SHARER, J.
This appeal follows the entry of a judgment in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, after consideration of Baltimore County's request for judicial review of a decision and order of the Maryland Workers' Compensation Commission ("the Commission").
Concurrent with its petition for judicial review, the County filed a motion for summary judgment. Appellee, Carroll Thiergartner, opposed the County's petition, and filed a cross-motion for summary judgment. After a hearing, the circuit court denied the County's motion for summary judgment and granted Thiergartner's cross-motion for summary judgment.
The County presents two questions for our review which, as slightly edited, are:
For the reasons that follow, we shall affirm the circuit court's denial of the County's motion for summary judgment, and affirm the grant of appellee's motion. However, we shall remand for the purpose of recalculation of the amount by which appellee's workers' compensation benefits should be offset.
Our review of the trial court's grant, or denial, of a motion for summary judgment is whether the trial court was legally correct, since a trial court decides issues of law, not fact, when granting summary judgment. Heat & Power Corp. v. Air Prods. & Chem., Inc., 320 Md. 584, 578 A.2d 1202 (1990). "The court shall enter judgment in favor of or against the moving party if the motion and response show that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the party in whose favor judgment is entered is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Md. Rule 2-501(f). In this case, the circuit court found no disputes of material fact; indeed, the parties agree that there are no such disputes. The factual determination having been made for us, "`we review the trial court's ruling on the law, considering the same material from the record and deciding the same legal issues as the circuit court.'" D'Aoust v. Diamond, 424 Md. 549, 575, 36 A.3d 941 (2012) (quoting Messing v. Bank of America, N.A., 373 Md. 672, 684, 821 A.2d 22 (2003)) (further citation omitted).
Appellee, Carroll Thiergartner, prior to his retirement in September 2005, was employed as a sworn Baltimore County firefighter for 33 years. During his active employment, Thiergartner participated in the County's Deferred Retirement Option Program ("DROP"). At the time of his retirement, he opted to receive a lump-sum payment from his DROP account. In May 2010, nearly five years after he retired, Thiergartner began to develop chest pain. He sought medical attention and was diagnosed and treated as follows:
Thereafter, on February 18, 2011, Thiergartner filed a claim for workers' compensation benefits in which he asserted that his heart condition was a compensable "occupational disease" that arose from his employment with the County. Following a hearing, the Commission issued its order, on February 14, 2012, finding that the effects of Thiergartner's coronary artery disease amounted to a 25 percent loss of the industrial use of his body. As a result, the Commission awarded Thiergartner permanent partial disability benefits. The Commission explained the calculation and distribution of Thiergartner's benefits as follows:
The County sought judicial review of the Commission's order. In its motion for summary judgment, the County conceded that, with respect to individuals who were employed as firefighters, under L.E. § 9-503(a)(1), "conditions of heart disease and/or hypertension" are presumed to be compensable occupational diseases arising in the course of employment. The County took no exception to the Commission's finding of a compensable condition, nor of the Commission's disability rating. The substance of the County's argument was, and is, with respect to the Commission's calculation of Thiergartner's workers' compensation award.
The County argued, correctly, that under L.E. § 9-503(e)(2), the combined total of an individual's weekly retirement and workers' compensation benefits may not exceed the weekly salary he or she received while last employed. Thus, the County contended that the Commission was incorrect in its benefit offset calculation because it did not appropriately account for the cumulative retirement benefit Thiergartner received, i.e., the $189,346.90 lump sum DROP payment. It was the County's position below that the Commission's calculation of Thiergartner's maximum workers' compensation benefit only took into account his weekly pre-retirement income of $1,213.80, and the fact that, had he not chosen to accept the DROP lump sum, he would have received weekly retirement benefits of $946.15.
Applying those figures, the circuit court found that Thiergartner was eligible for a maximum workers' compensation award of $272.03 per week. The County argued its position that, as Thiergartner's compensable occupational disease allowed, by law, a maximum compensation benefit of $307 per week, the lump sum DROP payment should have offset any compensation award for a total of up to 617 weeks; that is, Thiergartner's receipt of the lump sum DROP retirement benefit should have completely offset his workers' compensation award.
Thiergartner's position before the circuit court, and now, was that, because his pre-retirement weekly income was $1,213.80 and his weekly retirement benefits were $847.40, he was eligible to receive as much as $366.40 per week in workers' compensation benefits.
Alternatively, Thiergartner contends that if his lump sum DROP payment was to be accounted for in his workers' compensation
Following the hearing on the parties' motions, the circuit court issued its order, on November 19, 2012, denying the County's motion for summary judgment, granting Thiergartner's cross-motion for summary judgment, and explaining only that it was "persuaded that the approach of [the Commission] [was] correct."
Additional facts will be provided below as our analysis requires.
