Protz v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board

131 A.3d 572, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 18
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 6, 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 131 A.3d 572 (Protz 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
Protz v. Workers' Compensation Appeal Board, 131 A.3d 572, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 18 (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION BY

President Judge DAN PELLEGRINI.

Mary Ann Protz (Claimant) petitions for review of the order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board) affirming the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ) which awarded Derry Area School District (Employer) and PSBA/Old Republic Insurance Company (Insurer) subrogation of a third party medical malpractice award Claimant received with respect to medical treatment she underwent following her accepted workplace, injury. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the Board’s order. .

I

The following facts are not in dispute. Claimant sustained a> work-related injury to her right knee in the form of right knee pain with underlying vascular impairment from a total knee arthroplasty with chronic regional pain, syndrome type I. (reflex sympathetic dystrophy) while working for Employer on April 23, 2007. Employer accepted the work injury and was paying Claimant partial-disability benefits as of January 2012 pursuant to an impairment rating evaluation.3

Subsequently, Claimant’s work injury necessitated a total knee replacement resulting in an inadvertent transected popli-teal artery. As a result, Claimant .filed medical malpractice actions against the hospital where the operation was performed and the operating doctor and his practice in the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County, alleging that Defendants negligently performed the procedure and failed to obtain Claimant’s informed consent.

In the course of the medical malpractice lawsuits, Claimant submitted a medical report from her expert, Raymond M. Vance, M.D. (Dr. Vance), stating that as a result of Claimant’s work injury, she underwent a total knee replacement performed by Dr. [574]*574Hershoek, and that due to the negligent manner in which it was performed, Claimant suffered “a laceration completely dividing her popliteal artery” which in turn necessitated subsequent popliteal artery repair, embolectomy and bypass procedure. (Reproduced Record [R.R.] at 11a.)

Specifically, Dr. Vance’s report stated:

While’her'vascular insufficiency has been reversed, the patient is-left with continuing symptoms consistent with a chronic regional pain syndrome compli-eating her artery laceration. I make the observation that this condition, that is complex regional pain syndrome, is known to commonly occur When significant neurovascular injury of the sort she sustained happens. With reasonable medical probability, the entirety of her symptom complex at the present time is the direct result of the complication she suffered. All treatment she has required since the complication can specifically be directly related to the complication’itself. Apart from the patient’s specific need to undergo revision total knee replacement surgery, all vascular procedures in particular and any procedure directed at pain management considerations with medical probability derives entirely from the patient’s complication and its need for ongoing care.
Her disability results in my view solely at the present time from her complications of chronic regional pain syndrome that are directly attributable to the vascular injury.
Were it only for her knee itself, she would be back to work at her usual and customary employment.

(Id.) This action eventually settled.

In December 2012, Employer and Insurer filed a petition to review compensation benefits (petition) indicating that Claimant received a third party recovery in the medical malpractice action and seeking to sub-rogate that recovery under Section 319 of the Workers’ Compensation Act, (Act).4 Claimant filed an answer denying- that the injuries resulting from the medical malpractice increased Employer and Insurer’s liability under the Act and asserting that they were not entitled to any recovery [575]*575under the Medicare Care Availability and Reduction of Error (MCARE) Act.5 A consolidated hearing was held before the WCJ on this issue and on Claimant’s utilization-review. petition which was filed simultaneously. .. • , ' ■ -

At the hearing, Employer submitted Claimant’s medical malpractice complaints, a praecipe dated November 2012 to settle and discontinue the consolidated medical malpractice actions, and the settlement and distribution-sheet prepared by Claimant’s counsel in the • malpractice action, showing that all monies awarded were with regard to future medical expenses and lost-wages, with none of the funds being set aside for the payment of past medical bills or past lost wages. The WCJ also admitted, over Glaimant’s counsel’s hearsay objection, Dr. Vance’s report.6

Following the hearing, the WCJ issued a decision awarding Employer and Insurer subrogation benefits from the time of the settlement forward because Employer and Insurer “established that [Claimantj’s third party settlement was for the malpractice injury ... sustained during surgery performed to treat the April 23, 2007, work injury and the complications that sprang from that injury,”'for which Employer and Insurer were paying Claimant’s medical and indemnity benefits. (R.R. at 68a.)

Based upon Section 508 of the MCARE Act,7 the WCJ determined that Section [576]*576508(a) and (c) preclude Employer and Insurer from obtaining subrogation of the medical malpractice proceeds with regard to payments for past medical expenses and past lost earnings paid before the time of trial in which Claimant sought benefits for the malpractice. However, noting that the bar against subrogation in subsection (c) applied only to a “benefit covered in subsection (a)” and that subsection (a) pertained only to past medical expenses and past lost earnings, the WCJ held that Section 508 of the MCARE Act did not preclude Employer and Insurer from seeking subrogation with respect to future payments.

As such, the WCJ ordered that Employer and Insurer reimburse Claimant for the attorneys’ fees and costs she incuired in obtaining the medical malpractice settlement. Determining that the cost of recovery for the third party settlement consumed 47% of the settlement, the WCJ also held that Employer and Insurer were entitled to a reduction of Claimant’s “medical bills and disability benefits at the rate of 47% of the repriced amount for future medical bills and 47% of her weekly disability rate.” (Id.)

Claimant appealed to the Board, contending that: (1) the WCJ erred in relying upon Dr. Vance’s report which was offered only for purposes of adjudicating Claimant’s utilization review petition and not for purposes of Employer’s petition; and (2) Section 508 of the MCARE Act precluded a workers’ compensation carrier from sub-rogating the proceeds of a claimant’s third party medical malpractice action. First, the Board noted that although there was no evidence before it regarding Claimant’s utilization review petition, “[Employer] indicate[d] that Claimant has filed a UR Petition concerning the propriety of physical therapy she had been receiving, which was initially consolidated with the Review Petition.” (R.R. at 79a n. 2.) Because Claimant’s utilization review petition “[p]urportedly ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 A.3d 572, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/protz-v-workers-compensation-appeal-board-pacommwct-2016.