Charlotte MARSHECK v. BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE FIRE & POLICE EMPLOYEES’ RETIREMENT SYSTEM OF THE CITY OF BALTIMORE
No. 69, Sept. Term, 1999
Court of Appeals of Maryland
April 12, 2000
749 A.2d 774 | 358 Md. 393
It follows that Johnson‘s convictions under counts one and two must be reversed.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS REVERSED IN PART AND CASE REMANDED TO THAT COURT WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO REVERSE THE CONVICTIONS ON COUNTS ONE AND TWO. JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS ON COUNTS THREE THROUGH FIVE AFFIRMED. COSTS IN THIS COURT TO BE PAID BY TALBOT COUNTY. COSTS IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS TO BE PAID THREE-FIFTHS BY TALBOT COUNTY AND TWO-FIFTHS BY STEVE JOHNSON.
749 A.2d 774
Charlotte MARSHECK v. BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF the FIRE & POLICE EMPLOYEES’ RETIREMENT SYSTEM OF the CITY OF BALTIMORE.
No. 69, Sept. Term, 1999.
Court of Appeals of Maryland.
April 12, 2000.
William R. Phelan, Jr., Principal Counsel and Avery M. Muller, Asst. City Sol. (Otho M. Thompson, City Sol., on brief), Baltimore, for respondent.
Argued before BELL, C.J., and ELDRIDGE, RODOWSKY, RAKER, WILNER, CATHELL and HARRELL, JJ.
HARRELL, Judge.
Charlotte Marsheck, Petitioner, applied to the Fire and Police Employees’ Retirement System of the City of Balti
- Did the Court of Special Appeals err, in affirming the Circuit Court‘s ruling that the hearing examiner properly denied Petitioner‘s application for special disability, by construing the term “injury“, as used in
Article 22, § 34(e) of the Baltimore City Code , to begin at the time Petitioner originally sustained her work-related back injury on 13 February 1992? - Did the Court of Special Appeals err in failing to apply the “substantial compliance” standard to Petitioner‘s untimely filing of her special disabilities benefit application?
We affirm the judgments of the Court of Special Appeals and the Circuit Court.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
The facts of this case are not in dispute. Petitioner began her employment as a Baltimore City police officer on 15 August 1985. On 13 February 1992, she sustained a work-related back injury while on duty. Despite the injury, she continued to serve with the police department, at times as a full duty police officer and at other times, due to the injury, on light duty status. Throughout her service, she underwent
After a three year period during which Ms. Marsheck endured several surgeries on her back, multiple epidural injections and steroid blocks, and severe depression, her physician opined, on 6 February 1997, that Petitioner was one hundred percent disabled from performing her duties with the police department. On 12 February 1997, Petitioner‘s then attorney sent, via first-class mail, an application for special disability benefits to Respondent. Respondent replied, by letter dated 19 February 1997, informing Petitioner that her application was received by it on 18 February 1997 and, furthermore, that the application was not notarized as required. The application was returned via first-class mail to Petitioner on 19 February 1997. Petitioner then sent a properly notarized application which was docketed as received by Respondent on 25 February 1997.
On 22 May 1997, at an administrative hearing before the Respondent‘s examiner, Respondent argued that Petitioner did not file her application within five years of her 13 February 1992 injury, as required by
Petitioner filed a timely petition for judicial review of the hearing examiner‘s decision in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City.3 In an order dated 4 February 1998, the Circuit Court affirmed the hearing examiner‘s decision. Petitioner then filed an appeal of the Circuit Court‘s decision to the Court of Special Appeals which affirmed the Circuit Court‘s judgment.
I.
Petitioner asks us to equate the term “injury“, as it is used in
In contrast, Respondent argues that the term “injury” refers clearly and unambiguously to the original incident that causes the worker to eventually become permanent disabled, or incapacitated. Respondent states that
This Court presumes that the decision made by an administrative body is prima facie correct. See Baltimore Lutheran High School Ass‘n, Inc. v. Employment Sec. Admin., 302 Md. 649, 662-63, 490 A.2d 701, 708 (1985). We, therefore, limit our review of a final decision from an administrative agency to determining whether the agency had before it, at the time its decision was rendered, substantial evidence to support its decision and whether the agency‘s decision is free from prejudicial legal error.4 See Baltimore Lutheran, 302 Md. at 662, 490 A.2d at 708. Because of the deference courts ordinarily accord the expertise of an administrative agency acting within the sphere of its regulated activities, we refrain from making our own independent findings of fact or substituting our judgment for that of the agency when the record contains substantial evidence supporting the agency‘s determination. See State Admin. Bd. of Election Laws v. Billhimer, 314 Md. 46, 58, 548 A.2d 819, 825-26 (1988); Baltimore Lutheran, 302 Md. at 662, 490 A.2d at 708.
