Palos Electric Co. v. IC

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 30, 2000
Docket1-99-0323WC
StatusPublished

This text of Palos Electric Co. v. IC (Palos Electric Co. v. IC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palos Electric Co. v. IC, (Ill. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Industrial Commission Division

May 30, 2000

No. 1-99-0323WC

______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

______________________________________________________________________________

PALOS ELECTRIC COMPANY, ) Appeal from the

) Circuit Court of

Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Cook County, Illinois.

)

) No. 97 L 50610

THE INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION et al. )

(Sentry Claims Service, a Department of ) Honorable

Sentry Insurance, a Mutual Company), ) JOHN A. WARD,

) Judge Presiding.

Defendant-Appellees. )

______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE HOLDRIDGE delivered the Opinion of the Court:

______________________________________________________________________________

This appeal follows the Commission's denial of Palos Electric's petition under the Worker's Compensation Act, 820 ILCS 305/19(o) (West 1993).  An employee of Palos alleged he suffered on the job injury and filed a claim for compensation under the Workers' Compensation Act.  Palos, believing the claim to be non-compensable, requested that the insurer deny the claim.  Sentry Claims Service settled the claim and paid the employee's the claim over Palos' objections.  Palos filed a §19(o) petition requesting Sentry purge their records of the expense related to the claim.  The Commission denied Palos' §19(o) petition and the Cook County Circuit Court affirmed the Commission's decision.  Palos now appeals the Commission's denial of its petition.

Appellant, Palos Electric (Palos), employed Jeffrey Geibel (Geibel) as an electrician for approximately six years prior to July 25, 1994, the date of the alleged accident.  After having suffered from numbness and tingling in his hand for three and one-half years, on April 19, 1994, Geibel saw a physician and was diagnosed with bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome.  On July 26, 1994, he underwent surgery to correct his carpal tunnel syndrome.  All medical expenses related to Geibel's carpal tunnel syndrome diagnosis and treatment were paid by his group health insurance.  Geibel's treating physician, Dr. Henry Fuentes, a board certified orthopedic surgeon, offered no opinion as to the cause of Geibel's carpal tunnel but, on the group health insurance claim form, checked "no" in answer to the question "is condition related to [current or previous] employment."  In a written statement, Geibel described how Tom Bulow, one of the three brothers who owned Palos, asked him not to file for workers' compensation.  Tom asked him to accept a check from Palos that would get him through the four weeks he needed to be off work to recover from the surgery.  Tom Bulow later stated that the money was not intended to prevent Geibel from filing a workers' compensation claim but rather was a bonus for Geibel's good work.  Palos had paid Geibel a bonus on two prior occasions.  Geibel accepted $2000 for the time he would need to take off work and agreed to come back after four weeks of recovery.  After four weeks off, Geibel called Bulow to arrange his return to Palos but was told there was no work for him.  Geibel stated that he believed that he was not given work as a result of his injury and the bad feelings about the money that Palos had given him.   In September of 1994, Geibel resigned from Palos and, on October 1, began a new job as an electrician with another company.  Palos stated that it believed Geibel quit because he could not get along with his co-workers.  

On February 7, 1995, Geibel filed an Application for Adjustment of Claim (application) with the Illinois Industrial Commission against Palos for his bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome treatment and surgery.  On his application, Geibel indicated that his accident occurred on July 25, 1994, one day prior to his carpal tunnel surgery.  Palos forwarded the application to its insurer, Sentry Claims Service (Sentry).  On March 17, 1995, Palos wrote to Sentry stating that it believed the claim was non-compensable and should be denied.  Sentry undertook an investigation of the claim and hired an investigator to obtain the statements of Bill Bulow and Tom Bulow, Palos' principal officers.  Sentry also hired a physician, Dr. Richard Shin, to examine Geibel.  Dr. Shin agreed with Dr. Fuentes that Geibel did have carpal tunnel but did not conclude that the condition was caused or aggravated by his work as an electrician.  Sentry's senior claims adjustor originally took the position that the claim should not be paid because Geibel had symptoms of the condition, tingling and numbness, since 1991.  Sentry initially argued that the existence of symptoms over three years prior meant that Geibel's claim was time bared under the applicable three-year statute of limitations.  

Pursuant to the insurance contract between Palos and Sentry, Sentry entered into settlement negotiations with Geibel. (footnote: 1)  Sentry and Geibel came to an agreement and settled the claim.  They agreed on compensation for 10% loss in each hand, 38 weeks of compensation at $396.89 per week.  A total lump sum payment of $15,071.82 was paid to Geibel in June of 1995.  The settlement was approved by the Illinois Industrial Commission.  Sentry did not pay Geibel any temporary total disability benefits or medical benefits.  Included in the settlement was a statement by Sentry and Geibel stipulating that the matter was in dispute and the settlement did not constitute an admission of liability on the part of Sentry or Palos.  Geibel is not a party to this case and would not be required to refund any payment received.   See 820 ILCS 305/19(o) (West 1993).         

After the settlement had been paid, Palos again wrote to Sentry contending that Geibel's injury had not been work related and should not have been compensated.  Palos requested that Sentry remove any record of the settlement from Palos' file so that no loss or expense would be reflected for the purpose of determining Palos' insurance rates.  Sentry responded by letter and informed Palos that it had two physicians' opinions, Geibel's treating physician, Dr. Fuentes,  and the independent physician hired by Sentry, Dr. Shin, both supporting Geibel's claim that his injury was work related.  Sentry refused to remove record of the loss from Palos' experience rating.   

On March 8, 1996, Palos filed a petition under 820 ILCS 305/19(o).  §19(o) allows an employer to challenge payments made by its insurance company for claims that the employer believes should not have been compensated.  Palos filed a §19(o) petition seeking: 1) a finding that Geibel's claim was not work related nor compensable; 2) an order requiring Sentry to purge its records of any loss or expense associated with Geibel's claim; 3) reimbursement of attorney's fees; 4) reimbursement on any payments made to Sentry for the rate adjustment fund or second injury fund; and 5) an order that any loss or expense related to this claim not be factored into Palos' future insurance rates with Sentry.  After oral arguments, the Commission, en banc

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Palos Electric Co. v. IC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palos-electric-co-v-ic-illappct-2000.