General Electric Co. v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board

849 A.2d 1166, 578 Pa. 94, 2004 Pa. LEXIS 1278
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 27, 2004
Docket47 WAP 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 849 A.2d 1166 (General Electric Co. 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
General Electric Co. v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board, 849 A.2d 1166, 578 Pa. 94, 2004 Pa. LEXIS 1278 (Pa. 2004).

Opinions

OPINION ANNOUNCING THE JUDGMENT OF THE COURT

Justice NIGRO.

We granted allowance of appeal in this workers’ compensation case to decide whether the workers’ compensation judge (“WCJ”) properly found that a light-duty position offered to [98]*98James Myers (“Claimant”) was a temporary position and if so, whether the WCJ properly modified Claimant’s benefits only for that period of time that the position was available. We affirm the WCJ’s decision in both respects.

On September 21, 1995, Claimant injured his head while working for Appellant General Electric Company (“Employer”) as a welder and an assembler.1 Employer subsequently issued a notice of compensation payable, acknowledging Claimant’s injury and agreeing to pay him total disability benefits of $509.00 per week. Claimant eventually returned to work with Employer in a light-duty position and his benefits were suspended. See Meyers Dep., 4/20/1998, at 5-6. In April 1996, however, Claimant was laid off from that position and his total disability benefits were reinstated. See id.

On November 13, 1997, Employer filed a petition to modify Claimant’s benefits, alleging that he had acted in bad faith in failing to follow through with several referrals to open jobs within his medical limitations. After Claimant filed an answer denying Employer’s allegations, however, Employer amended its petition to allege only that Claimant had acted in bad faith in refusing two specific job offers, both of which were with a telemarketing company called Smart Telecommunications, Inc. (“Smart”). In support of its petition, Employer presented the deposition testimony of (1) Janet Winschel, the general manager of Expediter Corporation (“Expediter”), an employment consulting firm that Employer’s insurance carrier hired to find Claimant a job; (2) Stacey Marchione, the owner and president of Smart; and (3) two doctors who had examined Claimant.

According to the testimony of Ms. Winschel and Ms. Marchione, Smart interviewed Claimant on July 24, 1997, and thereafter offered him a position as a customer service survey- or for forty hours a week at a rate of $9.00 per hour. In that position, Claimant would be required to contact various businesses by telephone to verify their names and addresses so that Smart’s clients could send the businesses information about products. Claimant was expected to work in his home, [99]*99but Employer’s insurance carrier would provide for all of his necessary equipment as well as training.2 Significantly, three separate doctors had examined Claimant on Employer’s behalf and all had approved the position as within Claimant’s medical capabilities.

A short time after he received the offer, however, Claimant informed Smart that he could not work in his home because he lived in an area zoned for agricultural use only.3 Thereafter, Ms. Winschel notified Claimant that office space had been rented for him to perform the surveyor position and that training would begin on August 15, 1997. In spite of the resolution of this issue, on the day before the training was to begin, Claimant notified Ms. Winschel that he was declining the Smart position based on his family doctor’s advice. Two months later, Employer sought an independent medical examination of Claimant, following which the examining doctor concluded that Claimant was medically capable of performing the Smart position. Expediter therefore re-offered Claimant the surveyor position on Smart’s behalf. Nevertheless, Claimant declined the position again.

On cross-examination at their depositions, both Ms. Winschel and Ms. Marchione revealed that the surveyor position was to have been fully subsidized by Employer’s insurance carrier. See Winschel Dep., 2/12/98, at 76-77; Marchione Dep., 4/29/98, at 34. That is, Employer’s insurance carrier was to have paid for all of Claimant’s wages, insurance, taxes, equipment, and training, as well as for the rent on the facility where he would have worked.4 See Winschel Dep., at 47, 77, 88; Marchione Dep., at 34, 43, 76, 89, 99. However, both Ms. [100]*100Winschel and Ms. Marchione also testified that the subsidization period was limited in duration and typically lasted just ninety days or less.5

Ms. Marchione added that under the subsidization program, if subsidized employees meet Smart’s productivity standards by the end of their subsidy periods, Smart will continue to employ them and will place them on its own payroll. See Marchione Dep., at 85-86; see also Winschel Dep. at 78 (“If they are productive employees they will be hired on Smart’s employment payroll.”). However, Ms. Marchione also acknowledged that when a formerly subsidized employee is officially placed on Smart’s payroll, his job may change, his hours may be reduced, and his wages may decrease as the subsidy rate is higher than the rate at which Smart normally [101]*101pays its employees.6,7 See id. at 85-86, 56-59. Ms. Marchione further conceded that the turnover rate for employees who worked at Smart based on Expediter referrals was “very high.” See id. at 49-53. Indeed, according to Ms. Winschel, while Expediter had placed fifty-plus people at Smart since Smart was incorporated in September 1997, only about four of those people were officially hired by Smart at the end of the subsidy period.8 See Winschel Dep. at 81-82.

Meanwhile, the two doctors who testified on behalf of Employer both opined that Claimant was capable of performing the surveyor position.9 In defending his refusal to accept the position, Claimant offered his own testimony as well as the deposition testimony from three different doctors. Notably, Claimant testified that he thought that he could perform the surveyor position, but expressed a concern that he might have trouble with the writing component of the job. Claimant nevertheless stated that he refused the position based on his family doctor’s recommendation. In fact, two of the doctors produced by Claimant, one of whom was his family doctor, testified that they did not believe that Claimant could perform [102]*102the surveyor position. On the other hand, the third doctor whose testimony Claimant offered opined that the position was within Claimant’s medical limitations.

After reviewing all of the evidence, on June 14, 2000, the WCJ issued a decision granting Employer’s modification petition in part and denying it in part. In particular, the WCJ determined that Claimant could perform the surveyor position offered to him and that his refusal of that position was improper.10 Nevertheless, the WCJ also found that the position was only temporarily available to Claimant for ninety days. As she explained:

[Ijnasmuch as said position was a funded position, only guaranteed for a period of ninety (90) days, and there was no assurance or obligation on behalf of Smart Telecommunications, Inc. to hire the Claimant after the period of funding ran out, said job is found to only have been temporarily available to the Claimant for those ninety (90) days.

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General Electric Co. v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board
849 A.2d 1166 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
849 A.2d 1166, 578 Pa. 94, 2004 Pa. LEXIS 1278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-electric-co-v-workers-compensation-appeal-board-pa-2004.