Berks Area Regional Transportation Authority v. WCAB (Modesto)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 2, 2016
Docket1432 C.D. 2015
StatusUnpublished

This text of Berks Area Regional Transportation Authority v. WCAB (Modesto) (Berks Area Regional Transportation Authority v. WCAB (Modesto)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berks Area Regional Transportation Authority v. WCAB (Modesto), (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Berks Area Regional Transportation : Authority, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 1432 C.D. 2015 : Submitted: January 8, 2016 Workers' Compensation Appeal : Board (Modesto), : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE SIMPSON FILED: March 2, 2016

In this appeal, Berks Area Regional Transportation Authority (Employer) asks whether the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board) erred in ordering it to pay several years of unpaid attorney fees to Peter Modesto’s (Claimant) attorney as ordered by a Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ) in 2007. Employer argues the Board erred in failing to address whether Employer’s actions in failing to deduct the attorney fees from Claimant’s weekly wage loss benefits were intentional and done in bad faith so as to warrant a penalty. It further contends the Board erred in failing to apply laches so as to bar any recovery of attorney fees by Claimant. Upon review, we affirm.

In December 2004, Claimant sustained a work-related back injury. Employer accepted the injury through a Notice of Compensation Payable (NCP). About two years later, Claimant’s benefit status was changed from total disability to partial disability as a result of an impairment rating evaluation.

Thereafter, in November 2007, WCJ Terry W. Knox (WCJ Knox) granted Claimant’s petition to review compensation benefits, amended the description of injury and ordered “Employer [to] deduct 20% of Claimant’s continuing compensation payable, if any … directly to Claimant’s [attorney], and [to] pay the balance directly to Claimant.” WCJ’s Op., 11/2/07, at 6; Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 8a.

Employer began paying Claimant’s compensation benefits pursuant to WCJ Knox’s decision. However, it paid Claimant 100% of the awarded compensation without deducting the 20% attorney fee as directed. Employer continued not to deduct the attorney fee until August 2013. At that time, Employer corrected its error after Claimant’s attorney contacted Employer. Between 2007 and August 2013, Employer paid 100% of the compensation payable to Claimant. Claimant’s attorney did not receive his fee from the date of the 2007 decision through August 2013, a period of approximately six years.

In September 2013, Claimant filed a penalty petition alleging Employer violated the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act)1 and its rules or its regulations. Employer filed an answer denying any such violation.

1 Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§1-1041.4; 2501-2708.

2 Before the WCJ, Claimant’s counsel explained that his penalty petition was based on Employer’s failure to pay his 20% attorney fee pursuant to WCJ Knox’s 2007 decision and order. The WCJ admitted into evidence the NCP, the notice of change of workers’ compensation disability status and WCJ Knox’s 2007 decision. No witness testimony was presented before the WCJ.

Ultimately, the WCJ explained:

Claimant asserts [Employer] violated the Act by failing to comply with the 11/2/2007 Decision. Claimant points out [Employer] admitted to failing to deduct the 20% attorney fee because of an ‘inadvertent error.’

Claimant’s letter brief references evidence not of record in this litigation in his proposed calculation of the penalty. The 11/2/2007 Decision does not contain Findings of Fact or Conclusion of Law establishing Claimant’s disability status as of that decision. By [Employer’s] admission, it paid Claimant 100% of the compensation payable to Claimant during the six– year period in question, but there is no evidence of that sum. Claimant’s proposed calculations are based on evidence not of record and will not be considered.

Claimant seeks an award of penalties for [Employer’s] admitted failure to comply with the 11/2/2007 Decision, but Claimant’s counsel also acknowledges his delay in discovering the error - no fee received for six years.

[Employer] admits it did not comply with the 11/2/2007 Decision and paid 100% of Claimant’s compensation payable directly to Claimant for the six-year period in question, and immediately began deducting the 20% attorney fee and sending it to Claimant’s counsel as soon as Claimant’s counsel inquired of same. [Employer] argues this is analogous to Campbell [by Campbell v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Hards Construction Co.), 695 A.2d 976 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007)] in which the Commonwealth Court held that evidence established the defendant’s error failing to pay compensation was human and

3 clerical error and not in bad faith, thus not supportive of a penalty award. [Employer] argues its ‘inadvertent error’ was a similar human and clerical error not in bad faith. Unfortunately, unlike Campbell, [Employer] did not offer evidence of its ‘inadvertent error’ for this Judge to make such a conclusion.

The record merely establishes the following: (1) [Employer] was directed to deduct 20% of compensation payable to Claimant, if any, and pay that sum directly to Claimant’s counsel as an attorney fee; (2) [Employer] did not do as it was directed to do by the 11/2/2007 Decision resulting in Claimant’s counsel not receiving his fee according to the fee agreement between Claimant and Claimant’s counsel; (3) Claimant received 100% of his compensation payable, if any, instead of 80% for a six-year period, and; (4) Claimant’s counsel failed to notice he was not receiving a fee for six years.

WCJ’s Op., 5/15/14, at 2-3 (footnotes omitted).2

The WCJ determined, by its own admission, Employer violated the Act when it did not deduct 20% of the compensation payable to Claimant and send that sum to Claimant’s attorney. The WCJ further determined Claimant’s attorney was guilty of laches in failing to notify Employer of his non-receipt of attorney fees. Thus, the WCJ determined both Employer and Claimant’s counsel bore equal fault for the delay in compliance with WCJ Knox’s 2007 decision. Based on these determinations, the WCJ declined to award a monetary penalty. Nevertheless, he directed Employer to pay Claimant’s attorney 50% of the attorney fees that should have been deducted for the six-year period at issue. The parties filed cross-appeals to the Board.

2 The WCJ also found Employer initially failed to pay Claimant’s $3,723.80 in litigation costs pursuant to WCJ Knox’s 2007 decision; however, Employer paid these costs after the WCJ’s 2013 hearing here.

4 On appeal, the Board initially noted that Claimant did not specifically argue for the imposition of a penalty, which the WCJ declined to impose; rather, he argued the WCJ erred in his conclusions of law regarding the payment of actual, past due attorney fees. The Board also pointed out that neither party advanced any argument that any funds should be disgorged from Claimant. The Board further stated there was no dispute that Employer did not pay Claimant’s attorney the 20% attorney fee ordered by WCJ Knox in 2007.

Ultimately, based on this Court’s decision in Devault Packing Co., Inc. v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Jones), 670 A.2d 741 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1996), the Board determined Employer was obligated to pay Claimant’s attorney’s full 20% attorney fee as approved and ordered payable by WCJ Knox in 2007. Thus, the Board ordered Employer to pay Claimant’s attorney fees from the date of WCJ Knox’s 2007 decision. The Board also disagreed that laches applied here so as to diminish or eliminate the recovery of the actual, past due attorney fees, which were awarded in 2007.

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Bluebook (online)
Berks Area Regional Transportation Authority v. WCAB (Modesto), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berks-area-regional-transportation-authority-v-wcab-modesto-pacommwct-2016.