P.M. v. Metromedia Steakhouses Co.

931 S.W.2d 846, 1996 Mo. App. LEXIS 1401, 1996 WL 453202
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 13, 1996
DocketNo. 69604
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 931 S.W.2d 846 (P.M. v. Metromedia Steakhouses Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
P.M. v. Metromedia Steakhouses Co., 931 S.W.2d 846, 1996 Mo. App. LEXIS 1401, 1996 WL 453202 (Mo. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

PUDLOWSKI, Presiding Judge.

On May 22,1992, respondent P.M.1 was on an out-of-town business trip in her capacity as a marketing and advertising manager for appellant Metromedia Steakhouse when she was raped by Richard Biederman, a high-level Metromedia executive. Psychological trauma ensued, escalating over time despite her attempts to continue working for over a year after the attack. Eventually, P.M.’s mental condition deteriorated to the point where she was entirely unable to work (according to numerous doctors). The instant Worker’s Compensation action was subsequently filed.

During the period from June 3, 1993, to October 28, 1993, while P.M. was unable to work but was still a Metromedia employee, Metromedia made disability payments to her in amounts equivalent to two-thirds of her salary. Alleging that these benefits were terminated unjustifiably, without prior notice or explanation, P.M. sought a hardship hearing pursuant to RSMo. § 287.203, which the administrative law judge (ALJ) granted. After the accelerated hearing, the ALJ concluded that P.M. was permanently, totally disabled and entered an award accordingly. Citing § 287.203’s authorization for an award of the “cost of recovery,” the ALJ also ordered that Metromedia pay P.M.’s attorney’s fee. The Labor and Industrial Relations Commission (LIRC) affirmed this award in toto.

Metromedia and its insurer, National Union Fire Insurance Company (appellants), now challenge this award.2 Appellants contend that the ALJ erred in conducting the hearing under § 287.203 (and in awarding attorney’s fee pursuant to that provision), that there was insufficient evidence that P.M.’s disability is permanent, and that the ALJ’s award of future medical expenses is “vague, indefinite and not authorized” by relevant law. The award is affirmed in its entirety.

The only serious issues raised by appellants’ concern § 287.203. That statute was enacted in 1993, and there are no eases interpreting its provisions. In relevant part, it states:

Whenever the employer has provided compensation under section 287.170, 287.180 or 287.200, and terminates such compensation, the employer shall notify the employee of such termination and shall advise the employee of the reason for such termination. If the employee disputes the termination of such benefits, the employee may request a hearing before the division. ... Reasonable cost of recovery shall be awarded to the prevailing party.

The contention appellants argue with the most vehemence is that they never furnished P.M. with the kind of benefits contemplated by the statute, so that the predicate for a § 287.203 hearing (i.e., termination of bene[848]*848fits) was not satisfied. While tacitly conceding that they provided benefits to P.M. and later terminated them, appellants assert that there is an absence of substantial evidence that these payments are properly classifiable as Worker’s Compensation benefits.

Two Metromedia inter-office memoranda demonstrate that P.M. was provided the benefits at issue and that such benefits were terminated;- thus, the only dispute concerns how these benefits should be labelled. Though we need not decide it today, this court is not at all sure that the label matters; the relevant point is that after sustaining a work-related injury, P.M. received, then lost, employer-provided disability benefits while she was unable to work. In any event, examination of the inter-office memorandum dated June 2, 1993, reveals that the disability payments made were calculated as 66%% of her salary — the amount which §§ 287.170, 287.180, and 287.200 require. This is a sufficient basis for the LIRC’s factual determination that the disability payments received by P.M. were Worker’s Compensation benefits made pursuant to one of the relevant statutory provisions.

The evidence which appellants cite in support of the opposite conclusion does not undermine the validity of the award. The June 2 memo contains a line which reads, “Integrate pay with Worker’s Compensation” followed by the selections “yes,” “no” and “not determined yet.” The “not determined yet” and “no” selections each have an “X” by them, though the “X” by “not determined yet” has been marked through. Appellants argue that this line proves that P.M. did not in fact receive Worker’s Compensation benefits, but we find this evidence ambiguous. The memo does not explain the quoted line, nor is it self-explanatory. Even if this line indicates that disabled Metromedia employees are potentially eligible for two separate disability payments (i.e., regular wages and Worker’s Compensation), the memo does not on its face reveal which one P.M. received and which was left “unintegrated” by selection of the “no” response.

Appellants also rely on a statement which P.M. submitted to the ALJ in her Application for Hardship Setting, which reads as follows: “The employer has wholly failed and omitted to pay the employee any temporary total disability benefits-” Appellants claim this is an admission which conclusively demonstrates that P.M. “received absolutely no benefits for the care of her work-related injuries.” This is a curious position for appellants to take, especially given the stridency with which it is urged, as they elsewhere admit that Metromedia did provide disability benefits. But it hardly matters. The LIRC may have reconciled P.M.’s statement in her Application for Hardship Setting with the facts of the case by concluding that the payments provided by Metromedia were temporary partial (§ 287.180) or permanent total (§ 287.200) disability payments rather than temporary total benefits. More likely, they accepted P.M.’s subsequent explanation that at the time the statements in the application were made, P.M. was suffering from memory loss caused by the electrotherapy she had received as treatment for her psychiatric condition. In any event, our standard of review requires merely that the LIRC’s award be supported by competent and substantial evidence and that it not be clearly contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence; the LIRC was free to disregard any evidence before it, including the statement on which appellants rely. Strate v. Al Baker’s Restaurant, 864 S.W.2d 417, 419-421 (Mo.App. E.D.1993).

Appellants also argue that the ALJ erred in awarding P.M. her attorney’s fee irrespective of whether the hearing was properly conducted under § 287.203, because the phrase “cost of recovery” does not include attorney’s fee. Appellants point out that when a statute provides for an award of “costs” to a prevailing litigant, authorization for an award of attorney’s fee is generally not conferred thereby. Washington University v. Royal Crown Bottling Co., 801 S.W.2d 458, 470 (Mo.App. E.D.1990). However, there is no Missouri case addressing the question of whether the novel statutory phrase “cost of recovery” likewise excludes attorney’s fee.

Thus, we are faced with an issue of first impression. Our research does not uncover [849]*849use of the phrase “cost of recovery” in the worker’s compensation statute of any other state. However, Michigan Compiled Laws Annotated § 418.827(6) defines “expenses of recovery” to include attorney’s fee. Likewise, Montana Code Annotated (1995) § 39-71-414 uses the phrase “cost of the action” as a term inclusive of attorney’s fee, and the Montana Supreme Court in

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Bluebook (online)
931 S.W.2d 846, 1996 Mo. App. LEXIS 1401, 1996 WL 453202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pm-v-metromedia-steakhouses-co-moctapp-1996.