This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing the complaint in summary judgment context. The case was filed by Harvey and Trithenia Carey, appellants, seeking damages for multiple permanent injuries sustained by Harvey Carey while working in the regular course of his employment with the C.J. Coakley Company. 1 Pursuant to D.C.Code 1973, § 36-501, Carey was covered by the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C. §§ 901 et seq. (1976) (hereinafter LHWCA), at the time of his accident. 2 Section 914(a) of the LHWCA requires that compensation “be paid periodically, promptly, and directly to the person entitled thereto, without an award, except where liability to pay compensation is controverted by the employer.” (Emphasis added.) In compliance with § 914(a), the Coakley Company’s insurance carrier promptly began Carey’s compensation payments, filing at the same time the necessary standardized form with the Office of Workers’ Compensation. That form computed Carey’s payments according to the percentage formula set forth in § 908 of the LHWCA. Carey continues to receive compensation as thus calculated. Because it was undisputed that Carey’s injuries occurred in the regular course of his employment, the Coakley Company did not contest its liability.
Section 933(a) of the LHWCA provides that an injured worker who accepts workers’ compensation can also seek to recover against a third party who may be liable in damages. 3 It is not necessary for the injured worker to elect whether to receive compensation or to recover against the third party. However, § 933(b) states:
Acceptance of such compensation under an award in a compensation order filed by the deputy commissioner or Board shall operate as an assignment to the employer of all right of the person entitled to compensation to recover damages against such third person unless such person shall commence an action against such third person within six months after such award. [Emphasis added.]
Two years after Carey’s injury, appellants initiated this suit in negligence against the Crane Service Company, Inc. and the Hutchison Crane Company, Inc., appellees, as third-party tort-feasors. The
On the day following Carey’s accident and qualifying injuries, his employer filed Form BEC-202 (Employer’s First Report of Accident or Occupational Illness) with the proper government offices, and on April 7, his employer’s insurance carrier commenced disability compensation payments and filed Form BEC-206 (Payment of Compensation Without Award) with the deputy commissioner for this compensation district. As required by § 908 of the LHWCA, Form BEC-206 computed Carey’s compensation at 66 2 /4 per centum of his average weekly wage. No other order awarding Carey disability benefits was ever entered by the Benefits Review Board or the deputy commissioner. Carey continues to receive and accept compensation as provided by Form BEC-206. His payments have never been controverted.
On September 5, 1979, approximately thirty months after the accident, appellants filed this suit against appellees as third-party tort-feasors. Appellants alleged that the negligent operation of a crane by appellees’ employee was the proximate cause of Carey’s injuries. The trial court granted appel-lees’ motion for summary judgment citing
Rodriguez v. Compass Shipping Co. Ltd.,
When interpreting any portion of an act, the statutory meaning of a term or phrase must “be derived not from the reading of a single sentence or section, but from consideration of [the] entire enactment against the backdrop of its policies and objectives.”
Don’t Tear It Down v. Pennsylvania Ave. Dev. Corp.,
Acceptance of such compensation shall operate as an assignment to the employer of all right of the person entitled to compensation to recover damages against such third person, whether or not the person entitled to compensation has notified the deputy commissioner of his election.
Nothing more than acceptance of compensation was required to evidence the employee’s election. He did not have the option of compensation and a suit against a third party.
See Rodriguez, supra
In 1938, Congress enacted a procedural change to § 933(b) in order to protect employees from the harsh consequences of an improvident election. 7 The amended section stated:
Acceptance of such compensation under an award in a compensation order filed by the deputy commissioner shall operate as an assignment to the employer of all right of the person entitled to compensation to recover damages against such third person. [Emphasis added.]
For a few years there was disagreement about what constituted “compensation under an award in a compensation order.” Third parties and employers who had been impleaded by third parties for indemnification purposes argued that mere acceptance of compensation still operated as a conclusive election not to sue. However, in 1945 the Second Circuit addressed the issue in
Grasso v. Lorentzen,
Before the statute was amended in June 1938, acceptance of compensation was enough under § 933(b) to operate as an assignment to the employer of the employee’s cause of action against a third party, and thereafter there could be no election under § 933(a) to sue rather than to receive compensation. But after the amendment the phrase “acceptance of compensation” in § 933(b) was modified by the words “under an award in a compensation order filed by the deputy commissioner.” As a result of the amendment there must now be some official action by the Deputy Commissioner establishing an award of compensation in order to make such acceptance an assignment of the employee’s cause of action against a third party. Although the award may be informal, it must amount to an award by the Deputy Commissioner. The language and the legislative history of the amendment of 1938 show that it was intended to make the assignment effective only when compensation was accepted in accordance with such an award. [Id. at 128-29 (emphasis added) (citations omitted).]
