Schauder v. Brager

492 A.2d 630, 303 Md. 140, 1985 Md. LEXIS 587
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 28, 1985
Docket125, September Term, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 492 A.2d 630 (Schauder v. Brager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schauder v. Brager, 492 A.2d 630, 303 Md. 140, 1985 Md. LEXIS 587 (Md. 1985).

Opinions

SMITH, Judge.

We shall here hold that under Maryland Code (1957, 1979 Repl.Vol.) Art. 101, § 57 the Workmen’s Compensation Commission is empowered to approve fees of physicians and others who evaluate a claimant in preparation for trial and who appear for a claimant at trial. This section provides in pertinent part:

“No person shall charge or collect any compensation for legal services in connection with any claims arising under this article, or for services or treatment rendered or supplies furnished pursuant to § 37 of this article, unless the same be approved by the Commission. When so approved, such fee or claims shall become a lien upon the compensation awarded, but shall be paid therefrom only in the manner fixed by the Commission. Upon application of any party in interest, the Commission shall have full power to hear and determine any and all questions which may arise concerning legal services rendered in connection with any claim under this article and may order any attorney or other person receiving the same, to refund to the person paying the same, any portion of any charge for legal services which the Commission may, in its discretion, deem excessive.”

[143]*143Appellant, Paulette S. Schauder, sustained an injury in the course of her employment. She retained the services of physicians and a psychologist to evaluate her injuries. The psychologist testified before the Commission. After the Commission made an award to her, her attorney presented a petition to the Commission seeking payment of his own fee and payment of these other professional fees as per the attached bills. Her signed consent was appended to the petition. The Commission reduced the amount to be paid to these persons. It specified in its order that these reduced fees were “to be paid in lump sums and deducted from the last weeks of compensation.” Appellees, the physicians and psychologist in question, entered an appeal to the Circuit Court for Baltimore City.

In the circuit court it was contended “that the Workmen’s Compensation Commission has no jurisdiction over the approval and/or reduction of medical fees for evaluation as were submitted in this case at the request of the Workmen’s Compensation Commission.” That court held:

“Because the statute itself is void as to any specific language regarding the regulation of fees by the Commission as to evaluating physicians only and because the language of the Court of Special Appeals [in Harris v. Janco Enterprises, 53 Md.App. 674, 455 A.2d 453 (1983),] indicates that the Commission has no statutory authority to regulate the fees of evaluating physicians, this Court holds that the Workmen’s Compensation Commission exceeded its authority in modifying the awards given to the doctors at the hearing level.”

An appeal was promptly filed to the Court of Special Appeals. We issued a writ of certiorari, 301 Md. 697, 484 A.2d 640, on our own motion prior to argument in the intermediate appellate court in order that we might address the important public issue here presented.

Harris v. Janco Enterprises, 53 Md.App. 674, 455 A.2d 453 (1983), to which the trial judge alluded in his opinion, concerned an application of Art. 101, § 37. Section 37(a) [144]*144provides that in addition to the compensation provided for in Art. 101

“the employer shall promptly provide for an injured employee, for such period as the nature of the injury may require, such medical, surgical or other attendance or treatment, nurse and hospital services, medicines, crutches, apparatus, artificial hands, arms, feet and legs and other prosthetic applicances as may be required by the Commission____”

Section 37(c) states,

“All fees and other charges for such treatment and services shall be subject to regulation by the Commission, and shall be limited to such charges as prevail in the same community for similar treatment of injured persons of a like standard of living.”

Harris simply held that the fee of “a physician who had examined Harris more than five years after the accident, for the sole purpose of evaluating his disability and testifying at the trial” was not a fee which the employer was obliged to pay under § 37. Judge Adkins was careful to place a footnote for the Court of Special Appeals in that case to the effect that because the issue was not before it that court did “not decide whether the Commission has authority to regulate fees for the testimony of a treating physician, as opposed to fees for the treatment alone.” 53 Md.App. at 677, n. 2, 455 A.2d at 455, n. 2.

Section 57 is not in the form of its enactment in 1914. Chapter 404 of the Acts of 1931 added the sentence:

“Upon application of any party in interest, the Commission shall have full power to hear and determine any and all questions which may arise concerning legal services rendered in connection with any claim under this article and may order any attorney or other person receiving the same, to refund to the person paying the same, any portion of any charge for legal services which the Commission may, in its discretion, deem excessive.”

[145]*145This is the third sentence in what we have quoted from § 57. The report of the Commission to study the Workmen’s Compensation Act of Maryland 1930-31 “recommended that some change be made in Section 57 of the Act whereby the State Industrial Accident Commission would have the power to require the return of any excessive portion of a fee that had been charged for legal services without the approval of said Commission.” This enactment followed that recommendation.

Appellees argue that “the language gives the Commission authority over attorneys and non-attorneys practicing before the Commission, whether or not authorized by law, and also the authority of the Commission to order refunds in cases of abuse or unauthorized charges for fees.” It is true that non-lawyers have been known to represent claimants before the Commission. See 23 Op. Att’y Gen. 427 (1938), and the Ninth Report of the Governor’s Commission to Study Maryland Workmen’s Compensation Laws (1969).1 The latter report at 2 proposed that in order to represent a claimant or employer and insurer before the Commission one be required to be a member of the Maryland Bar. The General Assembly has enacted no such legislation. The fact that non-lawyers have at some time in the past appeared before the Commission is not dispositive of the issue at hand, however.

Many of our cases tell us that the long-standing view of a statute taken by an administrative agency, particularly such view taken “soon after its passage,” is strong, persuasive influence in determining the judicial construction and should not be disregarded except for the strongest and most urgent reasons. However, where the language is plain and unambiguous the judicial construction cannot be [146]*146controlled by extraneous considerations, since no custom, however venerable, can nullify the plain meaning and purpose of the statute. See, e.g., Comptroller v. John C. Louis Co., 285 Md. 527, 543-44, 404 A.2d 1045, 1055-56 (1979); Baltimore Gas & Elec. v.

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Schauder v. Brager
492 A.2d 630 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
492 A.2d 630, 303 Md. 140, 1985 Md. LEXIS 587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schauder-v-brager-md-1985.