Joann M. Berger, Appellant, v. Kenneth S. Apfel, Commissioner, of Social Security, Appellee.
United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
Submitted: October 20, 1999 Filed: February 2, 2000
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota.
Joann Berger appeals the judgment of the district court upholding the final decision of the Commissioner of Social Security reducing Berger‘s disability insurance benefits to offset a lump-sum settlement of her workers’ compensation benefits. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I. BACKGROUND
Federal law limits the amount of Social Security disability insurance benefits that a person may receive when he or she is also receiving state workers’ compensation benefits. If the sum of a person‘s Social Security and workers’ compensation disability benefits would exceed 80% of that person‘s pre-disability earnings,
Minnesota law provides for an opposing, or “reverse” offset. Under
Berger was injured at work in April 1990, and began to collect workers’ compensation benefits. In April 1991, Berger applied for Social Security disability benefits and supplemental security income. Her application for benefits was granted in May 1992. Berger later reached a settlement of her workers’ compensation claim. Berger‘s attorney was concerned that a lump-sum settlement would result in a reduction to Berger‘s Social Security benefits. In a letter to counsel for State Fund Mutual, her employer‘s insurer, Berger‘s attorney asked that the settlement agreement include “language which will minimize any impact [the settlement] may have on Mrs. Berger‘s social security benefits.” (App. at 3.) Counsel for State Fund Mutual, who was charged with drafting the settlement document, responded that he would “simply include some language that indicates the amount of the workers’ compensation settlement contemplates an offset because [Berger] is receiving social security benefits simultaneously with her workers’ compensation benefits.” (Id. at 4.) Presumably, this was a reference to Minnesota‘s reverse offset.
The terms of the settlement were set forth in an August 1993 stipulation. Although the parties continued to disagree as to whether Berger was totally and permanently disabled, Berger received a lump-sum payment of $30,000, of which $6,200 represented attorney‘s fees. The stipulation included the following provision:
It is stipulated that the lump sum payment of $30,000 contemplates a reduction of workers’ compensation permanent total disability payments as the result of the employer and insurer‘s right to take an offset for the social security benefits the employee is receiving and will continue to receive. Nothing in this agreement shall be construed as a waiver by the employee to claim full entitlement to social security benefits.
(R. at 76.) The agreement also noted that Berger‘s employer contended her average weekly wage at the time of the injury was $187.17.
At the time the stipulation was signed, Berger was receiving a weekly workers’
In August 1994, the Social Security Administration (SSA) informed Berger that her Social Security disability benefits would be subject to a
In October 1995, Berger forwarded to the ALJ a copy of an amended settlement agreement dated September 1995. In the stipulation, the parties indicated they intended “to clarify the terms of [the original] Stipulation for Settlement as it was the employee‘s intention that the Stipulation for Settlement be drafted so as to maximize her social security disability benefits.” (R. at 110.) The amended agreement went on to provide that the settlement “[took] into consideration” Berger‘s remaining life expectancy of 36.2 years, and should be prorated over that span. (R. at 111.) Subtracting from the $30,000 lump-sum payment the $7,500 for rehabilitation benefits and $1,968.75 representing “impairment compensation,” Berger calculated that the settlement, prorated over her remaining life expectancy, represented a weekly benefit of $12.99. (Id.) The parties also recounted that prior to the settlement Berger had received $2508.08 in temporary total disability benefits, and $14,694.31 in temporary partial disability benefits, or a total of $17.202.39. This amount, minus $6,754.89 in attorney‘s fees and divided over 139.4 weeks, represented a pre-settlement weekly benefit of $74.95.
In an October 1996 decision, the ALJ affirmed SSA‘s determination that Berger was subject to an offset, rejecting Berger‘s contention that the settlement should be prorated over her remaining life expectancy. According to the ALJ, the amended agreement was “an after-the-fact maneuver . . . to attempt to circumvent the imposition of a valid Worker‘s Compensation offset.” (R. at 21.) If the parties had intended to base the lump-sum award on a formula related to Berger‘s life expectancy, the ALJ opined, they should have said so in the original settlement agreement.
The ALJ concluded that SSA had correctly used $187.17 as the rate at which to prorate Berger‘s lump-sum settlement. The ALJ noted that under a provision in SSA‘s Programs Operations Manual System (POMS), SSA applies a three-step test to determine the rate at which to prorate such a settlement: first, SSA looks to the rate specified in an award; second, to the periodic rate paid prior to the settlement; and third, to the maximum benefit to which the claimant would have been entitled under the state‘s workers’ compensation law. See Social Security Administration POMS DI 52001.555(C)(4). The ALJ determined that SSA‘s use of $187.17 was consistent with this approach, because the settlement agreement failed to specify an amount by which to prorate the award, and the figure “was mentioned in the settlement agreement and was also once a rate paid to [Berger] for weekly benefits.” The ALJ concluded,
In the absence of a specified rate in the original Stipulation for Settlement, [SSA] is not required to speculate as to what rate was applied and is not required to assume that the lump sum award was intended to compensate the claimant based on his life expectancy . . . [I]f that was [the parties‘] intention, then their intention should have been incorporated into the original Stipulation.
(R. at 23.)
Berger subsequently brought this action in the district court pursuant to
On appeal, Berger asserts that the original stipulation indicates that the amount of the settlement had been reduced pursuant to Minnesota‘s “reverse offset” provision,
II. DISCUSSION
In reviewing the Commissioner‘s decision, we examine whether it is supported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole and whether the Commissioner applied the correct legal standards. See
We are inclined to agree that SSA was not compelled to prorate the settlement award over Berger‘s remaining life expectancy. Although we believe it is clear from the original stipulation that the parties and their attorneys intended to structure the settlement such that Berger‘s Social Security benefits would not be adversely affected, it is implicit in the agency‘s three-step approach to proration of lump-sum settlements that bare intent to evade the offset is insufficient, and we are unable to conclude the agency‘s three-step approach is an unreasonable approach to fulfilling its statutory mandate, see Shalala v. Guernsey Mem‘l Hosp., 514 U.S. 87, 94-95 (1995); Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. National Resource Defense Council, 467 U.S. 837, 844 (1984). Further, we do not agree that SSA was bound to accept the proration terms specified in the amended stipulation. SSA has delineated fairly clearly how it goes about prorating a lump-sum workers’ compensation award, see Social Security Ruling 87-21c, and it was therefore incumbent upon Berger‘s attorney to ensure that the settlement detailed not only the parties’ intent, but also how that intent was to be carried out.
However, in light of
Although we recognize that the POMS guidelines “ha[ve] no legal force, and do[] not bind the [Commissioner],” Schweiker v. Hansen, 450 U.S. 785, 789 (1981), we believe the agency‘s use of $187.17 confuses the first and second steps, and therefore
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded with instructions to remand to the Commissioner for recalculation of benefits.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
