Justice EAKIN.
Claimant Kevin Ressler suffered a recognized work injury July 21, 1995, in the nature of tendonitis of the right shoulder. A notice of compensation payable was issued, and Mr. Ressler began receiving Workers' Compensation benefits and coverage for his medical bills. On March 16, 2004, Mr. Ressler submitted to an independent medical evaluation (IME); the sequence of events thereafter is the crux of this case.
On June 1, 2004, Mr. Ressler had surgery, purportedly associated with the work-related injury. On July 19, 2004, employer filed a petition to terminate benefits as of March 16, the date of the IME. The employer concurrently requested supersedeas pursuant to § 413 of the Workers' Compensation Act, 77 P.S. §§ 1-1041.4. A Workers' Compensation Judge (WCJ) denied the supersedeas request August 30, 2004. On October 11, 2004, a $35,405.45 bill for the June 1 surgery was submitted to the insurer, which paid the bill January 25, 2005. On June 28, 2005, a WCJ granted the employer's July 19 petition to terminate benefits. The Workers' Compensation Appeal Board (WCAB) affirmed the decision.
On appeal, the en banc Commonwealth Court determined:
Dep't of Labor Indus. Bureau of Workers' Comp. v. Workers' Comp. Appeal Bd. (Crawford & Co.), 965 A.2d 332, 338-39 (Pa.Cmwlth.2009) (en banc) (emphasis in original) (citations omitted).
Judge Pellegrini, joined by Judge Friedman, dissented, opining that whether a payment is made "as a result" of supersedeas denial is determined by whether the insurer would have been required to pay the bill if the supersedeas had been granted. Id., at 340 (Pellegrini, J., dissenting). He stated supersedeas only relieves the insurer of making payments from the day of its granting and does not sanction recoupment of any payments made prior to that date. Id., at 341. Under Judge Pellegrini's analysis, even if supersedeas had been granted, the insurer was still obligated to pay expenses incurred before it filed the supersedeas request, such that the payments made could not have been made as the result of supersedeas denial, as is required by § 443(a). Id.
We granted appeal to consider "[w]hether the Supersedeas Fund may deny reimbursement of medical treatment rendered before an insurer requested supersedeas, where the Workers' Compensation Act
The Bureau argues § 443(a)'s language pertaining to payments made "as a result" of a denial of supersedeas does not allow the insurer to recover reimbursement for treatment costs incurred prior to the supersedeas filing. As the insurer did not request supersedeas until six weeks after the surgery, the insurer could not have made the payment as a result of denial of supersedeas as required by § 443(a). Payment, the Bureau argues, was an obligation cemented by the failure to seek supersedeas before the service was provided. To find as did the Commonwealth Court, it contends, may encourage insurers to withhold payment of medical bills until after supersedeas requests are resolved, improperly shifting medical costs to the Supersedeas Fund and its contributing employers.
The insurer points to the plain language of § 443(a), which does not mention medical services when referring to supersedeas timing; the statute points to "payment of compensation" as the triggering event when evaluating an insurer's right to reimbursement. It contends it is sufficient under § 443(a) that Mr. Ressler's treatment occurred after he had fully recovered, and the relevant medical bill was submitted to and paid by the insurer after the date supersedeas was requested and denied. Section 413 echoes this conclusion: "A supersedeas shall serve to suspend the payment of compensation in whole or to such extent as the facts alleged in the petition would, if proved, require." 77 P.S. § 774(2) (emphasis added).
The insurer discounts the Bureau's policy arguments, pointing out the Act requires insurers to make all payments within 30 days of receipt unless the bill itself is disputed; thus, there is no incentive for insurers to delay payments because they will be penalized for doing so. It further notes the Supersedeas Fund is maintained for the very purpose embodied in this case—it is simply seeking reimbursement from the Fund to which it contributed of the amount it paid for a bill that was ultimately determined to be unrelated to Mr. Ressler's work injury.
In reviewing an agency decision, our standard of review is restricted to determining whether there has been a constitutional violation, an error of law, or a violation of agency procedure, and whether necessary findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence. 2 Pa.C.S. § 704; Pieper v. Ametek-Thermox Instruments Div., 526 Pa. 25, 584 A.2d 301, 303 (1990). Statutory interpretation poses a question of law; thus, our standard of review is de novo, and our scope of review is plenary. Borough of Heidelberg v. Workers' Comp. Appeal Bd. (Selva), 593 Pa. 174, 928 A.2d 1006, 1009 (2007).
The elements in the relatively straightforward language of § 443(a) can be examined in order, as the facts are not in dispute. First, is this a case "in which a supersedeas has been requested and denied"? It is—supersedeas was requested in July, 2004, and denied August 20, 2004. Second, was the request under the provisions of § 413 or § 430? The record shows it was under § 413.
