Sadler, C. v. WCAB (Apl of: Phila Coca-Cola Co.)

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 27, 2021
Docket6 EAP 2020
StatusPublished

This text of Sadler, C. v. WCAB (Apl of: Phila Coca-Cola Co.) (Sadler, C. v. WCAB (Apl of: Phila Coca-Cola Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sadler, C. v. WCAB (Apl of: Phila Coca-Cola Co.), (Pa. 2021).

Opinion

[J-68-2020] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA EASTERN DISTRICT

SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

CARL SADLER : No. 6 EAP 2020 : : Appeal from the Order of v. : Commonwealth Court entered on : 05/22/2019 at No. 328 CD 2018 : (reargument denied 07/18/2019) WORKERS' COMPENSATION APPEAL : vacating, remanding, reversing and BOARD : granting in part the order entered on : 02/16/2018 by the Workers' : Compensation Appeal Board at No. APPEAL OF: PHILADELPHIA COCA- : A16-0936 COLA COMPANY : : ARGUED: September 15, 2020

OPINION

JUSTICE DONOHUE DECIDED: January 27, 2021

Appellant, Philadelphia Coca-Cola Company (“PCCC”), asks this Court to

determine whether the Commonwealth Court erred in concluding that it was not entitled,

pursuant to Section 306(a.1) of the Workers’ Compensation Act,1 to a reimbursement of

1 77 P.S. § 511.1, Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended.

Section 306(a.1) provides as follows:

Nothing in this act shall require payment of compensation under clause (a) or (b) for any period during which the employe is incarcerated after a conviction or during which the employe is employed and receiving wages equal to or greater than the employe’s prior earnings. 77 P.S. § 511.1 (emphasis added). benefits paid to Appellee Carl Sadler (“Sadler”) during his pre-conviction incarceration

while awaiting trial. Alternatively, PCCC contends that Commonwealth Court’s

interpretation of Section 306(a.1) violates equal protection guarantees under the federal

and state constitutions. Finding no merit in PCCC’s arguments, we affirm the order of the

Commonwealth Court.

On July 2, 2012, Sadler was injured while working as a production manager for

PCCC. PCCC issued a notice of compensation payable, acknowledging Sadler’s injuries

as a right pinky finger amputation and a low back sprain and providing that Sadler was

entitled to a weekly disability rate of $652 based upon an average weekly wage of $978.

On August 13, 2013, Sadler was charged with a crime in New Jersey. Because he could

not post bail, Sadler remained incarcerated for 525 days, until January 22, 2015, when

he pled guilty. At sentencing, immediately after accepting Sadler’s plea, the trial court

sentenced him to 525 days of incarceration, gave him credit for time served, and

immediately released him from custody.

Months later, Sadler filed a petition seeking review of his average weekly wage.

PCCC responded with a suspension petition, contending that Sadler was not entitled to

retain the benefits he received while incarcerated and asking that his benefits be adjusted

to prevent him from being unjustly enriched for the amounts received during that time.

The petitions were heard by a workers’ compensation judge, who concluded that PCCC

was entitled to reimbursement for benefits paid to Sadler during his pre-conviction

incarceration. The judge did not provide for a future credit against benefits to be paid to

Sadler, but rather ordered that PCCC should petition the Supersedeas Fund for

reimbursement. PCCC appealed to the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board

[J-68-2020] - 2 (“Board”), and Sadler cross-appealed. The Board modified the workers’ compensation

judge’s decision by allowing PCCC to seek a credit against Sadler’s future payments, but

affirmed in all other respects.

Sadler appealed to the Commonwealth Court. He maintained that his workers’

compensation benefits had been improperly suspended because he spent no time in

incarceration after his conviction, as is required pursuant to the clear language of Section

306(a.1). The Commonwealth Court agreed. Sadler v. WCAB (Philadelphia Coca-Cola),

210 A.3d 372 (Pa. Commw. 2019). The Commonwealth Court stressed that Sadler’s pre-

conviction incarceration was due to his inability to post bail and that consistent with

Section 306(a.1)’s plain language, his benefits could not be suspended during that time.

Id. at 381. The Commonwealth Court also reasoned that the General Assembly, in

enacting Section 306(a.1), was aware that pursuant to Section 9760(1) of the Sentencing

Code,2 an individual who is incarcerated prior to being convicted is entitled to receive

post-conviction credit for time served. Id. at 382. Thus, the court reasoned, the General

Assembly could have included a provision in Section 306(a.1) that would “allow for time

spent incarcerated before a conviction to be deemed as occurring after a conviction[.]”

Id. (emphasis in original).

The Commonwealth Court based its decision in substantial part on its prior

decision in Rogele, Inc. v. WCAB (Mattson), 969 A.2d 634 (Pa. Commw. 2009), a factually

similar case also involving the payment of workers’ compensation benefits during a period

of pre-incarceration. In discussing Section 306(a.1), the court recognized that “this

section makes no reference to a termination of benefits during periods of incarceration

2 42 Pa.C.S. § 9760(1).

[J-68-2020] - 3 prior to conviction” and recognized that it was powerless to “engraft language onto a

statute” or “impute an intent where the statutory language is unambiguous.” Id.at 637-

38. The Commonwealth Court continued, explaining that “[a]bsent explicit statutory

provision, [it] is not free to reduce statutorily-created benefits. If the legislature had

intended that benefits be discontinued for an incarcerated recipient prior to conviction, it

would have written the statute to achieve that result.” Id.

In dissent, the Honorable Anne Covey found that the lower tribunals correctly

granted PCCC’s petition due to Sadler’s incarceration. In her view, the majority’s “narrow

reading” of Section 306(a.1) failed “to give effect to all of the words in that provision.”

Sadler, 210 A.3d at 388 (Covey, J., dissenting). Judge Covey emphasized the portion of

the statute providing that “nothing in the Act shall require the payment of [benefits] for

‘any period during which the employe is incarcerated after a conviction[.]’” Id.

(emphasis in original). The dissent concluded that the majority ignored the emphasized

portion of this provision by focusing on the single term “after,” thus distorting the language

of the statute. Id.

This Court subsequently granted PCCC’s petition for allowance of appeal to

consider the following issues:

1. Whether the Commonwealth Court erred in reversing … [the Board’s] affirmance of the [workers’ compensation judge’s] grant of [PCCC’s] suspension petition for a [seventy-five] week period which allowed [PCCC] to assert a credit against [Sadler’s] future compensation for money paid to [Sadler] during his incarceration as the grant of a suspension was consistent with the Act and the applicable case law?

2. Whether the Commonwealth Court’s interpretation that [PCCC] is precluded from suspending benefits under the circumstances of this case[] creates an unequal application of the law for similarly situated claimants, and similarly-situated employers, in violation of the Equal Protection guarantees of the Constitutions of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the United States of America?

[J-68-2020] - 4 Sadler v. WCAB ((Philadelphia Coca-Cola Co.), 223 A.3d 674 (Pa. 2020) (per curiam).3

PCCC’s first claim presents a straightforward issue of statutory interpretation.

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