Menichetti v. Palermo Supply Co.
This text of 933 A.2d 16 (Menichetti v. Palermo Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Philip MENICHETTI, Petitioner-Respondent,
v.
PALERMO SUPPLY COMPANY, Respondent-Appellant.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
Sherman & Viscomi, attorneys for appellant (Anthony J. Brown, on the brief).
Silvi, Fedele & Honschke, attorneys for respondent (Ralph F. Fedele, on the brief).
Levinson Axelrod, attorneys for amicus curiae New Jersey Advisory Council on Safety and Health (Richard J. Marcolus, Edison, on the brief).
Before Judges WEISSBARD, S.L. REISNER and GILROY.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
S.L. REISNER, J.A.D.
This case concerns the proper construction of N.J.S.A. 34:15-64c, a provision of the Workers' Compensation Act[1] that allows an employer to pay a reduced amount of counsel fees to the employee if the employer makes a good faith offer of compensation prior to the hearing. The issue is whether such an offer, which is made before the employer has the employee examined by its doctor but which also turns out to be higher than the percentage of permanent disability that the employer's doctor eventually determines, is nonetheless "tendered in good faith" so as to reduce the employer's liability to pay the employee's counsel fees. We hold that *18 such an offer does entitle the employer to the benefit of the statutory reduction in counsel fees.
I
Where an employee obtains a judgment awarding workers' compensation, the Act requires the employer to pay the employee's counsel "a reasonable attorney fee, not exceeding 20% of the judgment." N.J.S.A. 34:15-64a. However, the Act also provides the employer an incentive to offer compensation in advance of any hearing on a claim petition, by providing that if the employer makes the offer and actually tenders the offered compensation, any counsel fee will be calculated only on the difference between the employer's offer and the eventual award.
A fee shall be allowed at the discretion of the judge of compensation when, in the official's judgment, the services of an attorney and medical witnesses are necessary for the proper presentation of the case. . . . When, however, at a reasonable time, prior to any hearing compensation has been offered and the amount then due has been tendered in good faith or paid within 26 weeks from the date of the notification to the employer of an accident or an occupational disease or the employee's final active medical treatment or within 26 weeks after the employee's return to work whichever is later or within 26 weeks after employer's notification of the employee's death, the reasonable allowance for attorney fee shall be based upon only that part of the judgment or award in excess of the amount of compensation, theretofore offered, tendered in good faith or paid. When the amount of the judgment, or when that part of the judgment or award in excess of compensation, offered, tendered in good faith or paid as aforesaid, is less than $200, an attorney fee may be allowed not in excess of $50.
[N.J.S.A. 34:15-64c (emphasis added).]
Against this statutory backdrop, we briefly review the facts and procedural history giving rise to this appeal. Petitioner Philip Menichetti injured his knee at work on October 7, 2005. He filed a claim petition on November 7, 2005. However, he did not undergo a partial medial meniscectomy of the knee until two days later on November 9, 2005. He received follow-up care from his doctor in December 2005. Less than two months later, on February 22, 2006, before having Menichetti examined by its own doctor, the employer offered Menichetti an amount representing fifteen percent of partial disability of petitioner's leg. The employer paid Menichetti in accordance with its offer.
The employer's doctor examined petitioner in April 2006, but was unable to opine with certainty as to permanency because petitioner did not bring his treatment records to the examination. In June 2006, after receiving the records, the employer's doctor opined that there was a seven and one-half percent permanent disability. Petitioner's doctor, who examined him in August 2006, found a forty-five percent disability. By November 2006, the parties had agreed upon a settlement of twenty-two and one-half percent disability with credit for the fifteen percent the employer had already paid. However, they disagreed on whether the original tender was a bona fide offer under N.J.S.A. 34:15-64c, for purposes of calculating petitioner's counsel fee.[2]*19
Relying on Coponi v. Federal Industries, 31 N.J. 1, 155 A.2d 1 (1959), the workers' compensation judge determined that the employer's initial tender was not made in good faith, because the employer had no medical basis on which to make the offer.
[T]he Court has to look at whether or not there is a basis for the respondent making the tender, and I've felt in this case that that amount was more than should have been made, so to speak, in good faith, as being a good faith tender, there was no real basis to make that amount of tender . . . and the more proper amount of tender should have been . . . 7½ percent, based upon the respondent's medical examination, which was what disclosed the disability.
Hence, the judge reasoned that the employer's credit should be limited to the seven and one-half percent disability later substantiated by its doctor.
II
Based upon our consideration of the Act and applicable case law, we conclude the trial court misconstrued N.J.S.A. 34:15-64c. We begin by considering Coponi, supra, the case on which the trial judge relied. In that case, the employer had the employee examined, and had a doctor's opinion as to sixty percent disability, some seven weeks before the employer made an offer to pay compensation. Moreover, the offer was not couched in terms of any agreement to pay a specific percentage, or to be bound to pay that percentage on a permanent basis. Rather, the employer simply made a general offer to pay compensation and began sending the employee checks. Not until just prior to the hearing did the employer finally concede that it agreed the employee had a sixty percent disability.
In considering the issue of the employer's right to pay reduced counsel fees under N.J.S.A. 34:15-64c, the Court first considered the purpose of the statute and its relationship to the offer requirement:
The statute possesses a dual function. It is designed to give protection to an attorney who invests substantial time and effort in the employee's claim, and to stimulate the full, fair, unqualified and timely discharge of the employer's obligation to pay compensation. Accomplishment of these objectives can be brought about only by an interpretation which gives full force to the lawmakers' language. The requirement for the offer of compensation (that is, the amount of benefits or the percentage of disability which the employer concedes, subject to N.J.S.A. 34:15-16, to be discussed later) and the tender "in good faith" of the sum then due represents the measure of the duty imposed. The obligation to make a good faith tender is not limited to the mere delivery of cash or a check for any benefits then due; it cannot be considered as a separate and distinct matter. The real significance must be gathered from the context, that is, in relation to and in characterization of the nature of the offer to pay compensation.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
933 A.2d 16, 396 N.J. Super. 118, 2007 N.J. Super. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/menichetti-v-palermo-supply-co-njsuperctappdiv-2007.