—i.e., the date upon which Bayada made a second offer for re-employment and the date Ms. Shaw-Hicks acknowledged her refusal to return. See id. 12 Reply Br. at 4 (D.I. 22). 3 evidence against it pursuant to its own summary judgment motion. For her part, Ms. Shaw-Hicks defends the Boards’ decision. She contends that Bayada terminated her TDB without an agreement or IAB approval to do so.13 6. On appellate review of an IAB decision, the Court must determine whether substantial evidence on the record supported the decision and whether the Board committed an error of law.14 Here, Bayada seems to challenge certain findings of fact. In this case, more appropriately, the failure of the Board to conduct a proper evidentiary hearing was a procedural irregularity that provides no record for review.15 Accordingly, no substantial evidence review is possible. Bayada further contends that the hearing officer committed an error of law based upon the plain meaning of the controlling statute. For purposes of the latter contention, questions of statutory interpretation raise questions of law that require the Court to conduct a de novo review.16 7. This appeal turns primarily on the clear language of 19 Del. C. § 2347(k) (“Subsection 2347(k)”). Subsection 2347(k) provides, in pertinent part, the following: (k) On an employer’s petition to review an agreement for total or partial disability benefit entitlement on the ground that the employee is physically able to return to work, compensation shall be paid from the Workers’ Compensation Fund by the Department to the employee on acceptance of the employer’s petition to review as follows: . . . (1) The Department shall initiate compensation retroactive to the date the petition to review was accepted by the Department. The Department

13 D.I. 21, at 1. 14 Powell v. OTAC, Inc., 223 A.3d 864, 870 (Del. 2019); 29 Del. C. § 10142. 15 The Court provides no opinion regarding whether the summary judgment record supported finding a number of other factual matters that would have resolved the entire matter in Bayada’s favor.

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Bluebook (online)
Bayada Home Healthcare v. Shaw-Hicks, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bayada-home-healthcare-v-shaw-hicks-delsuperct-2024.