Petitioner presents us with a solely legal issue, namely to determine the meaning of the term “injury” as used in
“Fundamentally, the object of all statutory construction is to determine and effectuate the enactment‘s purpose.” Briggs v. State, 289 Md. 23, 31, 421 A.2d 1369, 1374 (1980). Generally, if the language of the statute is unambiguous and
Remedial legislation, such as governs the retirement system here, must be construed liberally in favor of injured employees in order to effectuate the legislation‘s remedial purpose. See Martin, 353 Md. at 400, 726 A.2d at 734; Montgomery County v. McDonald, 317 Md. 466, 472, 564 A.2d 797, 800 (1989). Such a principle, however, does not grant us license to alter the statute beyond its clear meaning and the legislature‘s intent. See id. This Court, therefore, will not add provisions or tailor existing ones to change the mandatory nature of the statute‘s language in order to favor the disability claimant. See Philip Elec. North America v. Wright, 348 Md. 209, 217, 703 A.2d 150, 153 (1997); McDonald, 317 Md. at 472-73, 564 A.2d at 800.
The general rule of liberally construing remedial statutes is approached with caution when the scrutinized legislative scheme contains a statute of limitations.5 We have
“[T]he general purpose of the applicable work[ers‘] compensation act to compensate injured workers should not be used to interpret the limitations provision, because the very existence of a limitations provision in the act indicates that the legislature has deliberately compromised the general compensation purpose in the interests of the purposes served by a limitations provision.”
McDonald, 317 Md. at 472-73, 564 A.2d at 800 (citing Kelley, Statutes of Limitations in the Era of Compensation Systems: Workmen‘s Compensation Limitations Provisions for Accidental Injury Claims, 1974 Wash.U.L.Q. 541, 603). See also Mayor & City Council of Cumberland v. Beall, 97 Md.App. 597, 600, 631 A.2d 506, 508 (1993). “Accordingly the Courts should refuse to give statutes of limitations a strained construction to evade their effect.” McMahan v. Dorchester Fertilizer Co., 184 Md. 155, 159, 40 A.2d 313, 315-16 (1944).
Statutes of limitations are also remedial and grounded upon sound public policy. See McMahan, 184 Md. at 159, 40 A.2d at 315. In addition to serving important societal benefits, such as judicial economy, they are designed to balance competing interests between potentially adverse parties. See Doe v. Maskell, 342 Md. 684, 689, 679 A.2d 1087, 1089 (1996); Hecht v. Resolution Trust Corp., 333 Md. 324, 332-33, 635 A.2d 394, 399 (1994). On the one hand, statutes of limitations provide plaintiffs or claimants with a window of time to initiate a cause of action or assert a claim. See Maskell, 342 Md. at 689, 679 A.2d at 1089. As implied from its title, the time period in a statute of limitations is not infinite. Once the limitation period passed, the statute, which once provided opportunity, closes the window and the claim is barred thereafter. The legislature, in drafting such legislation, implicitly recognizes that as time passes, difficult evidentiary issues arise, such as proof of the cause of injury, faded
We have further noted that there is no magic to the window of time determined by the legislature. See Maskell, 342 Md. at 689, 679 A.2d at 1089. “It simply represents the legislature‘s judgment about the reasonable time needed to institute suit.” Id. We also recognize that “[t]he statute of limitations, as a defense that does not go to the merits, is disfavored in law and is to be strictly construed.” Newell, 323 Md. at 728, 594 A.2d at 1157. This makes sense if we remember that “[s]tatutes of limitation find their justification in necessity and convenience rather than in logic. They represent expedients rather than principles.” Maskell, 342 Md. at 690, 679 A.2d at 1089 (citations omitted).
With these concepts in mind, we turn to the statute at issue.
Any ordinary disability or special disability claimant must make proper application to the Panel of Hearing Examiners, which application shall include a medical certification of his disability and all supporting medical documentation, on a form prescribed by the Panel of Hearing Examiners, wherein the member shall state he has suffered a disability and that such disability prevents him from further performance of the duties of his job classification in the employ of Baltimore City. If the claim is for a special disability benefit, he shall in addition, state that such physical incapacity was the result of an injury arising out of and in the course of the actual performance of his duty, without willful negligence on his part. Any member who has joined this system on or after July 1, 1979, and who makes application for special disability benefit must additionally state that the disability resulted from an injury that occurred within five (5) years of the date of his application.
(Emphasis added).
The hearing examiner shall conduct hearings for all members on all matters involving ordinary disability claims, special disability claims, special death benefit claims, and any related matters arising out of said claims.... One hearing examiner from the Panel shall hear a particular claim for benefits. The hearing examiner shall conduct hearings in an informal manner with sufficient latitude to provide a fair and impartial hearing to all of the parties without requiring strict compliance with the rules of evidence. Testimony at the hearing shall be under oath and recorded.
The hearing examiner shall make the following determinations:
(1) Whether the member has suffered an injury or illness of such a nature as to preclude the member from the further performance of the duties of his job classification in the employ of Baltimore City.
