Millard “Skeeter” Baltzell was critically injured when he was crushed by a tractor-trailer while working for The Ensign-Bick-ford Company. Skeeter sought workers’ compensation from Ensign, and along with his wife Ruth Ann, brought strict liability claims against three companies — R & R Trucking Company, the owner of the tractor-trailer; Freightliner Corporation, the tractor manufacturer; and Lufkin Indus
The Baltzells prevailed before a jury, which found the and Ensign collectively liable for $13,980,120. Ensign then moved to dismiss the contribution claims against it in exchange for waiving a statutory lien that it had on the Baltzells’ recovery from the defendants. The district court denied Ensign’s motion and entered judgment against the defendants and Ensign. We conclude that the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act and the Illinois Supreme Court’s decision in
LaFever v. Kemlite Co.,
I. BACKGROUND
A. Workers’ compensation in Illinois
Before delving into the facts of this case, we first provide some background on the somewhat complicated statutory scheme at issue here. Like other states, Illinois has a workers’ comрensation system in which employers compensate their employees for job-related injuries or illnesses, regardless of fault.
See
Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act (“IWCA”), 820 Ill. Comp. Stat. 305/1 et seq. In return for not having to prove fault, employees receive only workers’ compensation benefits from their employers and cannot sue their employers to receive morе damages.
See id.
at 305/5(a). This rule also bars loss of consortium claims that employees’ spouses might otherwise bring against employers.
Id.
(extending bar to “any one otherwise entitled to recover damages for such injury”);
Vickery v. Westinghouse-Haztech, Inc.,
Sometimes, however, parties other than an employer might cause an employee to be injured at work. An employee in this situation can sue these third parties for damages.
See
820 Ill. Comp. Stat. 305/5(b) (‘Where the injury or death for which compensation is payable under this Act was caused under circumstances creating a legal liability for damages on the part of some person other thаn his employer to pay damages, then legal proceedings may be taken against such other person to recover damages notwithstanding such employer’s payment of or liability to pay compensation under this Act.”). These third parties can in turn seek contribution from the employer, thereby pulling the employer into the suit.
Id.
Alternatively, an employer may chоose to exercise its right to intervene in the suit before satisfaction of judgment.
See Ins. Co. of N. Am. v. Andrew,
Now suppose an employee ends up recovering money from a third party for a work-related injury. That would imply the employer was not solely responsible for the accident. So Illinois law gives the employer a lien on any recovery that an employee obtains from a third party for a work-related injury. 820 Ill. Comp. Stat. 305/5(b). An employer who exercises this lien gets first crack at any recovery the employee gets from the third party. Id. (“[F]rom the amount received by such employee or personal representative [from a third party] there shall be paid to the employer the amount of compensation paid or to be paid by him to such employee or personal representative.... ”).
Workers’ Total % fault Employer’s
comp. recovery of pro rata Employer’s
obligation_from suit_employer_liability_lien 1 _
$2 M_|5M_0%_$0_$2 M
$2 M_$5M_8%_$400 K_$2 M
$2 M_$2JV1_25%_$500 K_$1.5 M
$2 M_$1M_40%_$400 K_$600 K
$2 M_|1M_60%_$600 K_$400 K
$2 M|5M_60%|3M$2 M
As the last entry in the chart shows, sometimes an employer’s pro rata liability might exceed its workers’ compensation obligation. This is problematic because Illinois law seeks to prоtect employers from paying more than what workers’ compensation requires.
To avoid this difficulty, the Illinois Supreme Court has provided employers with two different ways to curtail their contribution liability. First, Illinois law caps an employer’s contribution liability at “an amount not greater than the [employer’s] workers’ compensation liability.”