As a result of the August supersedeas denial, the insurer had no choice but to pay the October bill, despite the fact that Mr. Ressler's surgery corrected no work-related injury. That ultimate obligation to pay was undetermined when the bill was due, but the duty to pay it in the meantime fell to the insurer as supersedeas had been denied. Ultimately, it was not an obligation of the insurer; the insurer's payment cannot be the result of the surgery, for in the end, it had no responsibility for that bill at all. What the insurer did have the obligation to do was cover the bill pending the final determination, and that obligation was the direct and singular result of the denial of supersedeas.
To make reimbursement dependent on the date of the event giving rise to the bill is to insert an additional element into the statute. In fact, Judge Pellegrini's dissent is telling. Judge Pellegrini states "grant of supersedeas only relieves an employer of making payments from the day it was granted; it does not authorize the recoupment of any payments made before that date." Crawford & Co., at 341 (Pellegrini, J., dissenting) (emphasis added). The insurer is not asking for payments made before the supersedeas filing date, much less the date of granting supersedeas—this is about a payment made after denial, an obligation incurred when the insurer was denied permission to suspend compensation payments.
The legislature has expressly conferred broad suspension authority on WCJs during the litigation of termination, suspension, or modification petitions, 77 P.S. § 774(2), and we cannot find a WCJ lacks the authority to suspend insurer-provided compensation payments relative to treatment rendered before the date of a supersedeas request. One can fathom a host of situations where justice might require a supersedeas relative to payment for past medical services, such as where the treatment is unrelated to a work injury, the employer had no notice or opportunity to challenge the treatment prior to its execution, or where the insurer has no precertification or prior approval of the treatment. To tie the WCJ's hands in light of the plain language of the statute and the clear authority provided by the legislature would go against our duty to effectuate the legislature's intentions, 1 Pa.C.S. § 1921(a), and we decline to do so.
The insurer challenged its obligation via the supersedeas—when that was denied, the insurer lost the right to delay payment
Order affirmed; jurisdiction relinquished.
Chief Justice CASTILLE, Justices SAYLOR, BAER and ORIE MELVIN join the opinion.
Justice McCAFFERY files a dissenting opinion in which Justice TODD joins.
Justice McCAFFERY, dissenting.
Because I read Section 443(a) of the Workers' Compensation Act ("Act")
As the majority points out, the contentious issue here is what Section 443(a) means when it provides that "payments of compensation are made
We have recognized "the longstanding principle" that, absent a supersedeas, the burden remains on the employer to continue to pay medical and other compensation during a litigation period.
Id. at 288-89 (emphasis added).
In the present case, the employer had not yet filed its termination petition and request for supersedeas by the time of the surgery in question. My reading of the above authority leads me to conclude that the employer would have been responsible for paying the surgery bill even had its supersedeas request been granted, because the claimant's treatment occurred prior to that request. A grant of supersedeas would only have
Related to the above, the majority does not explain the anomalous result that springs from its holding, to wit, that the right to recoup payment for the
I do not discount the important salutary purpose of Section 443(a) to provide a mechanism for an employer to be reimbursed for benefit payments made that are ultimately determined to be unrelated to the work injury. However, Section 443(a) provides only for a specific and limited
Distilled to its elements, Section 443(a) requires that: (1) a supersedeas
Applying my interpretation of Sections 413(a.2) and 443(a) to the present matter, I believe that the employer is entitled to supersedeas relief only regarding those benefits due and owing as of the date it requested supersedeas, and thereafter. Thus, the employer is not entitled to relief for any benefits due and owing prior to its supersedeas request. As the surgical procedure here occurred prior to the employer's supersedeas request, the employer could not seek suspension of its obligation to pay under Sections 413(a.2) and 443(a) any more than it could seek suspension of disability benefits due and owing prior to the date supersedeas was requested. The fact that the bill for that procedure was submitted after the date supersedeas was requested is, in my view, a happenstance unrelated to the focus of Sections 413(a.2) and 443(a). Had the billing department of the hospital submitted its bill immediately, and the employer paid the bill as required under the Act, which would have been before the date the employer requested supersedeas, there would be no question that the employer could not seek Supersedeas Fund reimbursement for this expense under Section 443(a).
Finally, I note that the Act reflects a series of legislative solutions and compromises creating a carefully considered overall scheme that may be unintentionally thrown off by judicial interpretations that focus on perceived equities, particularly those not inuring to the claimant. There is a strong current in the majority's analysis that it would simply be inequitable for the employer to pay for a surgical procedure that was ultimately determined to be unrelated to the underlying work injury. However, absent from the majority's analysis is a focus on the efficiencies built into the legislative scheme, which require the employer to take timely action in order to fully reap the benefits the Act relevantly provides. Because of that circumstance, and my interpretation of what the General Assembly intended by confining supersedeas relief under Section 413(a.2) to a "suspension" of an employer's obligation to pay benefits, I respectfully dissent.
Justice TODD joins this dissenting opinion.
Id., § 999(a).