On appeal, the parties' arguments are identical to those raised in their respective motions for summary judgment. The County contends that proper adjustment of Thiergartner's workers' compensation award requires accounting for the lump sum DROP payment he received, $189,346.90, by dividing that sum by the maximum weekly workers' compensation award he was eligible to receive for his compensable coronary artery disease, $307 per week, in order to arrive at the number of weeks by which his workers' compensation award should be offset. That arithmetic exercise results in a product of 617 weeks. Clearly, this method of calculation would provide for a complete offset of the compensation award granted, which was $272.03 per week for 125 weeks.
In contrast, Thiergartner asserts that a legally correct offset calculation would not take the lump sum DROP payment into account at all, because that payment was not made to him during a time in which he was also eligible to receive workers' compensation benefits. He maintains, alternatively, that if the lump sum must be part of the workers' compensation award offset equation, the Commission's method of making the calculation was correct, i.e., by applying the greater amount of weekly retirement benefits he would have received had he not opted to take the DROP payment.
Initially, we recognize, and the parties agree, that there are no disputes regarding any of the material facts of the case. As we have laid out previously, Thiergartner's pre-retirement weekly income was $1,213.80. Upon his retirement, Thiergartner opted to receive his benefits via a lump sum payment of $189,346.90, along with subsequent weekly payments of $847.40. In so doing, he declined the benefits option which included no lump sum payment but provided for higher weekly payments in the amount of $946.15. Several years later, Thiergartner was awarded workers' compensation benefits due to his coronary artery disease, a condition first discovered
(Emphasis added).
Whether retirement benefits which are not received concurrently with an individual's workers' compensation award must be used in the offset calculation provided for in L.E. § 9-503(e)(2) is an issue of first impression. Therefore, we assess the relevant provision through the lens of our oft-cited principles of statutory construction:
Barbre v. Pope, 402 Md. 157, 172-73, 935 A.2d 699 (2007) (parallel citations omitted).
In our view, a reading of L.E. § 9-503(e)(2), in which we observe the plain meaning of its language, indicates that the statute is intended to preclude the sum of a claimant's weekly retirement and workers' compensation benefits from exceeding the weekly salary he or she earned during active employment. See Polomski v. Mayor & City Council of Baltimore, 344 Md. 70, 84, 684 A.2d 1338 (1996) ("[T]he clear language of [the benefit offset provision in L.E. § 9-503] negate[s] the need to look elsewhere for its meaning. The section specifically and unambiguously requires that ... workers' compensation benefits be reduced to the extent that, when combined with ... retirement benefits, the sum does not exceed [the subject individual's] weekly salary."). This goal is accomplished by capping the sum of weekly benefits at the figure of the individual's pre-retirement income. L.E. § 9-503(e)(2) ("The benefits received under this title shall be adjusted so that the weekly total of those benefits and retirement benefits does not exceed the weekly salary that was paid to the ... firefighter...").
Moreover, the language employed in L.E. § 9-503(e)(2) makes obvious that the restriction contemplated by the statute can only apply to
We contrast the wording of L.E. § 9-503(e)(2) with that of L.E. § 9-503(e)(1), which provides for workers' compensation benefits to be received in addition to "any benefits" the employee is entitled to receive under the retirement system. Thus, we conclude that the legislature limited the scope of L.E. § 9-503(e)(2) in comparison to the broader language of L.E. § 9-503(e)(1). The distinction is significant
On the facts before us, it cannot be said, and has not been alleged, that Thiergartner was "gaming the system" by choosing to accept a portion of his retirement benefits in a lump sum, since his
We conclude that a plain reading of the benefit adjustment language of L.E. § 9-503(e)(2), that "benefits received under [the workers' compensation] title shall be adjusted so that the weekly total of those benefits and retirement benefits does not exceed the weekly salary that was paid to the ... firefighter[,]" does not reveal it to be ambiguous. Thus, our statutory construction analysis need proceed no further. We do not see a basis for an interpretation that would allow for the accounting of any retirement benefits other than those which are to be paid weekly and concurrently with a workers' compensation award. We are unwilling to conclude that the legislature intended for L.E. § 9-503(e)(2) to allow for improvisation in the treatment of retirement benefits not clearly contemplated by the statute. See Polomski, 344 Md. at 84, 684 A.2d 1338 (holding that if benefits of a type not listed in the offset provision of L.E. § 9-503 were to be affected by the statute, "that amendment must come from the General Assembly, not this Court.").
Accordingly, we hold that the circuit court did not err in finding that, as a matter of law, the County was not entitled to a full offset of Thiergartner's workers' compensation award, and in denying its motion for summary judgment.
Nevertheless, our review of the matter leads us to the conclusion that calculation of Thiergartner's workers' compensation award must be based on the weekly retirement benefit payment he actually receives, $847.40. Therefore, we shall remand this matter to the circuit court with directions to remand the case to the Workers' Compensation Commission for recalculation of Thiergartner's award.