City of Newport News v. Peninsula Neurosurgical Associates, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 31, 2020
Docket1315191
StatusUnpublished

This text of City of Newport News v. Peninsula Neurosurgical Associates, Inc. (City of Newport News v. Peninsula Neurosurgical Associates, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Newport News v. Peninsula Neurosurgical Associates, Inc., (Va. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Petty, Russell and Malveaux Argued at Norfolk, Virginia UNPUBLISHED

CITY OF NEWPORT NEWS

v. Record No. 1315-19-1

PENINSULA NEUROSURGICAL MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY ASSOCIATES, INC. JUDGE WESLEY G. RUSSELL, JR. MARCH 31, 2020 PENINSULA NEUROSURGICAL ASSOCIATES, INC.

v. Record No. 1382-19-1

FROM THE VIRGINIA WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION

Adonica Baine, Senior Assistant City Attorney, for City of Newport News.

Philip J. Geib (Philip J. Geib, P.C., on briefs), for Peninsula Neurosurgical Associates, Inc.

In this consolidated appeal, the City of Newport News (the City) challenges a decision of

the Workers’ Compensation Commission (Commission) awarding Peninsula Neurosurgical

Associates, Inc. (Neurosurgical Associates) payments for medical treatment it provided to June

Seals1 (claimant) pursuant to a previous award of the Commission. The City specifically

contends the Commission erred in excluding certain evidence and in finding that Neurosurgical

Associates’ application for payment was not barred by the doctrine of laches. Neurosurgical

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 1 Seals, the claimant in the underlying workers’ compensation claim, was given notice when the matter was filed, but did not file a brief or otherwise participate in this matter. Associates appeals the Commission’s denial of its request for attorney’s fees. Finding no

reversible error, we affirm the judgment of the Commission in its entirety.

BACKGROUND

In April 1995, claimant suffered a compensable injury to her back while she was working

as a cardiac technician for the City’s fire department. She filed a claim for wage and medical

benefits with the Commission. Consistent with an agreement reached by the City and claimant,

the Commission awarded claimant temporary total disability benefits for a defined period and

medical benefits “for as long as necessary.”2

In August 1995, claimant underwent a lumbar discectomy as a result of her injury; the

doctor, who worked for Neurosurgical Associates, also found an extruded disk. Several years

later, in October 1999, claimant went to the doctor for “recurrent back and left leg pain.” The

doctor determined that she “likely has recurrent disk disease . . . [that] is most likely related to

her previous workman[’]s compensation injury.” She underwent an MRI, and the doctor

eventually confirmed that “[t]his is recurrent disk disease; the same level as the prior problem.”

About a year later, claimant again went to the doctor for “back pain.” X-rays were taken,

and she was treated with epidural steroid injections. A few months thereafter, in January 2002,

claimant again complained of “[b]ack and leg pain” and reported that the epidurals she had been

receiving were providing “good relief, but they don’t last more than a month.” An x-ray

“reveal[ed] degenerative disk disease . . . pretty severe.” The doctor, noting that claimant was

experiencing “recurrent radicular pain” and that her “last MRI scan was not really normal[,]”

ordered an additional MRI as well as x-rays. At her follow-up visit a month later, claimant

received a diagnosis of “lumbar degenerative spondylolisthesis . . . and spinal stenosis and

2 The award initially was entered on October 23, 1996, but an amended award was entered on June 7, 1997, to reflect a different average weekly wage. -2- associated lumbar degenerative disk disease . . . with disk herniation . . . .” Claimant and her

doctor then discussed potential operative treatment.

Claimant elected to pursue operative treatment and underwent surgery in April 2002. She

had a follow-up visit in July to review her progress. About five years later, she returned to the

doctor, complaining of leg pain. The doctor determined that the pain was caused by a herniated

disk.

The total cost of these doctor visits and treatments was $12,883. In due course, all bills

were submitted to the City’s third-party administrator (TPA), who in turn made payments on the

City’s behalf. Neurosurgical Associates received $6,714.18 for services rendered, but the

remaining balance of $6,168.82 was not paid.

Sixteen years after claimant’s last doctor’s visit and almost twenty years after some of the

treatment at issue, Neurosurgical Associates filed an application with the Commission seeking

reimbursement from the City for the unpaid balance of $6,168.82. Neurosurgical Associates

alleged that the City “fail[ed] to pay the reasonable and medically necessary medical costs for

the treatment provided to the claimant as a result of the injuries sustained in the industrial

accident of April 16, 1995.” Neurosurgical Associates also requested an award of attorney’s

fees. The City defended on the grounds of “laches, spoliation, [and] prejudice to [the City] due

to unreasonable delay.”

Neurosurgical Associates’ application was considered by the deputy commissioner at a

hearing conducted on March 4, 2019. The deputy commissioner noted that there are “no issues

of medical treatment, just medical pricing, between the parties . . . .” Neurosurgical Associates

submitted records related to claimant’s treatments, including letters from the doctor confirming

that the treatments were causally related to the compensable accident, requests for authorization,

-3- and approvals. Only two witnesses testified; both parties called Donna McCord, while Elaine

Johnson testified on behalf of the City.

McCord testified that she had worked as Neurosurgical Associates’ office manager since

1987. She related that she was responsible for all of Neurosurgical Associates’ billing and thus

was familiar with the billing procedures in place since 1995. She stated that in July 2018 she

started an audit of workers’ compensation files to determine whether there had been

underpayments on past patient charges. She testified that prior to the audit, she was not aware

that unpaid balances could be recouped from the City.

McCord relayed that bills for claimant’s treatment dates had been submitted to the City’s

TPA. She confirmed that, although the charges totaled $12,883, Neurosurgical Associates

received only $6,714.18 from the TPA. She could not recall whether specific payments came

with an explanation of benefits or, if one had, whether it would have been destroyed.

She testified that Neurosurgical Associates utilized only one fee schedule and that she

believed that the charges that had been billed were consistent with the prevailing community

rate. McCord testified that Neurosurgical Associates “did a write-off” of the remaining balance

of $6,168.82 for its own internal billing system. McCord conceded that she never notified the

City or the TPA of the underpayments, but also averred that Neurosurgical Associates never

agreed with the City or the TPA that it would not seek full payment or that either could close its

files related to claimant’s claim.

Johnson testified that she served as the acting director of the City’s human resources

department and oversaw City workers’ compensation claims in that capacity. She stated that the

City was self-insured and had been using a TPA to process claims since the early 1990s. Richard

Flagship was the TPA when claimant first suffered her compensable injury, but soon thereafter

-4- FARA became the City’s TPA. The City, at some point later, switched TPAs again, first

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City of Newport News v. Peninsula Neurosurgical Associates, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-newport-news-v-peninsula-neurosurgical-associates-inc-vactapp-2020.