Roberts v. Burdick

2021 IL App (5th) 190119, 190 N.E.3d 261, 454 Ill. Dec. 661
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 18, 2021
Docket5-19-0119
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2021 IL App (5th) 190119 (Roberts v. Burdick) 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
Roberts v. Burdick, 2021 IL App (5th) 190119, 190 N.E.3d 261, 454 Ill. Dec. 661 (Ill. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Digitally signed by Reporter of Decisions Reason: I attest to Illinois Official Reports the accuracy and integrity of this document Appellate Court Date: 2022.06.09 10:56:28 -05'00'

Roberts v. Burdick, 2021 IL App (5th) 190119

Appellate Court BRITTON L. ROBERTS, Plaintiff-Appellee and Cross-Appellant, v. Caption EDWARD LEE BURDICK and GDL TRANSPORT, INC., Defendants (State Employees’ Retirement System, Intervenor- Appellant and Cross-Appellee; The Department of Central Management Services, Intervenor and Cross-Appellee).

District & No. Fifth District No. 5-19-0119

Filed August 18, 2021

Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Union County, No. 15-L-8; the Hon. Review Mark M. Boie, Judge, presiding.

Judgment Affirmed in part and reversed in part; cause remanded.

Counsel on Kwame Raoul, Attorney General, of Chicago (Jane Elinor Notz, Appeal Solicitor General, and Richard S. Huszagh, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel), for appellant.

John Womick, of Womick Law Firm, Chtrd., of Carbondale, for appellee. Panel JUSTICE CATES delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Wharton and Vaughan concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Plaintiff, Britton L. Roberts, brought suit against the defendants, Edward Lee Burdick and GDL Transport, Inc., for injuries Roberts sustained as a result of a motor vehicle accident. Roberts settled his claim against the defendants and brought a petition to adjudicate liens held by the Department of Central Management Services (CMS) and the State Employees’ Retirement System (SERS). SERS intervened, seeking to establish its right to reimbursement and a lien against the personal injury settlement proceeds for occupational disability benefits and retirement account contributions it made to, and on behalf of, Roberts. In adjudicating the liens, the circuit court of Union County entered an order reducing SERS’s right to reimbursement by $150,000, to account for funds Roberts transferred to his ex-spouse pursuant to an order entered in his dissolution proceeding. SERS appeals the circuit court’s order reducing SERS’s reimbursement rights. Roberts cross-appeals asserting the circuit court erred by failing to find that SERS consented to the reduction of its lien rights and by failing to order any offsets of disability benefits taken by SERS to be backdated to the date of injury. We reverse in part and affirm in part.

¶2 BACKGROUND ¶3 On April 10, 2013, Roberts was injured in a motor vehicle accident while performing road maintenance for his employer, the Department of Transportation. The vehicle Roberts was driving was struck by a semi-trailer truck being driven by Burdick in the course of his employment with GDL Transport, Inc. ¶4 On April 19, 2013, CMS began paying Roberts temporary total disability (TTD) workers’ compensation benefits as a result of his injuries. Roberts’s TTD benefits were equal to 66.66% of his average weekly wage. See 820 ILCS 305/8(b) (West 2012). That same date, SERS also began paying Roberts occupational disability benefits and making contributions to Roberts’s state funded retirement account. As a State employee, Roberts was entitled to receive occupational disability benefits equal to 75% of his salary or average final compensation for the work-related injury. See 40 ILCS 5/14-123 (West 2012). In this case, Roberts was entitled to receive $3345 in monthly occupational disability benefits or 75% of his salary. Pursuant to section 14-129 of the Illinois Pension Code (40 ILCS 5/14-129 (West 2012)), the SERS monthly occupational disability benefit obligation was offset by the amount of workers’ compensation benefits being paid to Roberts by CMS. 1 As such, Roberts began receiving

1 Section 14-129 of Pension Code provides that any amounts paid to an employee under those Acts shall be applied “as an offset to any occupational disability or occupational death benefit *** in such manner as may be prescribed by the rules of the board.” 40 ILCS 5/14-129 (West 2012). Title 80, section 1540.90(a), of the Illinois Administrative Code specifies how SERS calculates and applies section 14-129 offsets. 80 Ill. Adm. Code 1540.90(a) (2021). Under section 1540.90(a)(1), if the amount of workers’ compensation benefits is less than the monthly benefit provided under the Pension

-2- $2973.06 in TTD benefits from CMS and $371.94 in occupational disability benefits from SERS, for a total of $3345 in monthly disability benefits. SERS also began contributing $379.10 to the retirement program on Roberts’s behalf. ¶5 On February 27, 2015, Roberts filed suit in Union County against the defendants seeking recovery for his personal injuries. Roberts notified CMS, but not SERS, of his suit against the defendants. On March 20, 2015, the defendants removed the case to the federal district court for the Southern District of Illinois. ¶6 On April 6, 2015, Assistant Attorney General Paul Kmett, counsel for CMS, sent a notice of lien to Timothy Denny, Roberts’s counsel, and to the defendants. The notice provided that CMS was claiming a lien pursuant to section 5(b) of the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act) (820 ILCS 305/5(b) (West 2012)) against the proceeds of any amounts Roberts recovered from the defendants for personal injuries arising from the April 10, 2013, accident. ¶7 On June 15, 2015, SERS sent Roberts and Denny a letter indicating SERS had received notice of a proposed settlement of Roberts’s workers’ compensation case with CMS for $149,999. SERS indicated that, after deduction of attorney fees, costs, and future medical expenses, SERS would offset Roberts’s future occupational disability benefits by $119,815.46, or $2676.01 per month for approximately 3½ years. On August 14, 2015, Roberts settled his workers’ compensation case with CMS for a lump-sum permanent partial disability (PPD) benefit payment of $149,999. ¶8 On March 10, 2016, Denny informed Kmett that the personal injury case was scheduled for a settlement conference on March 16, 2016. On March 16, 2016, a federal magistrate conducted a settlement conference between Roberts and the defendants. Kmett also attended the conference, at which time he provided an updated lien amount for CMS and advised the parties that CMS’s lien was nonnegotiable. At the conference, Denny further informed Kmett of the possibility that SERS had a lien on any of the proceeds from the settlement. Prior to that time, Kmett was unaware of a possible interest held by SERS and had not held himself out to Roberts or Denny as representing SERS. After the conference, Kmett contacted SERS and informed it of the pendency of the personal injury case. Kmett believed this was SERS’s first notice of the existence of the third-party proceeding. SERS subsequently contacted the Attorney General’s office and requested representation, and Assistant Attorney General Josue Barba was assigned to represent SERS. ¶9 On April 8, 2016, Denny e-mailed Kmett requesting the “final work comp lien amount.” Kmett responded later that day and attached two spreadsheets to the e-mail. The first attachment, titled “CMS Lien Calculation for Employee Britton Roberts,” was an itemized list of expenditures made by CMS in relation to the accident demonstrating that CMS had expended $258,248.93 in medical payments and disability benefits. The second spreadsheet, titled “SERS Lien Calculation for Employee Britton Roberts,” was an itemized list of monthly disability payments and retirement contributions made by SERS to, and on behalf of, Roberts.

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Bluebook (online)
2021 IL App (5th) 190119, 190 N.E.3d 261, 454 Ill. Dec. 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-burdick-illappct-2021.