Comeau's Case

CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMay 8, 2017
DocketAC 16-P-134
StatusPublished

This text of Comeau's Case (Comeau's Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Comeau's Case, (Mass. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1 Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557- 1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us

16-P-134 Appeals Court

JEFFREY COMEAU'S CASE.

No. 16-P-134.

Suffolk. January 13, 2017. - May 8, 2017.

Present: Grainger, Wolohojian, & Neyman, JJ.

Workers' Compensation Act, Interest. Statute, Construction. Massachusetts Insurers Insolvency Fund. Words, "Claim."

Appeal from a decision of the Industrial Accident Reviewing Board.

Michael Brangwynne & John G. Neylon, Sr., for the employee. Paul M. Moretti for Massachusetts Insurance Insolvency Fund. Margo A. Sutton for Wasau Insurance Company.

WOLOHOJIAN, J. At issue is the meaning of the word "claim"

as it appears in G. L. c. 152, § 50, which requires that

interest be assessed on unpaid workers' compensation claims from

"the date of the receipt of the notice of the claim by the

department." The reviewing board (board) of the Department of

Industrial Accidents (department) concluded that, in the

circumstances of this case, interest was to run from the date 2

the department received notice of the claim ultimately resulting

in the order awarding benefits. The board rejected the

employee’s argument that interest should run instead from the

filing date of an earlier, similar claim that had been

terminated by agreement, pursuant to G. L. c. 152, § 19, prior

to an adjudicated conclusion or an award of benefits. We

affirm.

Background.1 The case has an extensive history, most of

which is not pertinent to this appeal and therefore need not be

set out here. Of importance for our purposes is the following.

The employee was injured in 1993 while working. Liberty Mutual

Insurance Company (Liberty), as successor to Wausau Insurance

Company (the insurer on the date of injury), accepted liability

and paid the employee benefits for total incapacity pursuant to

G. L. c. 152, § 34, until he returned to work. Liberty then

paid the employee partial incapacity benefits pursuant to G. L.

c. 152, § 35, benefits until March 10, 1995. The employee

continued to work until October 2, 1995, when he suffered a

second injury. The insurer for this second injury is now the

Massachusetts Insurance Insolvency Fund (MIIF), which assumed

1 Our recitation of the factual background is drawn from the decision of the board, certain aspects of which we cannot independently verify because the employee did not include the pertinent documents in the record appendix. For example, the appendix does not contain copies of any of the pre-2010 notices of claim. 3

the risk when Eastern Casualty Insurance Company, the insurer at

the time of the second injury, became insolvent.2 See G. L.

c. 176D, § 5. On December 26, 1995, on the advice of his

treating orthopedic physician, the employee stopped work and has

not returned to work since.

The employee filed a claim for the second injury on April

1, 1996, and MIIF filed a denial of that claim on April 10,

1996.3 Shortly thereafter, in May, 1996, Liberty filed a

complaint for recoupment of almost $35,000 it had paid with

respect to the first injury, alleging that the employee earned

more than his average weekly wage while receiving the G. L.

c. 152, § 35, benefits.

The employee then moved to join two claims against Liberty

for the first injury, one for G. L. c. 152, § 34, benefits from

January 2, 1996, and the other for G. L. c. 152, § 36, benefits.

Liberty in turn moved to join MIIF as the insurer for the second

injury. After a conference on the motions, the complaint for

recoupment, and the employee's claims, an administrative judge

denied Liberty's request for recoupment, allowed the motion to

join MIIF, and denied the employee's claims, without

2 As a convenient shorthand, we refer to both Wausau and Liberty as Liberty, and to Eastern and MIIF as MIIF. 3 This notice of claim is not in the record appendix, see note 1, supra. 4

adjudicating MIIF's liability. Liberty and the employee both

appealed.

Over the next eleven years, although a number of hearings

were scheduled, for reasons unknown they did not take place and

the litigation languished. On July 10, 2008, the parties

entered into two agreements pursuant to G. L. c. 152, § 19; one

agreement was between the employee and Wausau (now Liberty), and

the other was between Wausau and Eastern (now MIIF). In both

agreements, Wausau agreed to withdraw without prejudice its

appeal of the order denying recoupment. In the agreement

between the employee and Wausau, the employee agreed to withdraw

his appeal of the conference order denying disability, reserving

the right to raise a disability claim in the future. The

employee also stipulated to an overpayment by Wausau of almost

$35,000. That said, Wausau agreed not to pursue the employee

for the overpayment unless the employee filed a "future claim

for disability and that claim is resolved." In the agreement

between Wausau and Eastern, Eastern, without agreeing to

liability and without prejudice, agreed that it had been joined

to the litigation. The § 19 agreements made no mention of

interest or the date from which it would accrue in the event the

employee ever received an order for unpaid benefits. In short,

the effect of the § 19 agreements, which were filed with the

department and approved by the administrative judge, was to 5

terminate the pending proceedings without final adjudication and

without prejudice in the event the employee again filed a claim.

The employee decided to do just that. He first filed

claims again in 2008, but withdrew them in 2009. He refiled the

claims in 2009, and then again withdrew them.4 The employee’s

present claims were filed on January 25, 2010, when he filed an

"Employee’s Claim" Form 110 with the department, seeking §§ 34

and 35 benefits from April 1, 1996, to the present. Ultimately,

through a series of rulings that are not at issue here, MIFF was

ordered to pay the employee G. L. c. 152, § 34A, benefits for

permanent and total incapacity from April 1, 1996 (the date on

which the employee first filed a claim relating to the second

injury) to the present and continuing.

Although the board affirmed the administrative judge's

award of benefits from April 1, 1996, forward, the board

assessed interest under G. L. c. 152, § 50, only from January

25, 2010, the filing date of the employee's most recent claim.

On appeal, the employee argues that he should have been awarded

interest from December 17, 1996 (the date the department

4 The record appendix does not reveal the reason for this pattern of events, but the insurers contend that -- especially when viewed against the earlier denial of the employee's claim of disability -– it reflects forum shopping. We need not, and do not, determine what motivated the employee’s actions. It is enough to note that he sought on multiple occasions to start the litigation afresh and then changed his mind, withdrawing his claims. 6

functionally received notice of his claim for the second

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