Principal Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Progressive United Corp.
This text of 674 So. 2d 1073 (Principal Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Progressive United Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
PRINCIPAL MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
PROGRESSIVE UNITED CORPORATION, d/b/a KVKI, Defendant-Applicant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
Mayer, Smith & Roberts by Frank K. Carroll, Shreveport, for Defendant-Applicant.
Kantrow, Spaht, Weaver & Blitzer by Martin E. Golden, Baton Rouge, for Plaintiff-Respondent.
Before MARVIN, NORRIS and BROWN, JJ.
MARVIN, Chief Judge.
In this dispute between the plaintiff-group health insurer and the defendant-employer of an injured employee, we granted a writ to review the Workers' Compensation Hearing Officer's denial of the employer's exception of no cause of action. The issue presented by the exception is whether LRS 23:1212, which took effect January 1, 1990, allows the group health insurer to recover from the employer, who is self-insured for workers' compensation, *1074 all or part of the medical expense benefits paid to the employee-insured under the group health policy.
Our review of the record convinces us that the exception was properly denied. We affirm the WCHO's ruling for these reasons:
FACTUAL AND LEGAL CONTEXT
For purposes of the exception of no cause of action, we accept as true these allegations of the plaintiff-health insurer, Principal Mutual Life Insurance Co.:
The employee, Showalter, was injured in the course and scope of his employment with the defendant, Progressive United Corporation, doing business as the radio station KVKI, on March 8, 1994.
Principal Mutual paid about $11,000 of the medical expenses Showalter incurred for treatment of the work injury, which expenses apparently total over $14,000.
Under LRS 23:1203, KVKI is legally obligated to Showalter for payment of all medical expenses relating to his work injury.
Under the terms of the group health policy, Principal Mutual is subrogated to Showalter's rights against KVKI, to the full extent of the benefits paid by Principal Mutual under that policy.
Alternatively, and in the event that LRS 23:1212 bars Principal Mutual from recovering the portion of the group health insurance payments attributable to the percentage of premiums for that coverage paid by KVKI, Principal Mutual may recover from KVKI the portion of the group health payments corresponding to the percentage of group health insurance premiums paid by Showalter or by his wife individually.
Showalter paid an as-yet unspecified portion of the premiums for the group health coverage.
KVKI's exception is premised on the assertions that the right to recover medical expenses under § 1203 is personal to the injured employee, and that Principal Mutual's payment of a portion of Showalter's medical expenses had the effect of extinguishing KVKI's obligation for those expenses, by the express wording of § 1212.
LRS 23:1212
The litigants generally agree that § 1212 applies here, but advance differing interpretations of the statute's meaning. To facilitate discussion, we emphasize both the sentence sequence and the content of the statute, which was enacted by the legislature as a single paragraph:
§ 1212. Medical expense offset.
[First sentence]
Payment by any person or entity, other than a direct payment by the employee, a relative or friend of the employee, of medical expenses that are owed under this Chapter shall extinguish the claim against the employer or insurer for those medical expenses.
[Second sentence]
This Section shall not be regarded as a violation of R.S. 23:1163 [which otherwise prohibits the employer from charging the employee with the cost of compensation, directly or indirectly].
[Third sentence]
If the employee or the employee's spouse actually pay premiums for health insurance, either as direct payments or as itemized deductions from their salaries, then this offset will only apply in the same percentage, if any, that the employer of the employee or the employer of his spouse paid the health insurance premiums.
The statute has been aptly described in the Malone-Johnson workers' compensation treatise as
[a]n interesting provision of uncertain import... It specifies that payment "by any person or entity other than a direct payment by the employee, a relative or friend of the employee," of medical expenses otherwise owed by the employer extinguishes the claim against the employer or carrier for those expenses. This provision is specifically stated not to be a violation of LSA-R.S. 23:1163, which otherwise prohibits any direct or indirect charging of the cost of compensation to the employee. However, if the employer and the employee (or the spouse's employer and the employee's spouse) have shared the cost *1075 of premiums for health and accident insurance (which is the most likely source of the payment envisioned by the section), the offset applies only in the same percentage in which the employer paid the premiums.
Malone & Johnson, Workers' Compensation Law and Practice, 13 Louisiana Civil Law Treatise (3d ed. 1994), § 287 at pp. 791-792. Our emphasis.
On its face, the statute speaks rather broadly of "the claim" against the employer being extinguished in the first sentence, but refers to a more limited or partial offset of the claim in the third sentence. We must construe the statutory provisions as a meaningful whole, and not in isolation, to reconcile the apparent or arguable inconsistencies and to discern the legislature's intention as to the purpose, meaning and scope of the statute. Garrett v. Seventh Ward Gen. Hosp., 95-0017 (La. 9/22/95), 660 So.2d 841; O'Neal v. Jackson Parish Police Jury, 27,452 (La.App. 2d Cir. 6/21/95), 658 So.2d 240.
For almost a decade before § 1212 was enacted, the courts concluded that § 1163's general prohibition against charging the employee with the cost of workers' compensation, directly or indirectly, prevented the employer from receiving a credit or offset against its § 1203 medical expense obligation for payments made toward those expenses by someone other than the employer or the w.c. insurer, such as the employee's group health insurer. See, for example, Bryant v. New Orleans Public Service, Inc., 414 So.2d 322 (La.1982) and Woolsey v. Cotton Bros. Bakery, 535 So.2d 1119 (La.App. 2d Cir.1988), writ denied. The employee who paid a portion of the premiums for group health coverage was regarded as having contributed to that coverage directly. Even, however, in circumstances where the employer paid the entire monetary premium for the group health coverage, the employee was deemed to have contributed to the coverage indirectly, based on the rationale that the coverage constituted a fringe benefit of the employment, part of what the employee "earned" from the employer as remuneration for his or her work.
With this historical backdrop, and in light of the legislature's express statement in the second sentence of § 1212 that the provisions of § 1212 shall not be regarded as a violation of § 1163, we conclude that the legislature, by adopting § 1212, intended to allow or to grant the employer a credit or offset against the employer's § 1203 medical expense obligation for medical expenses paid by someone other than the employee or a relative or friend of the employee. The legislature clearly coupled this credit or offset, however, with a proviso
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674 So. 2d 1073, 1996 La. App. LEXIS 857, 1996 WL 229837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/principal-mut-life-ins-co-v-progressive-united-corp-lactapp-1996.