Kotecki v. Cyclops Welding Corp.,
Despite the protection that Kotecki provides, however, some employers might still prefer to pay workers’ compensation rather than contribution. For example, a contribution judgment would probably require an employer to make a lump sum payment up front; workers’ compensation, on the other hand, often includes a component that is paid out over many years. Even if the lump sum payment is discounted to account for lost investment opportunities, it might not be properly indexed for inflation, which implicitly decreases the cost of future payments. Moreover, because the total cost of workers’ compensation often depends on how long the injurеd employee survives, an employer might prefer workers’ compensation if it believes the employee will die sooner than expected. (The flip side is that an employer may end up paying more in workers’ compensation than in contribution if the employee lives longer than expected.)
So Illinois law provides employers with a second option — an employer can escape contribution liability altogether by waiving its lien on an employee’s recovery
B. Factual background
Skeeter Baltzell worked for Ensign, a manufacturer of caps and boosters for explosives, at a facility in Union County, Illinois. He helped load specialized tractor-trailers that hauled explosives away from the Ensign facility. R & R Trucking had a contract with Ensign to provide these tractor-trailers along with the drivers, helpers, and equipment necessary to load and unlоad the trailers.
On May 22, 2000, an Ensign employee backed an R & R tractor-trailer into Skeeter, crushing him between the trailer and a loading dock. The Freightliner tractor and Lufkin trailer that were involved in the accident were not equipped with a back-up alarm.
Skeeter was terribly injured. His pelvis was severely fractured and his bladder and lower intestinal tract were crushed. Because of his injuries, Skeeter suffered deeр vein thrombosis, a heart attack, respiratory failure, and a stroke that left him brain damaged and partially paralyzed. Skeeter still needs constant care and attention from his wife, Ruth Ann, as he has a permanent colostomy, must be catheterized to urinate, and has cognitive difficulties.
Skeeter filed a claim before the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission (IWCC) seеking workers’ compensation benefits from Ensign. Skeeter and Ruth Ann also filed this suit in federal court, alleging strict liability claims under Illinois law for personal injury and loss of consortium, respectively, against R & R, Freight-liner, and Lufkin (collectively, the “defendants”). The defendants then filed third-party contribution claims against Ensign. 2
On April 21, 2005, a jury returned a verdict in favor of Skeeter for $11,980,120, and in favor of Ruth Ann for $2,000,000, which resulted in a total judgment of $13,980,120. The jury apportioned fault as follows: Skeeter Baltzell, 0%; Freightliner, 20%; Lufkin, 10%; R & R, 40%; and Ensign, 30%. Accordingly, Ensign was liable to Skeeter and Ruth Ann for $13,980,120 * .30 = $4,194,036.
Illinois law limited Ensign’s contribution liability to the present cash value of its total workers’ compensation obligation (i.e., its Kotecki cap). But the IWCC hadn’t yet finally determined what Ensign’s total workers’ compensation liability would be, so the district court required Ensign to submit an estimatе of this amount. Ensign submitted documentation that its Kotecki cap was $4,085,571.21, and that it had already paid $873,953.31 in workers’ compensation to the Baltzells. Neither the defendants nor the Baltzells disputed these values, which the district court proceeded to adopt.
Ensign then moved to waive its hen on the Baltzells’ recovery and to dismiss the defendants’ third-party contribution
Ensign then filed various post-judgment motions, including another motion to waive its workers’ compensation lien and dismiss the third-party contribution claims against it. Meanwhile, the Baltzells and the defendants entered a settlement agreement in which the defendants agreed to pay their respective pro rata shares of the judgment but reserved their right to litigate contribution and setoff issues.
On February 13, 2006, the district court denied Ensign’s post-judgment motions, setting the stage for Ensign’s current appeal. The defendants also filed related cross/contingent appeals regarding setoff and contribution issues in the event that we vacated the judgment entered against Ensign.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Ensign was entitled to waive its workers’ compensation lien and the contribution claims against it should have been dismissеd.
Because this is a diversity case governed by Illinois law, we must resolve this matter how we think the Illinois Supreme Court would.
