Mercer Lime & Stone Co. v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board

923 A.2d 1251, 2007 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 242
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 17, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 923 A.2d 1251 (Mercer Lime & Stone Co. v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mercer Lime & Stone Co. v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board, 923 A.2d 1251, 2007 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 242 (Pa. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION BY

President Judge LEADBETTER.

Employer, Mercer Lime and Stone Company, petitions for review of the order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board), which affirmed the grant of claimant Kenneth McGallis’ penalty petition. The issue on appeal is whether employer failed to pay claimant in a timely manner in violation of the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act). 1 After review, we conclude that employer’s payment was untimely and, therefore, affirm the imposition of the five-percent penalty.

The facts are relatively undisputed. By decision and order circulated on October 18, 2004, the Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ) approved a compromise and release agreement between claimant, employer and employer’s insurer, resolving *1252 McGallis’ claim petition, which pertained to work-related injuries sustained on April 30, 2002. The agreement provided for payment to claimant in the amount of $100,000.00, payment of attorney’s fees to claimant’s counsel in the amount of $25,000.00, and payment of litigation costs to claimant’s counsel in the amount of $3,211.77. On November 5, 2004, employer sent claimant a check for the required amount; however, the check lacked an authorized signature and, therefore, was not negotiable. 2 Claimant’s counsel received the unsigned check on November 8 and promptly returned it to employer’s insurer. The insurance carrier received the claimant’s check on November 10.

Thereafter, on November 18, 2004, claimant’s penalty petition was mailed to the Department of Labor and Industry. Upon receiving his copy of the petition, employer’s counsel directed the insurance carrier to issue claimant’s replacement check. The original check issued to claimant was then signed and sent to claimant on November 22; claimant cashed the check the following day.

The penalty petition was litigated before the WCJ, during which claimant, employer’s counsel and the claims adjustor testified. Notably, the claims adjuster characterized the lack of an authorized signature on the initial check as an “honest oversight,” and indicated that he did not instruct anyone to send the check without a signature. The adjustor further testified that, following the WCJ’s decision and order, the employer had requested a copy of claimant’s letter of resignation. The adjustor then spoke with employer’s counsel, Charles Brown, who indicated that a letter of resignation had not been signed but that he would contact claimant’s counsel about the matter. According to the adjustor, Attorney Brown told him to hold onto the check in order to “speed up recovery of the resignation letter.” Hearing of April 14, 2005, Notes of Testimony (N.T.) at 18. The adjustor denied that the delay was intended to cause harm to claimant.

Attorney Brown also testified regarding the delay involved in providing claimant with a properly signed check. According to his testimony, following the WCJ’s decision, Attorney Brown instructed the adjustor to issue the required checks. Thereafter, the insurance carrier requested a copy of claimant’s letter of resignation. Attorney Brown initially thought one had been signed in connection with the compromise and release but then realized he had inadvertently neglected to have one prepared. Following several conversations with opposing counsel’s office staff, Attorney Brown believed that claimant would sign the resignation letter. When he subsequently discovered that the first check had been returned, he instructed the adjustor to “hold off having the check signed and reissued to Mr. McGallis because [he] thought it would speed up the process of having Mr. McGallis sign the letter of resignation, which [he] was under the impression Mr. McGallis was going to voluntarily sign....” N.T. at 51. Attorney Brown further testified:

I really believed that this was the way to handle the situation, because Employer was putting pressure on me to get this letter of resignation, and I thought this was a way to speed the process up. Had I known that Mr. McGallis was never going to sign the letter of resignation, I would have realized that there was nothing I could do about that. I’d have to deal with the employer and I would have instructed [the adjustor] to issue the checks right away.

Id. at 53.

Based upon the foregoing, the WCJ found that employer and insurer applied *1253 economic pressure to claimant in order to procure a resignation letter and, therefore, the delay in sending the check was due to more than an innocent oversight. Specifically, the WCJ found as follows:

I credit [the adjustor’s] testimony that it was a “honest oversight” that employer sent claimant the ... check with no signature.... Had insurer simply turned around and reissued the check with a signature and the check was not received until after 30 days following the circulation of the [WCJ’s] decision, at most the claimant would be proving a de minimus [sic] violation of the [Act]. However, what converts employer and insurer’s conduct from a de minimus [sic] violation to one with significance, even though the payment occurred 36 days after the circulation date of the decision and order, is that employer and insurer clearly attempted to use economic leverage by withholding the sending of the check in order to compel the claimant to sign a letter of resignation. There is no testimony that a letter of resignation was ever negotiated as part of the compromise and release agreement.

WCJ’s decision and order (circulated July 19, 2005), at 13.

The WCJ concluded that employer had 30 days following his order to pay claimant and, therefore, payment was due by November 17. Consequently, the WCJ found that employer’s payment, which claimant received on November 23, was six days late. Accordingly, the WCJ granted the penalty petition and imposed a $5,000.00 penalty (5% of claimant’s benefit). The Board affirmed and the present appeal followed.

On appeal, employer contends that claimant failed to prove that employer’s payment was untimely in violation of the Act. According to employer, it paid claimant in a timely manner because the check was first issued approximately eighteen days after the WCJ’s decision. Employer also suggests that its responsibility to issue the settlement proceeds and the time available to take that action did not begin until after the relevant appeal period (in this case twenty days) had passed. Therefore, since payment occurred on November 22, fifteen days after the appeal period expired on November 7, employer contends that its payment was timely under the Act. Finally, employer argues that, even if we were to conclude that employer had thirty days from the date of the WCJ’s decision and order in which to pay claimant, the payment to claimant was only six days late, and three days of that delay could be attributed to the time involved in returning the original check to insurance carrier. Accordingly, employer argues that its payment was actually only three days late, rendering the penalty excessive. 3

We begin by noting the statutory provisions relevant to the employer’s obligation to timely pay compensation benefits.

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Bluebook (online)
923 A.2d 1251, 2007 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercer-lime-stone-co-v-workers-compensation-appeal-board-pacommwct-2007.