695 So. 2d 898 | Fla. Dist. Ct. App. | 1997
Lead Opinion
In this workers’ compensation case, we have for review an order awarding attorneys’ fee pursuant to section 440.34(3)(b), Florida Statutes (1991). This statute allows the claimant to recover fees from the employer “[i]n any case in which the employer or carrier fails or refuses to pay a claim filed with the division ... on or before the 21st day after receiving notice of the claim-” We reverse because the claim was premature when filed, and the employer and carrier (E/C) accepted claimant as permanently and totally disabled within 21 days from the date they received actual notice that claimant had reached maximum medical improvement (MMI) from all conditions.
Claimant suffered a compensable industrial injury in February 1991, and the carrier shortly thereafter commenced voluntary payments of indemnity benefits. The E/C subsequently received notice that, according to one authorized treating physician, claimant had reached MMI from an anatomic stand
claimant remained under Dr. Director’s care from November 5,1993, until December 5, 1994, which was apparently her last visit with the physician. On January 19,1995, Dr. Director notified the E/C by telephone that claimant had reached MMI as of December 5, 1994. The doctor confirmed this by a letter of January 22, 1995. On February 9, 1995, the E/C commenced payment of PTD benefits and also paid benefits retroactive to December 5,1994.
Claimant subsequently sought payment of attorney’s fees pursuant to section 440.34(3)(b). Despite the E/C’s payment within 21 days of notice from Dr. Director, the JCC awarded fees under that section. The JCC found the “operative date” to be December 22, 1994, a date on which a representative of the E/C telephoned Dr. Director’s office. According to the JCC, “Dr. Director’s testimony is ... clear that had he been asked, he would have been able to give this maximum medical improvement information [the December 5, 1994 date] as early as December 22, 1994.” The JCC found fault with the E/C’s failure to ask questions on December 22 concerning psychiatric MMI. The JCC further found that the September 14, 1993, claim matured and ripened in December 1994, and that more than 21 days elapsed from December 22, 1994, the E/C’s “first opportunity to inquire about the claimant’s psychiatric maximum medical improvement date,” until benefits were paid on February 9, 1995. Accordingly, reasoned the JCC, claimant was entitled to attorneys fees under the 21-day rule.
The JCC erroneously focused upon what she perceived as the E/C’s bad-faith failure to investigate adequately the PTD claim. Bad faith attorneys’ fees existed in workers’ compensation cases under section 440.34(3)(b), Florida Statutes (1987), but were repealed in favor of the 21-day fee rule in 1989. Ch. 89-289, § 19, Laws of Florida. The present industrial injury occurred in 1991 and is therefore subject to the this rule of section 440.34(3)(b), Florida Statutes (1991). This rule requires that the carrier have actual notice of the claim to trigger the 21 days. Gunter v. Sauer, Inc., 629 So.2d 1086 (Fla. 1st DCA 1994); see also, Ralston v. Circle K, 659 So.2d 1380 (Fla. 1st DCA 1995); National Distrib. Co. v. Campbell, 632 So.2d 647, 649 (Fla. 1st DCA 1994) (21 days begins to run from actual notice of a claim).
In this case, the JCC erroneously reincarnated bad faith attorneys’ fees under the guise of the employer’s continuing obligation to place needed benefits speedily in the hands of the injured worker. Certainly the employer is under an obligation to provide needed benefits without delay. Also, the E/C is obligated to investigate upon receipt of a claim. That is a primary reason for the 21-day rule. Here, timely investigation of the September 14, 1993, claim revealed the premature nature of the claim. Under the 1989 amendments, attorneys’ fees are not available as a penalty for the employer’s failure to pay benefits before the expiration of 21 days after actual notice of a claim. Instead, the workers’ compensation law provides penalties for compensation unpaid within 14 days after becoming due. § 440.20(7), Fla. Stat. (1989). The JCC had no authority to reimpose the bad faith attorneys’ fee penalty when the Legislature saw fit to delete it in 1989.