Two years later the Supreme Court examined the issue and also held that the mere acceptance of compensation, without an award, does not preclude an injured worker from filing against a third-party tort-fea-sor.
American Stevedores, Inc. v. Porello,
During that same period, workers’ compensation for longshoremen and harbor workers and the admiralty doctrine of seaworthiness were finally interwoven. That was an important juncture for the LHWCA. Prior to 1946, a longshoreman could only sue a third-party shipowner for negligence. The shipowner’s “warranty of seaworthiness” for his vessel, which covered seamen and imposed virtual strict liability on the shipowner, was not extended to longshoremen as they were not employed by the shipowner.
9
A longshoreman was considered an invitee on board the ship and the only duty owed by a shipowner to a longshoreman was one of reasonable care. An-not.,
In
Ryan
the Court held that a shipowner found liable to a longshoreman in a third-party claim could assert its own claim for indemnification from the injured worker’s
As a result of the stevedores’ resistance to provide any payments without an award, the injured worker usually took “compensation [under an award] for the simple reason that his expenses must be met immediately, not months or years after when he has won his lawsuit.” S.Rep. No. 428, 86th Cong., 1st Sess., 2 (1959), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1959, p. 2134.
See Bloomer v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.,
The crux of the analysis in this case focuses on the definition of the term “award” within the phrases compensation “under an award in a compensation order” and compensation “without an award.” A particular term used in different sections of a statute must be assumed to have a consistent definition unless otherwise indicated or obvious from the face of the statute or the context in which it appears.
Atlantic Cleaners & Dyers, Inc. v. United States,
Compensation under this chapter shall be paid periodically, promptly, and directly to the person entitled thereto, without an award, except where liability to pay compensation is controverted by the employer. [Emphasis added.]
Section 913(a) similarly distinguishes compensation “without an award.” It states: “If payment of compensation has been made without an award ... a claim [for an award of compensation] may be filed within one year after the date of the last payment.” (Emphasis added.) Once the claim is made and the necessary investigations and hearings are held, the deputy commissioner must “by order, reject the claim or make an award in respect of the claim.” Section 919(c) (emphasis added). Under §§ 913(a), 914(a), and 919(c), payments made without an award are not synonymous with compensation paid under the terms of an award.
The distinction is also drawn in §§ 914(e) and (f) where additional compensation is made payable for overdue installments. Section 914(e) states:
If any installment of compensation payable without an award is not paid within fourteen days after it becomes due ... there shall be added to such unpaid installment an amount equal to 10 per centum thereof .... [Emphasis added.]
By contrast, § 914(f) provides:
If any compensation, payable under the terms of an award, is not paid within ten days after it becomes due, there shall be added to such unpaid compensation an amount equal to 20 per centum thereof .... [Emphasis added.]
To hold that payments made without an award in § 933(b) are subsumed under the phrase “compensation under an award” would violate the rule that terms and phrases must be construed consistently throughout a statute.
Other jurisdictions are split in their interpretations of the term “award” within the two phrases of the statute. Appellees place their reliance on
Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v. Ameta and Co.,
An award under a compensation order does not require formal entry of an award per se. Rather, the focus should properly be upon some act of ratification of compensation, whether formal or informal, and by the subsequent acceptance of compensation by the claimant. [Id. at 1102.]
See also Collins v. Norfolk Shipbuilding & Drydock Corp.,
In rejecting the holding in
Liberty Mutual,
the court in
Collier v. John Mendis, Inc.,
Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v. Ameta and Co., [supra, is inconsistent] both with the language and policy of the Act. Indeed, it is not certain that the Fourth Circuit would have arrived at that result were it not for its policy, expressed in Caldwell v. Ogden Sea Transport, Inc.,618 F.2d 1037 (4th Cir.1980), of allowing the employee to sue whenever the employer chooses not to sue. [15] Since theCaldwell policy was overruled in Rodriguez v. Compass Shipping Co., 451 U.S. 596 ,101 S.Ct. 1945 ,68 L.Ed.2d 472 (1981), [see supra] invoking the Liberty Mutual rule might have effects unforeseen by the Court that adopted it.