See Allstate Ins. Co. v. Menards, Inc.,
The primary precedent at issue here is the Illinois Supreme Court’s decision in
LaFever v. Kemlite Co.,
Here, the district court did not allow Ensign to waive its lien because it felt that allowing a post-verdict waiver would
Still, the Baltzells and the defendants contend that LaFever is distinguishable from this case. In LaFever, the employer had already paid out the workers’ compensation benefits that it owed the employee and it was not required to make аny future payments. By contrast, Ensign estimates that it still owes about $3 million in future workers’ compensation payments to the Baltzells.
Illinois courts, however, have never suggested that we should distinguish between paid and future benefits when deciding whether an employer can waive its workers’ compensation lien. Indeed, Illinois law is clear that an employer’s lien encompasses both paid and future workers’ compensation benefits. For example, the IWCA states that from the money the employee receives from a third-party suit, “there shall be paid to the employer the amount of compensation
paid or to be paid by him to such employee.”
820 Ill. Comp. Stat. 305/5(b) (emphasis added). And the
LaFever
court itself noted that an “employer may claim a lien on the worker’s recovery, in an amount equal to the amount of workers’ comрensation due the worker.”
LaFever,
Moreover, Illinois courts have allowed employers to waive their liens evеn when they owed future payments.
See generally Branum v. Slezak Constr. Co., Inc.,
Similarly, we conclude that the district court should have allowed Ensign to waive its lien on the Baltzells’ recovery in their lawsuit against the defendants. Thereafter, the court should have dismissed the contribution claims against Ensign.
B. The defendants are entitled to a setoff for the workers’ compensation benefits that Ensign has already paid.
Given that Ensign is not liable for contribution (but still owes workers’ com
This does not mean, however, that a setoff is proper for future workers’ compensation benefits whose value has yet to be determined. As far as we know, the IWCC, which is in charge of determining workers’ compensation awards, has yet to issue a final determination on the award that the Baltzells will receive for the accident. And an Illinois appellate court has indicated that we should not try to divine what that award will be.
See Branum,
On remand, the district court should require the parties to submit an update on the workers’ compensation payments that have been made and on the status of the proceedings before the IWCC. The court should also impose a setoff equal to the paid benefits that the Baltzells have already received from Ensign.
Regarding future benefits, we also note that the most efficient solution might be for all the parties to agree that any future workers’ compensation payments that the Baltzells receive from Ensign will be held in trust and distributed to the defendants according to their pro rata liability.
See Pekin Ins. Co. v. Hiera,
III. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is VACATED and the case is REMANDED
Notes
. Although not raised by the parties in this appeal, the IWCA also provides that any reimbursement that an employer recеives when exercising its lien is reduced by: (1) the employer’s pro rata share of the employee’s costs and reasonably necessary expenses in bringing the suit, and (2) 25% of the employee’s attorney fees. See 820 Ill. Comp. Stat. 3 05/5 (b). These cost- and fee-sharing provisions make sense — because the employer has cashed in on the employee's suit (by exercising the lien and effectively reducing its workers’ compensation obligation), the statute requires the employer to chip in for the expense of the suit.
. The district court properly exercised diversity jurisdiction over Skeeter and Ruth Ann’s claims. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a). Skeeter and Ruth Ann were citizens and residents of Illinois, whereas R & R, Freightliner, and Lufkin were incorporated in Missouri, Delaware, and Texas, respectively, and had their principal places of business in Missouri, Oregon, and Texas, respectively. The amount in controversy exceeded $75,000. Similarly, the court had supplemental jurisdiction over the contribution claims against Ensign, a Connecticut corporation with its principal place of business in Connecticut. See id. § 1367.
. As required by Illinois law, this calculation implicitly reappоrtioned to the defendants the difference between the liability assessed by the jury against Ensign ($4,194,036) and the
Kotecki
cap amount ($4,085,571.21).
See Ill. Tool Works, Inc. v. Indep. Mach. Corp.,
. While the plaintiffs and defendants both tacitly agreed to the
Kotecld
cap amount that Ensign submitted (which was Ensign’s estimate of its workers' compensation obligation), the parties never agreed to a setoff value.
See
R & R Br. at 31 n. 6; R. 457, Ex. A;
see also Branum, 225
Ill.Dec. 88,
