Cozzone v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board

73 A.3d 526, 621 Pa. 23, 2013 WL 4405825, 2013 Pa. LEXIS 1785
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 19, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 73 A.3d 526 (Cozzone v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board) 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
Cozzone v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board, 73 A.3d 526, 621 Pa. 23, 2013 WL 4405825, 2013 Pa. LEXIS 1785 (Pa. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

Chief Justice CASTILLE.

This appeal presents an issue of statutory interpretation concerning Section 413(a) of the Workers’ Compensation Act (“Act”), 77 P.S. § 772: specifically, whether the claimant/appellant1 should have been permitted to proceed on a post>-500week petition for reinstatement of total disability benefits where he filed that petition within three years of his most recent payment of compensation, a payment which was made pursuant to a post-500week supplemental agreement, notwithstanding a prior suspension of payments due to his return to work without a loss in earning capacity. In resolving this question, the Court is called upon to determine whether expiration of the 500-week period set forth within the Act (also referred to, infra, as a statute of repose) operates as a bar to the assertion of total disability claims by employees who have experienced a suspension of benefits; that determination requires the Court to examine the Commonwealth Court’s decisional law in this area. Finally, to properly decide the case, we must examine the effect of payments made pursuant to supplemental agreements upon an otherwise expired workers’ compensation claim. The Commonwealth Court below affirmed the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board’s (“WCAB”) reversal of a Workers’ Corn-[529]*529pensation Judge’s (“WCJ”) decision granting appellant’s reinstatement and penalty petitions. For reasons that follow, we hold that appellant’s reinstatement petition was not timely filed. Accordingly, we affirm the order of the Commonwealth Court, albeit for different reasons.

I.

On January 24,1989, appellant sustained serious back injuries when he fell through a roof in the course of his employment with East Goshen Township (“Township”). On February 6, 1989, the Township issued a notice of compensation payable pursuant to which appellant received total disability benefits until he returned to his pre-injury position on September 20, 1989, with no loss of earnings. Over thirteen years later, on May 19, 2003, the parties entered into an agreement reinstating appellant’s total disability benefits from February 24, 2003, to March 17, 2003. His total disability benefits were then reinstated again from June 17, 2005, to August 29, 2005. And on June 20, 2007, his total disability benefits were once again reinstated. On November 27, 2007, appellant began working in a modified-duty position for a different employer as a result of which the parties entered into an agreement on January 7, 2008, reducing appellant’s benefits status from total to partial disability. Appellant worked for his new employer until January 24, 2008, at which time he felt that he was no longer capable of performing his modified duties.

On September 26, 2008, appellant filed the underlying reinstatement petition, seeking a modification of his disability status from partial to total disability effective January 24, 2008. On January 25, 2009, the Township ceased making the partial disability payments due according to the January 7, 2008 agreement, raising the issue at a hearing before a WCJ on the following day, January 26, 2009. On February 25, 2009, appellant filed a penalty petition stating that the Township violated the Act by unilaterally ceasing payments. The two petitions were consolidated.

On February 25, 2010, the WCJ granted appellant’s reinstatement petition, finding appellant to be credible, and crediting the deposition testimony of appellant’s medical expert, a physician board certified in pain management, that appellant was no longer able to perform the modified-duty position upon which his change from total to partial disability status was predicated. The WCJ also granted appellant’s penalty petition, concluding that the Township violated the Act by unilaterally ceasing payments due under the January 7, 2008 agreement.2

After the WCAB reversed the WCJ’s decision, the Commonwealth Court affirmed that reversal in a 2-1 split-decision holding that appellant’s reinstatement petition was untimely filed beyond the 500-week period for which compensation was payable to appellant under the Act, specifically Section 306(b) of the Act, 77 P.S. § 512, and Section 413(a) of the Act. Cozzone v. WCAB (PA Municipal/East Goshen), 41 A.3d 105 (Pa.Cmwlth.2012). The majority stated:

[Bjecause [appellant’s benefits were suspended due to [appellant’s return to his pre-injury position without a loss of earnings, Section 413(a) of the Act’s [530]*530500-week statute of repose, not its three-year statute of limitations, governs the outcome of this case. Having been filed beyond the 500-week period, therefore, [appellant]’s reinstatement petition is time-barred by Section 413(a) of the Act’s statute of repose.

Cozzone, 41 A.3d at 112-13. The court further held that appellant was not entitled to penalties under the Act for his employer’s unilateral cessation of payment, because appellant’s “right to compensation was completely extinguished by the expiration of Section 413(a) of the Act’s 500-week statute of repose[,]” notwithstanding the supplemental agreement dated January 7, 2008, providing for payment of partial disability benefits. Id. The court reasoned that under Sharon Steel Corp. v. WCAB (Myers), 670 A.2d 1194 (Pa.Cmwlth.1996), the agreement had no bearing on appellant’s right to compensation under the Act, because “a supplemental agreement entered into after the expiration of a statute of repose is void and unenforceable, and cannot resurrect the claimant’s claim.” Cozzone, 41 A.3d at 113 (citing Sharon Steel, 670 A.2d at 1197-98).

In the dissenting opinion, Judge (now President Judge) Pellegrini stated his belief that the July 7, 2008, supplemental agreement remains valid until terminated by supplemental agreement between the parties, a final receipt, or by a WCJ/ WCAB order. He noted that he would reverse the WCAB’s decision because appellant was last paid on June 20, 2007, and his reinstatement petition was timely filed with respect to that date. Id. at 116. The dissenting view does not directly address the Commonwealth Court majority’s conclusion concerning prior expiration of the Act’s 500-week statute of repose.

II.

We granted discretionary review recognizing the apparent tension between the Commonwealth Court’s opinion and observations in this Court’s opinion in Stewart v. WCAB (PA Glass Sand/US Silica), 562 Pa. 401, 756 A.2d 655 (2000). The issues accepted for review are:

(1) Whether the Commonwealth Court erred as a matter of law when it held that appellant’s petition to reinstate was barred by § 413(a) of the Workers’ Compensation Act, 77 P.S. § 772, when he filed the petition within three (3) years from the last date of payment of compensation paid pursuant to a supplemental agreement, payments were ongoing when appellant filed the petition to reinstate, and East Goshen Township unilaterally ceased payments while the petition was pending?

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Bluebook (online)
73 A.3d 526, 621 Pa. 23, 2013 WL 4405825, 2013 Pa. LEXIS 1785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cozzone-v-workers-compensation-appeal-board-pa-2013.