Other courts have similarly rejected the
Liberty Mutual
analysis. In
Dunbar v. Retla Steamship Co.,
To allow an assignment of a claimant’s entitlement to sue to be triggered by the mere acceptance of benefits and the passage of time, at a point when the claimant is most in need of those benefits, would increase the likelihood that the assignment will be unwitting and unwilling, for both employer and employee — a result at odds with the purpose of the Act generally and this section in particular. [Id. at 1311.]
See also Fearson v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp., 525
F.Supp. 671 (D.D.C.1981);
Theodore v. Moore McCormack Lines, Inc.,
As in Dunbar, the facts in the instant case show no involvement by the deputy commissioner or the Office of Worker’s Compensation Programs and no controversion by appellant Carey’s employer. The appellants merely accepted compensation which was offered without benefit of an award and to which they were seemingly entitled. To allow assignment of their claim based on those facts would surely violate the LHWCA’s statutory purpose, and would be inconsistent with other provisions of the Act. Accordingly, the judgment of the Superior Court dismissing the complaint is reversed and the case is remanded with instructions to reinstate the complaint and for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
. Carey was employed as a drywall laborer. On the day of the accident, he was at a construction site several stories above ground level removing platforms of sheet rock which had been hoisted up on a flying jib mounted on a crane. As he attempted to stabilize the jib for its retraction through a “window opening,” his sleeve caught and he was pulled off the structure. He fell approximately 70 feet into a concrete-bottomed air vent shaft. He suffered multiple fractures to his ribs and legs resulting in permanent injury.
. The Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act was originally enacted by Congress in 1927. It was made applicable to workers in the private sector of the District of Columbia when Congress passed the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1928, Pub.L. No. 70-419, §§ 1-3, 45 Stat. 600 (1928) (codified at D.C.Code 1973, §§ 36-501, -502). Effective October 1, 1981, the District of Columbia Council enacted the Workers’ Compensation Act of 1979, D.C.Law 3-77, 27 D.C.Reg. 2503 (1980) (codified at D.C.Code 1981, §§ 36-301
et seq.),
and at the same time repealed all earlier workers’ compensation legislation applicable to the District. This court upheld the 1979 Act in
District of Columbia v. Greater Washington Central Labor Council,
D.C.App.,
. Section 933(a) provides:
If on account of a disability or death for which compensation is payable under this chapter the person entitled to such compensation determines that some person other than the employer or a person or persons in his employ is liable in damages, he need not elect whether to receive such compensation or to recover damages against such third person.
. Rodríguez consisted of three consolidated cases. Each employee was a longshoreman who was injured aboard ship in the regular course of his employment and received compensation from his stevedore employer. After the respective six-month periods expired and the stevedores failed to pursue their assigned claims against the shipowners, the longshoremen filed their own third-party suits. The District Courts dismissed the actions by reason of the longshoremen’s failure to bring suit within the statutory six months and the Court of Appeals affirmed. In upholding the lower courts, the Supreme Court stated:
The only conditions precedent to the statutory assignment are the acceptance of compensation pursuant to an award in a compensation order and the passage of the required period of 6 months. These conditions are admittedly satisfied in these cases. The statutory assignment encompasses “all right” of the employee to recover damages from a third party. These words preclude the possibility that the assignment is only a partial one that does not entirely divest the employee of his right to sue, or that the employee and the employer possess concurrent rights to sue in the post-assignment period. When the [§ 933(b)] assignment occurs, it transfers the employee’s entire right to commence a third-party action to the employer. [Id.451 U.S. at 603 ,101 S.Ct. at 1950 .]
. In
Rodríguez
two of the injured workers and their employers agreed to settlements during informal conferences convened by the Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs following the stevedores’ controversion of the workers’ claims for compensation. 33 U.S.C. § 908(i) provides for settlement agreements when they are in the best interests of the injured employee.
See also
20 C.F.R. §§ 702.241, -.242, -.311 to -.315 (1980). No formal orders were entered for the workers although 20 C.F.R. § 702.-315(a) requires that settlement agreements be embodied in memoranda or formal compensa
. Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act of 1927, Pub.L. No. 69-803, 44 Stat. 1424 (1927).
. Act of June 25, 1938, ch. 685, 52 Stat. 1168.
