Commercial Credit Claims v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board (Lancaster)

728 A.2d 902, 556 Pa. 325, 1999 Pa. LEXIS 831
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 26, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 728 A.2d 902 (Commercial Credit Claims v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board (Lancaster)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Credit Claims v. Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board (Lancaster), 728 A.2d 902, 556 Pa. 325, 1999 Pa. LEXIS 831 (Pa. 1999).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

CASTILLE, Justice.

This Court granted review in order to decide whether an employer seeking to terminate a claimant’s workers’ compensation benefits must disprove a causal relationship between the work-related injury and a subsequently alleged psychiatric injury where the employer accepted liability in the Notice of Compensation Payable only for the physical injuries suffered from the work-related accident. We find that in these circumstances, the employee, not the employer, shoulders the burden of establishing a causal relationship between the work-related injury and a subsequently alleged psychiatric injury. Accordingly, we reverse the Order of the Commonwealth Court.

On July 28, 1983, appellee John Lancaster (“claimant”) fell approximately twenty-eight feet from a catwalk while taking photographs in the course of his employment as a claims adjuster for appellant Commercial Credit Claims (“employer” or “appellant”). On December 22, 1983, employer and its insurance carrier issued a Notice of Compensation Payable (NCP) voluntarily accepting liability for physical injuries described as “cervical syndrome, sprain[ed] right sternoclavicular joint,” and agreed to pay claimant total disability benefits at the rate of $ 205.33 per week based on claimant’s weekly wage of $ 308.00 per week.

On July 7, 1986, employer filed a petition to terminate claimant’s benefits alleging that as of April 28, 1986, claimant had fully recovered from the work-related injury for which employer had accepted liability. At subsequent hearings on this petition, claimant testified in his own behalf as to his [328]*328ongoing pain. Employer presented the expert deposition testimony of James P. Valeriano, M.D., a board-certified neurologist. Dr. Valeriano testified that he had examined claimant twice. When asked if the physical symptoms of which claimant complained were causally related to the injuries sustained in 1983, Dr. Valeriano responded, “I don’t think they physically could have caused the problems he had.” Instead, Dr. Valeriano testified that “the main component of claimant’s problem was a psychiatric problem,” and that he could not ascertain any physical cause for the pain of which claimant complained. When asked if the psychological component was itself related to the 1983 accident, Dr. Valeriano responded that “there is almost no way that I can say that because I didn’t know him before.”

In 1995,1 the Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ) issued an opinion in which he found both claimant and Dr. Valeriano to be credible and in which he denied employer’s termination petition. In doing so, the WCJ made the following finding of fact:

While it is true that Dr. Valeriano never stated to a degree of medical certainty that claimant’s disabling psychiatric condition was related to his July 28, 1983 work-related injury, he certainly did not rule out the nexus between the claimant’s work injury and the disabling condition.

WCJ Opin. at 5, Finding of Fact No. 6. Based upon this finding of fact, the WCJ concluded as a legal matter that:

When the [employer’s] medical witness himself raises the possibility that claimant was suffering from a psychological disability caused by the work injury, that physician’s testimony cannot be be (sic) found to be unequivocal with regard to full and complete recovery.

Id. at 6, Conclusion of Law No. 2. Accordingly, the WCJ denied employer’s termination petition. On appeal, the Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board affirmed the WCJ. The Commonwealth Court affirmed the Board in an unpublished [329]*329opinion. Subsequently, this Court granted allocatur. Commercial Credit Claims v. WCAB, 549 Pa. 719, 701 A.2d 579 (1997).

Appellate review of a workers’ compensation order is limited to determining whether the lower tribunals committed a constitutional violation or an error of law and whether substantial evidence supports the necessary findings of fact. Ryan v. WCAB, 550 Pa. 550, 557, 707 A.2d 1130, 1133 (1998) (citing Pieper v. Ametek-Thermox Instruments Div., 526 Pa. 25, 31, 584 A.2d 301, 303 (1990)). Appellant contends that the lower tribunals committed an error of law by holding that an employer seeking to terminate a claimant’s workers’ compensation benefits must disprove a causal relationship between the work-related injury and a subsequently alleged psychiatric injury even if the employer accepted liability in the Notice of Compensation Payable only for the physical injuries suffered from the work-related accident. We agree.

The Workmen’s Compensation Act, 77 P.S. §§ 1 et seq., provides:

§ 717.1. Prompt payment of compensation; Interest; , credit for excess payment; controversion
The employer and insurer shall promptly investigate each injury reported or known to the employer and shall proceed promptly to commence the payment of compensation due either pursuant to an agreement upon the compensation payable or a notice of compensation payable as provided in [§ 731] ... Payments of compensation pursuant to an agreement or notice of compensation payable may be suspended, terminated, reduced or otherwise modified by petition and subject to right of hearing as provided in [§§ 771 to 774.1].

Here, the employer, as required by § 717.1, promptly proceeded to commence the payment of compensation “pursuant to a ... notice of compensation payable as provided in [§ 731].” Section 731 of the Act states in relevant part:

... All notices of compensation payable and agreements for compensation and all supplemental agreements for the mod[330]*330ification, suspension, reinstatement, or termination thereof ... shall be valid and binding unless modified or set aside as hereinafter provided.

Accordingly, the Notice of Compensation Payable, which set forth the terms for the payment of compensation by employer to claimant and described the nature of the injury which served as the predicate for that compensation, was “valid and binding unless modified or set aside” in the manner provided by the Act.2 The relevant modification procedures under the Act are set forth at §§ 771-772, and provide as follows:

§ 771. Review and modification or setting aside of notice of compensation payable or agreement incorrect in material respect
A referee of the department may, at any time, review and modify or set aside a notice of compensation payable and an original or supplemental agreement or upon petition filed by either party with the department, or in the course of the proceedings under any petition pending before such referee, if it be proved that such notice of compensation payable or agreement was in any material respect incorrect.
§ 772. Modification, etc., of. notice of compensation available, agreement or award on change in disability of injured person; exception as to eye injuries

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
728 A.2d 902, 556 Pa. 325, 1999 Pa. LEXIS 831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-credit-claims-v-workmens-compensation-appeal-board-lancaster-pa-1999.