Norfolk Shipbuilding & Drydock Corporation v. Robert T. Nance

858 F.2d 182, 1988 WL 98411
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 1989
Docket87-3892
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 858 F.2d 182 (Norfolk Shipbuilding & Drydock Corporation v. Robert T. Nance) 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
Norfolk Shipbuilding & Drydock Corporation v. Robert T. Nance, 858 F.2d 182, 1988 WL 98411 (4th Cir. 1989).

Opinions

HARRISON L. WINTER, Chief Judge:

Norfolk Shipbuilding & Drydock Corporation (Norfolk) petitions to set aside an order of the Benefits Review Board (the Board) affirming the decision and order of an Administrative Law Judge that required Norfolk to reinstate Robert T. Nance to his former position with back pay and to pay a penalty to the Deputy Commission.1 The decision and order were entered pursuant to § 49 of the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Worker’s Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C. § 948a (1976) (the Act.).2 The AD found that Nance had proved that Norfolk retaliated against him in violation of § 49 of the Act by discharging him from his job after the parties entered into an agreement to settle Nance’s pending claims for disability compensation, age discrimination and dis[184]*184crimination under § 49, and a grievance to his union.

The principal questions before us are whether testimonial evidence purportedly demonstrating that Nance voluntarily agreed to quit his job as partial consideration for the settlement was erroneously excluded by the AU, and whether the Board erred in sustaining the AU’s finding that Norfolk had the requisite discriminatory intent to violate § 49.

We perceive no reversible error on the part of the AU or the Board, and conclude that the Board’s order should be affirmed and enforced.

I.

On January 18, 1983, Norfolk and Nance entered into an agreement to settle Nance’s various claims against Norfolk for a lump sum payment. They stated the terms of the settlement on a government settlement form, Form LS-471, signed by their respective counsel, and submitted it to the Deputy Commissioner, all as required by 83 U.S.C. § 908(i) and 20 C.F.R. § 702.241-243. On the same day, the agreement was approved by Deputy Commissioner Basil Voultsides of the Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs. As the AU found, the LS-471 did not contain a “provision expressly or impliedly permitting Employer to discharge Claimant after consummation of the settlement.” In addition to making no mention that Nance would be discharged or that he would quit his employment, the parties described the type of employment that Nance, despite his injuries, could still perform. Shortly after March 7, 1983, Nance, who had been in lay-off status, received a letter from Norfolk advising him that his job had been terminated and all of his insurance benefits had been cancelled. Before the AU, Norfolk proffered evidence that as part of the settlement Nance and it had verbally agreed that Nance’s employment would be terminated. Nance’s proffered evidence was a denial of the existence of any such agreement. The AU ruled that Norfolk’s evidence was inadmissible and he refused to receive it.

Noting that Paragraph IV of Form LS-471 provides for “Action of the Deputy Commissioner” in order to make the settlement effective, the AU concluded that settlement procedures under the Act clearly contemplated that the complete agreement must be set forth in writing as a prerequisite to approval:

[T]he text of an LS-471 makes it clear that agreements extrinsic to that document are not to be considered in the approval process. It is apparent from the face of the LS-471 that it is intended to be the complete and integrated statement of the agreement between Claimant and Employer. Nor are there any ambiguities in the document requiring resolution. The LS-471 must, on its face, be considered an integrated agreement incorporating into a single written memorial all prior negotiations. There is accordingly, a conclusive presumption that the LS-471 incorporates the whole contract and is the sole evidence of the agreement. Employer may not, therefore, adduce evidence to show that Claimant had as part of the settlement agreed to voluntary termination of his employment after the settlement in an attempt to vary the terms of the agreement.

Accordingly, he refused to receive Norfolk’s evidence of an oral agreement as part of the settlement to terminate Nance’s employment.

The AU further found the requisite discriminatory intent for a § 49 violation in Norfolk’s testimony as to why it sought a voluntary termination agreement. Norfolk employees testified that Norfolk had a practice of settling only those compensation claims in which the employee agreed to leave his or her job. The AU decision quoted the following testimony by Norfolk’s Director of Safety and Workmens’ Compensation:

All lump sum settlements have worked around the employee voluntarily quitting. The employee is usually unhappy at that point, and we want a clean slate.
* * * * * *
[185]*185[N]ormally, the employee is unhappy. The medical information is becoming conflicting, that there are several doctors involved. You build a hostility situation where no matter what you do everybody is not going to be happy.
AU: This is because of the previous dealings on the claim, is that correct? Witness: That is correct. So what you arrive at, a lump sum settlement to me means a clean slate for everyone and off you go on with the rest of your life and we close up our books, and that is it.
* * * * * *
AU: You are talking about a clean slate. If I understand you correctly is that what you are saying is that you felt that in view of the preceding history of this Workers’ Compensation claim that there may have been some friction, and as a result you wanted Mr. Nance out of the company for a clean slate, is that correct?
Witness: That is correct.

On the basis of what he terms “generalized animus against longshore claimants as a class” because of friction engendered in the claim process, and specific testimony that Norfolk wanted a “clean slate” in the case of Nance, the AU found that Norfolk discriminated against Nance for filing a compensation claim in violation of 33 U.S.C. § 948a.3

Finding sufficient specific evidence of retaliatory intent in the case before him, the AU declined to reach the question of whether Norfolk’s policy of conditioning settlement on voluntary termination was consistent with § 49. But on appeal, the Board ruled, in addition to affirming the findings and conclusions of the AU, that Norfolk’s general policy of conditioning settlements upon a termination of employment was a violation of § 49 as a practice running “counter to the beneficent purpose of the Act.”

II.

This appeal presents two issues: whether the AU correctly excluded the proffered evidence; and whether there was substantial evidence of discriminatory intent against Nance to hold Norfolk in violation of Section 49, or, in the alternative, whether the Board erred in holding that Norfolk’s general policy of conditioning settlement on voluntary termination agreements violated the Act.

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Bluebook (online)
858 F.2d 182, 1988 WL 98411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norfolk-shipbuilding-drydock-corporation-v-robert-t-nance-ca4-1989.