.In Grasso v. Lorentzen, supra, a dispute arose over the continued disability of the claimant. An informal conference was held by the claims examiner and he reduced his recommendations to memorandum form and placed them in the official file. The memorandum recommended, but did not require or approve, payment of additional compensation. Nevertheless, the insurance carrier paid the additional recommended sums and the claimant accepted them.
Thereafter, the claimant filed suit to recover damages for personal injuries and the defendant-shipowner argued that the suit was barred under 33 U.S.C. § 933(b) because the claimant had accepted compensation pursuant to a “compensation order” (the memorandum dictated by the claims examiner after the informal conference). The district court disagreed and
. 79 C.J.S. Seamen § 192 (1952) states:
[T]he doctrine of unseaworthiness is a species of liability without fault not limited by conceptions of negligence, and it is not contractual in character. Accordingly, such liability does not depend on the exercise of reasonable care and may be imposed on the shipowner, in the case of unseaworthiness, irrespective of negligence or knowledge of condition of the vessel prior to her sailing. ...
. During the following years, suits against shipowners burgeoned as the range of items embraced by the concept of unseaworthy ships expanded to include even injuries sustained by longshoremen on dry land,
Thompson v. Calmar S.S. Corp.,
. The Ryan-type of liability, together with the dozens of cases stemming from its precedent, was abolished by Congress in 1972. Compensation Act of 1972, Pub.L. No. 92-576, § 15(f) —(h), 86 Stat. 1262 (1972). Abolished were both the shipowner’s absolute liability for unseaworthiness and the shipowner’s right to recover from the employer-stevedore. At the same time Congress substantially increased both the maximum and minimum compensation payments for injured workers. “The elimination of the shipowner’s cause of action against the stevedore was intended to reduce litigation, immunize stevedores and their insurers from liability in third-party actions, and assure conservation of stevedore resources for compensation awards to longshoremen.”
Bloomer v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.,
. Act of Aug. 18, 1959, Pub.L. No. 86-171, 73 Stat. 391. See S.Rep. No. 428, 86th Cong., 1st Sess., reprinted in 1959 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad. News, p. 2134.
. The documents filed in Liberty Mutual were
a)Form BEC-202 — Employer’s First Report of Accident or Occupational Illness; and
b) Form BEC-206 — Payment of Compensation Without Award; and
c) Form No. 6 — Attending Physician’s Report; and
d) Form BEC-208 — Compensation Payment Stopped or Suspended. [Liberty Mutual, supra at 1101, n. 10.]
In addition to compensation payments, the longshoreman in Liberty Mutual also obtained a voluntary settlement of $1,000 from the third-party shipowner whose alleged negligence caused his injury. The settlement agreement further provided an indemnity clause wherein the shipowner agreed to indemnify the longshoreman up to $1,000 for all claims or lawsuits brought by the insurance carrier to recover any compensation payments. Unable to recover any of its payments from the longshoreman, the insurance carrier filed suit against the shipowner. Finding that there was an award of compensation based on the filing of various documents, the court was able to enforce the insurance company’s claims for reimbursement of compensation. 33 U.S.C. § 933(h).
. The documents filed in the instant case were Form BEC-202 and Form BEC-206. Five weeks after Carey’s injury the insurance carrier temporarily suspended payments to correct an error in its calculations of Carey’s average weekly wage. However, the form suspending Carey’s initial payment of $215.20 per week, Form BEC-208, and the form initiating his recalculated payment of $187.36 per week, Form BEC-202, were both filed with the deputy commissioner on the same day. The reason given on the form for suspending the compensation was to correct the error in the original amount.
15. In
Caldwell, supra,
the Fourth Circuit expanded the injured worker’s right of action in third-party suits set down in
Czaplicki v. The Hoegh Silvercloud,
The fundamental point in Czaplicki is that notwithstanding a statutory assignment of the longshoreman’s right of action, that right of action may be revested in the longshoreman when it becomes manifest that the as-signee, with knowledge of its exclusive right to control and prosecute the claim, nevertheless declines to do so for any reason. This surely accords with the equitable considerations that the longshoreman should not lose his substantive right simply by reason of disinclination of the statutory assignee to sue, and that a deliberate decision by the latter to forego the exclusive right to control prosecution of the claim must reflect a knowledgeable relinquishment of right. [Id at 1046.]