We recognize that the fee statute we construe was patterned after former section 440.34(1), Florida Statutes, deleted in 1979. That statute, created in 1941, contained language similar to section 440.34(3)(b), Florida Statutes (1991), and provided that “[i]f the employer or carrier ... shall decline to pay a claim on or before the 21st day after they
Our construction of the 1991 statute is strongly influenced by Lehigh Portland Cement Co. v. Branch, 319 So.2d 13 (Fla.1975), a case involving the former 21-day rule. In that case, claimant’s treating physician examined claimant on June 13, 1973, and concluded that further treatment was unwarranted. Id. at 14. The physician delayed, however, until July 27, a decision and report on the appropriate disability rating, at which time he notified the employer. Id. Within 21 days after July 27, the employer voluntarily commenced payment of permanent disability benefits based upon the physician’s report. The judge of industrial claims denied attorneys’ fees, but the Industrial Relations Commission reversed holding that the employer failed to provide benefits within 21 days of the physician’s examination. The Florida Supreme Court reversed the Commission because “[sjection 440.34(1) unambiguously states that the 21-day period begins to run from the date on which the employer and carrier ‘have notice of (a claim)’.” Id.
Applying the Lehigh Portland decision to the present case, it is clear that Dr. Director made no determination as to MMI until January 19, 1995. Much of the claimant’s questioning of Dr. Director focused upon the issue of whether on December 22, 1994, Dr. Director would have given the carrier an MMI date of December 5,1994, had he been asked. Dr. Director answered that such a response would have been possible and that the actual MMI date he came up with was “probably generated around [January 22, 1995],” which is the date he wrote the MMI letter to the carrier. Dr. Director also testified that “at the end of December” he “probably would have been able to give an MMI date.” Finally, he stated that if a specific inquiry had been made by the carrier as of December 22, 1994, he probably would have been able to give an MMI date.
A comparison between Lehigh Portland Cement v. Branch and this court’s later decision in National Airlines, Inc. v. Wikle, 451 So.2d 908 (Fla. 1st DCA 1984), demonstrates that Lehigh Portland controls the present issue. In Wikle, the doctor examined the claimant on June 6, 1980, and on that date determined claimant had reached MMI, estimated claimant’s permanent disability rating, and prepared a report bearing that date. 451 So.2d at 910. For whatever reason, however, the carrier did not receive the report until July 24, 1980. The opinion in Wikle indicates that as of May 21, 1980, some two weeks before the doctor determined MMI, the carrier had knowledge of sufficient information to conclude that the claim for permanent disability benefits had matured to the point that further investigation was necessary. Id. at 911. The carrier did not pay until after receipt of the medical report on July 24, 1980, and the judge awarded attorneys’ fees, affirmed by this court. The Wikle opinion expressly distinguishes the Lehigh Portland decision:
In that case, the Court expressly found that there was no proof that the physician determined the extent of disability on the date of examination rather than six weeks later when the report was prepared and transmitted to the carrier. That absence of proof is a materially distinguishing fact from this case, where the proof supported a finding that the disability was determined at the time of examination.
Id. (citation omitted). In the present case, as in Lehigh Portland, the physician made no determination of MMI until several weeks after the December 5 examination and, in the present case, as in Lehigh Portland, the E/C promptly paid permanent benefits after receipt of the report. In Wikle, the court noted that the pending claim was perfected by imputed notice of facts “overtly determined in some discoverable fashion.” Id. Because no determination of MMI was made in the present ease in any fashion by December 22, the JCC erred in using that date as the operative date for attorneys’ fees.
