I.T.O. Corporation of Baltimore v. William Sellman Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, United States Department of Labor

954 F.2d 239
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 2, 1992
Docket90-1531
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 954 F.2d 239 (I.T.O. Corporation of Baltimore v. William Sellman Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, United States Department of Labor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
I.T.O. Corporation of Baltimore v. William Sellman Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, United States Department of Labor, 954 F.2d 239 (4th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

DONALD RUSSELL, Circuit Judge:

This case arises out of a claim filed under the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C. §§ 901-950 (1986). Employer, I.T.O. Corporation of Baltimore (“I.T.O.”), appeals from a decision of the Benefits Review Board (“Board”) affirming an administrative law judge’s (ALJ) decision denying I.T.O.’s request to terminate compensation and medical benefit payments or, alternatively, to offset its liability against settlement proceeds received by the claimant, William Sellman, through a third-party settlement agreement. We agree with the Board that I.T.O. may not terminate benefit payments, but reverse its determination that I.T.O. is not entitled to an offset.

There is no dispute in this case concerning William Sellman’s disability status. Sellman suffered a fall on July 10, 1979, while working on a ship known as the Algenib for I.T.O.’s predecessor, resulting in a fractured skull and paralysis. I.T.O. voluntarily paid compensation and medical benefits for total disability from July 11, 1979, until July 21, 1984. I.T.O. refused to make further payments after this date because Sellman refused to transfer to I.T.O. funds he received from a settlement of his third-party suit against the owners of the Algenib.

I.T.O., Sellman, and his wife 1 and children filed suit against the Algenib defendants in 1982 which culminated in two settlement agreements executed in June 1984. One agreement (“I.T.O. agreement”) called for the payment of $250,000 to I.T.O. The agreement provided that it would have “no force and effect” until “the companion Settlement Agreement of the Sellmans is approved by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County_” The I.T.O. agreement was signed by Mrs. Sellman, William’s attorney, and the attorneys for I.T.O. and the Algenib defendants.

The second agreement (“Sellman agreement”) required the Algenib defendants to pay $250,000 to the Sellmans in satisfaction of any claims against them. The Sellmans had filed nine causes of action against the Algenib, including one cause of action for loss of consortium. The Sellman agreement was signed by Mrs. Sellman, the Sell-mans’ attorney, Roger Smith, and the attorney for the Algenib defendants, Geoffrey Tobias. Like the I.T.O. agreement, the Sellman agreement was contingent upon approval by the Baltimore Circuit Court. Both agreements referenced I.T.O.’s alleged compensation lien. At the time the settlements were reached, I.T.O. had a lien of over one-half million dollars, which was growing at a rate of over $100,-000 a year.

The provision requiring approval by the circuit court was requested by the ship owners, because Mr. Sellman was under guardianship protection and the Baltimore County Circuit Court was the court which had approved Mrs. Sellman as Mr. Sell-man’s legal guardian. Pursuant to this requirement of the settlement agreements, Mr. Smith drafted a Petition to Compromise Claim for submission to the Balti *241 more County Circuit Court. The petition was drafted after the settlement agreements were executed and contained provisions which differed significantly from the provisions of the settlement agreements. Whereas the settlement agreements were silent as to whether I.T.O. had the right to suspend compensation payments, or to receive an offset against the proceeds of the Sellman settlement, the petition stated that I.T.O. had agreed to continue compensation and medical payments without interruption and that none of the proceeds of the Sell-man agreement were subject to offset because they were intended solely to compensate Mrs. Sellman for loss of consortium. The petition submitted to the Baltimore County Circuit Court resulted in approval of the Sellman agreement.

In finding that I.T.O. was required to continue making both compensation and medical payments, the ALJ found that the petition was incorporated into the settlement agreements, and relied on this document and testamentary evidence to find that the parties in fact intended that I.T.O. continue making payments without interruption. The ALJ further found that the circumstances of this case obviated Mr. Sellman’s responsibility under 83 U.S.C. § 933(g) to file a government form known as Form LS-33 reflecting I.T.O.’s written approval of its third-party settlement agreement. Finally, the AU determined that the proceeds of the Sellman agreement were for loss of consortium and thus not subject to offset.

The Board unanimously upheld the AU’s determination that I.T.O. was not entitled to terminate benefit payments. The Board reasoned that the requirement of section 33(g) that a claimant obtain employer’s written approval of any settlement claimant reached with a third party was inapplicable where, as in this case, employer was both a party to the third-party suit and helped negotiate the settlement reached between claimant and the third-party. The Board noted that, in any event, I.T.O. would have no right to terminate medical benefit payments because the statute only permitted termination of medical benefits where claimant failed to either obtain employer s written approval of the settlement or notify employer of the settlement, and there was no question that I.T.O. received notice of the Sellman agreement.

A majority of the Board also affirmed the AU’s finding that I.T.O. was not entitled to offset the proceeds of the Sellman agreement against its liability under the Act. The majority found that since the settlement agreements were ambiguous as to whether I.T.O. had waived its statutory right to an offset, the AU properly relied on extrinsic evidence to determine the intentions of the parties and that substantial evidence supported his findings regarding the intentions of the parties.

One Board member dissented from the majority’s determination regarding the offset issue. The dissenting Board member felt that I.T.O. had the right to either collect the entire $500,000 paid by the Algenib defendants immediately or to receive a credit against its future liability by suspending payments until its full offset was realized. The dissent also took the position that the petition to compromise claim was a separate document from the settlement agreements whose only purpose was to request the circuit court to approve the Sell-man agreement, and that the circuit court’s order did not approve the petition, but the Sellman agreement. Finally, the dissent argued that the AU’s findings regarding the intention of the parties were not supported by substantial evidence because the AU had misconstrued relevant testimony.

Under 33 U.S.C. § 933(a), an employee entitled to compensation under the Act need not elect to pursue his worker’s compensation claim to the exclusion of a negligence action against a third party. If, however, recovery is obtained from the third party, the employer is entitled to offset its liability under the Act against such recovery pursuant to 33 U.S.C. § 933(f). Section 33(g), 33 U.S.C. § 933

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954 F.2d 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ito-corporation-of-baltimore-v-william-sellman-director-office-of-ca4-1992.