REVERSED.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
In my judgment, the majority’s decision requiring actual notice of a claim as a precondition to an award of fees under section 440.34(3)(b), Florida Statutes (1991), is a substantial departure from prior case law which recognized that notice of a claim for statutory purposes occurs once an employer has sufficient information to begin investigating the status of its employee’s condition. In support of its position that section 440.34(3)(b) requires nothing less than actual notice of the claimant’s maximum medical improvement (MMI) condition, the majority cites three cases from this court: Ralston v. Circle K, 659 So.2d 1380 (Fla. 1st DCA 1995); National Distributing Co. v. Campbell, 632 So.2d 647 (Fla. 1st DCA 1994); and Gunter v. Sauer, Inc., 629 So.2d 1086 (Fla. 1st DCA 1994). All of these opinions are, however, factually distinguishable from the case at bar. In both Gunter and National Distributing Co., we properly held that the 21-day period runs from the date the claim is filed, rather than from the date of the E/C’s receipt of the claim acknowledged by the Division of Workers’ Compensation. In Ralston, we appropriately decided that because the 21-day period could not commence before the claim was filed, the E/C’s receipt of a copy of the claim before the claimant had filed it did not trigger the operation of the 21-day rule.
None of the above decisions addressed the facts and issue now before us, involving a situation where a claim for permanent disability benefits was premature when it was filed, because a date of MMI had not yet been established for the employee’s psychological condition,
Nevertheless, abundant case law exists construing former section 440.34(1), Florida Statutes, after which section 440.34(3)(b) was patterned. The rule is clearly established that a ease or cases interpreting an earlier statute may be controlling in subsequent eases as to the construction of another statute, if an examination reveals that for all practical purposes the statutes are identical. 49 Fla. Jur.2d Statutes § 168 (1984). These earlier cases never imposed, contrary to the interpretation that the majority now places on the statute, the requirement of nothing less than an employer’s actual notice of a claim’s subsequent maturity as a prerequisite to the running of the statutory 21-day term, if the employer had cause to reasonably believe that an investigation was needed to determine the current status of the employee’s condition. In other words, the construction formerly given section 440.34(1) was that the notice must be such as to apprise the employer of “some subsequent notice or event of which the carrier had or should have had knowledge, indicating that the claim was then considered mature.” National Airlines, Inc. v. Wikle, 451 So.2d 908, 909 (Fla. 1st DCA 1984) (emphasis added). The facts in Wikle are particularly instructive in regard to the issue at bar.
Wikle filed a premature “shotgun” claim in 1978 for, among other things, permanent disability benefits (PDB). The claim matured in 1980, and the E/C voluntarily began paying PDB on July 28, 1980. One of the questions before the court was whether the E/C’s payment of such benefits occurred more than 21 days after the requisite statutory notice for the payment of attorney’s fees. In affirming the judge’s award of fees, this court rejected the carrier’s argument that it had timely paid the claim within four days after it received actual notice of the claim’s maturity, i.e., its receipt (on July 24,1980) of a treating physician’s report,’ dated June 6, 1980, which informed it that claimant had recovered to a condition of 35 to 40 percent permanent disability of his injured right leg. In deciding that June 6, 1980, was the operative date for the commencement of the 21-day period, and that more than 21 days had elapsed thereafter before the claimed benefits were paid, we
We specifically noted that it was immaterial to the issue of claimant’s right to attorney’s fees that the carrier’s receipt stamp on the physician’s report bore the date of July 24, 1980, and that it paid the claim four days thereafter. We explained:
This physician had been approved by the carrier to treat the claimant and requested by it to estimate the extent of claimant’s permanent disability. The consequent breakdown in communication resulted in part from the carrier’s failure to follow through on its request, and responsibility for such breakdown is, therefore, fairly and properly placed on the carrier rather than the claimant.
Id.
The majority, however, states that the outcome in the case at bar is controlled not by Wilde but rather by the decision of the Florida Supreme Court in Lehigh Portland Cement Co. v. Branch, 319 So.2d 13 (Fla.1975). I cannot agree. As the Wikle court noted, nothing in the record in Lehigh Portland disclosed that the employer had actual notice of claimant’s disability status before July 27, 1973, the date the physician’s report was forwarded to it, after which the E/C timely made payment. Nor was there anything in the record which would have reasonably apprised the employer — as in both the case at bar and in Wilde — to begin an investigation of claimant’s condition at any time before the E/C’s actual receipt of the report.
In the case at bar, the majority is of the opinion that, as in Lehigh Portland, the facts disclose that the authorized physician made no determination of the MMI date until the time notice of same was given the E/C, and that the E/C paid the claimed benefits within 21 days after it had obtained such notice. Although the record is clear that payment was timely made after the carrier’s receipt of the physician’s report, it is inconceivable to me that the Wilde decision does not control the outcome of the present ease, thereby requiring the award of the attorney fee pursuant to the dictates of the statute.
The rule announced in Wilde was part of the natural progression of case law which had recognized that notice, sufficient to activate the running of the 21-day period, begins when the carrier has in its possession adequate information on which to launch an investigation regarding whether a claim, immature when filed, may have thereafter ripened into maturity. See Davis v. Edwin M. Green, Inc., 240 So.2d 4 (Fla.1970); Thompson v. W.T. Edwards Tuberculosis Hosp., 164 So.2d 13 (Fla.1964); Massey v. North Am. Biologicals, 397 So.2d 341 (Fla. 1st DCA 1981); Roberts v. Georgia-Pacific Corp., 394 So.2d 1093 (Fla. 1st DCA 1981); Lott Maxcy Corp. v. Mann, 393 So.2d 1128 (Fla. 1st DCA 1981).
For example, in Davis, after the employer had voluntarily paid benefits based on a determination that claimant had suffered a 23 percent disability, claimant sought additional benefits and twice set hearings to establish the requested increase. The employer canceled both hearings. Finally, a third hearing was scheduled, at which time the E/C’s physician testified that claimant was 100 percent disabled. Based on this testimony, the employer shortly thereafter commenced payments. In rejecting the E/C’s argument that it was not liable for fees under the statute, the Florida Supreme Court made the following pertinent observations:
An employer who does not exercise his [or her] right to investigate, and who forces the burden of proving liability on the claimant to the extent the claimant requires assistance of an attorney for depositions or other actions, is not protected from payment of attorneys’ fees by igno-*903 ranee resulting from failure to investigate liability.
Davis, 240 So.2d at 5. The court further observed:
The Florida Workmen’s Compensation Law does not contemplate that an employer may insulate itself from knowledge that benefits may be due to a claimant and then, when its wall of willful ignorance is breached by claimant’s attorney, commence “voluntary” payments and resist payment of attorneys’ fees.
Id.
The court in Lehigh Portland obviously was aware of the above quoted material in noting that there was no evidence that the E/C had “insulated itself from information available” on the date of claimant’s examination. Lehigh Portland, 319 So.2d at 14 n. 1. Unlike the facts in Lehigh Portland, the judge below could have reasonably concluded that the carrier, when it called Dr. Director’s office on December 22,1994, either had insulated itself from information which it could have then readily discovered by making the appropriate inquiries, or that it had negligently failed to investigate matters which a reasonable investigation required. Such a conclusion is amply supported by the facts of this case.
The record shows that the carrier, aware of its duty to monitor claimant’s psychiatric MMI status, had in fact commenced an investigation of same by making no less than 12 contacts with the physician before its call of December 22, 1994. While claimant remained a patient of Dr. Director, the E/C and its representatives made a total of 16 contacts to Dr. Director and members of his staff, the twelfth of which occurred on June 10, 1994, when an employee in the office of the E/C’s claims adjuster conferred with a psychologist concerning the claimant’s MMI and work status. In its next communication with Dr. Director’s office on December 22, 1994, more than 13 months after the employee had first been placed under the care of Dr. Director, and nearly four years after her compensable accident, the E/C’s agent failed to ask any questions regarding such status. Thereafter, the first such inquiry concerning same occurred on January 19, 1995, during a telephone conversation between Dr. Director and counsel for the E/C.
Thus, during a six-month interval, the E/C made no contacts whatsoever with the authorized treating physician or any of his staff regarding claimant’s psychiatric status. Nor did it make any inquiry for over seven months concerning whether claimant had yet attained psychiatric MMI, notwithstanding the E/C’s prior knowledge that the employee had previously achieved MMI from her physical injuries, and its earlier inquiry regarding the current state of claimant’s psychiatric condition. As a consequence, the E/C utterly failed for over seven months in its duty to conduct an adequate investigation regarding the essential question of whether claimant had the capacity to work, despite the fact that the only remaining issues involving the PTD claim were whether claimant had achieved MMI from a psychiatric perspective, and, if so, the extent of her permanent impairment, if any.
The evidence in the case at bar is identical to that in Wikle, because an inquiry had been made in both cases concerning claimant’s current MMI status — in Wikle on May 21, 1980, and in the case on review on June 10, 1994. This type of communication was held sufficient in Wikle to place the employer on reasonable notice to begin an investigation. The facts are dissimilar insofar as the carrier below received a negative response immediately after the question was raised, whereas, in Wikle, the subsequent examination of June 6, 1980, revealed a positive finding of MMI with a resulting permanent partial disability. I cannot believe, however, that if the examination of Wikle had failed to disclose his achievement of MMI — as occurred in the present case following the E/C’s query of June 10, 1994 — the employer’s duty to conduct a reasonable investigation regarding such status would have been discharged. The clear import of Wikle and the cases it relied on demonstrates that the E/C’s burden of investigation remains, and it is not satisfied until the question of a claimant’s entitlement to permanent benefits is finally resolved.
Considering the circumstances of this case, I conclude that the workers’ compensation
This conclusion is supported by Dr. Director’s testimony that had the E/C specifically asked him about claimant’s psychiatric MMI status during the contact of December 22, 1994, he probably would have then been able to state the MMI date, which he later confirmed in his letter of January 22, 1995. He explained that at claimant’s last office visit on December 5, 1994, she had failed to make any substantial progress since her hospitalization for a mental disorder; thus, it was his opinion that she had reached MMI sometime following her release. He therefore used the date of December 5, 1994, for MMI, because it was the first time he had seen claimant following her psychiatric evaluation.
If the majority’s decision is understood to say that nothing less than the employer’s actual notice of a claimant’s current condition is sufficient to trigger the running of the 21-day period, then it is in clear conflict with Wikle and other cases holding that notice begins when the E/C receives adequate information to commence an investigation. In that the majority has not expressly receded from Wikle and the cited cases espousing the above rule, I assume the majority’s holding can be alternatively interpreted as meaning that the information the employer received regarding the probable maturity of the claim before its call of December 22, 1994, was not sufficient to require it to begin an investigation of such status. The JCC, however, who served as trier of the facts, found that such information was sufficient. The weight and sufficiency of the evidence has traditionally been determined by the fact-finder. As we have long recognized:
We do not review whether there was competent, substantial evidence to support the claim ...; we only review whether the record contains competent, substantial evidence to support the deputy’s order.
Swanigan v. Dobbs House, 442 So.2d 1026, 1027 (Fla. 1st DCA 1983). And, to restate one of the most elementary standards of appellate review: we do not substitute our judgment for that of the JCC on factual issues that are supported by competent, substantial evidence.
In the case at bar, the JCC heard and examined the evidence and decided from its cumulative weight that the E/C, as of December 22, 1994, had sufficient notice of the maturity of the claim for PTD benefits to commence the running of the 21-day period. She did not, as the majority contends, erroneously reincarnate bad faith attorney’s fees, but instead clearly based the award upon a finding of notice under the 21-day rule. As I firmly believe her decision was supported by competent, substantial evidence, I would affirm the award of the fee.
. Ordinarily, a claimant must have reached MMI as to all conditions caused by the compensable injury to be entitled to permanent indemnity benefits. Copeland Steel v. Miles, 536 So.2d 1179 (Fla. 1st DCA 1989).