(2) If the claim is for special disability benefits, whether the physical incapacity is the result of an injury arising out of and in the course of the actual performance of duty, without willful negligence on his part, and whether such disability qualifies under the provisions of
Section 34(e) . If such claim is filed by a member who joined this system on or after July 1, 1979, the hearing examiner shall additionally determine whether such disability resulted from an injury that occurred within five (5) years of the date of the member‘s application.
(Emphasis added).
(c) Ordinary disability retirement benefit. Any member who has acquired five (5) or more years of service and who has been determined by a hearing examiner to be mentally or physically incapacitated for the further performance of the duties of the member‘s job classification in the employ of Baltimore City, and that such incapacity is likely to be permanent, shall be retired by the Board of Trustees on an ordinary disability retirement, not less than thirty (30) and not more than ninety (90) days next following the date of filing his application for ordinary disability retirement benefits.
(e) Special disability benefits. Any member who has been determined by the hearing examiner to be totally and permanently incapacitated for the further performance of the duties of his job classification in the employ of Baltimore City, as the result of an injury arising out of and in the
course of the actual performance of duty, without willful negligence on his part, shall be retired by the Board of Trustees on a special disability retirement. For any employee who became a member on or after July 1, 1979, any claim for special disability benefits must be filed within five (5) years of the date of the member‘s injury.
(Emphasis added).
We think it plain that the City Council, while not defining the terms anywhere in the City Code as they apply to
[w]e are not free, under the guise of construction to amend the statute by inserting therein before the word “injury” the word “compensable” so as to make “injury” read as if it were “disability.” Congress knew the difference between “disability” and “injury” and used the words advisedly. This view is especially compelling when it is noted that the two words are used in the same sentence of the limitations provision; therein “disability” is related to the right to compensation, while “injury” is related to the period within which the claim must be filed.
Moreover, the City Council‘s intent to distinguish in meaning and application the terms “injury” and “disability” is further illustrated by examining the availability of the two types of disability benefits. The remedial purpose of the retirement system here is to provide at least some benefits to disabled fire and police employees regardless of the source of the disability. The difference between the two benefits lies in the level of benefits received. Special disability benefits, available to police injured on the job, provide higher compensation than ordinary disability benefits. From the language of the Code, however, it is obvious that the City Council, in seeking to provide greater benefits to fire and police employees injured on the job, established greater, or at least different, hurdles for an employee to qualify for special disability benefits. We noted this higher or different level of proof as follows:
The distinction in terms of eligibility between the two sections lies with the source of the injury which results in disability: if the injury arose out of or in the course of the actual performance of duty, then the claimant who is totally incapacitated is entitled to special disability benefits; if the injury was caused by any other means, then the claimant who is totally incapacitated is entitled to ordinary disability benefits.
Mayor of Baltimore v. Hackley, 300 Md. 277, 289, 477 A.2d 1174, 1180-81 (1984) (emphasis added). Indeed, an applicant for special disability benefits must show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the injury arose from his or her police duties. See
We reject Petitioner‘s argument that by not equating “injury” with “disability” the “Court of Special Appeals has created a damaging precedent in its decision which encourages employers to take advantage of their employees’ ignorance about the nature of their injury, and fosters a flood of frivolous claims from employees that, while not yet entitled to receive any benefits, will file as a matter of course in order to preserve any later possible claim.” Indeed, the City Council‘s intent, while providing disability retirement for injured police workers, focuses on retaining or returning the employees in the workforce where possible. For example,
The Panel of Hearing Examiners may, at its discretion but not more frequently than once in any one year, require any retired member, who is receiving a disability retirement allowance and who has not yet attained age fifty-five (55), to undergo a medical examination to determine whether he has become fit to resume duties in the classification in which he was performing duties at the time of his retirement ...
The Panel of Hearing examiners shall thereafter submit its determination to the head of the department in which the retiree was employed at the time of his retirement, and in the case of classified employees, to the Civil Service Commission. For purposes of re-employment, the retiree shall be treated by the head of his department and by the Civil Service Commission as if he were an employee on leave of absence without pay. Until such time as he is actually re-employed he shall continue to receive his disability retirement allowance.
Should a disability retiree who has been certified as fit for the further performance of his duties refuse to accept an offer of re-employment ... all rights in and to his pension shall be revoked by the Board of Trustees, upon recommendation made by the Panel of Hearing Examiners. Should a disability retiree refuse to submit to the medical examinations herein provided for, his allowance may be discontinued until the withdrawal of said refusal, and should his refusal continue for one year, all rights in and to his pension shall be revoked by the Board of Trustees, upon recommendation made by the Panel of Hearing Examiners.
(Emphasis added). The statute provides authority to the Board to require medical checkups once a year on employees claiming disability benefits. If a disability is determined to be no longer permanent, and the employee is given the option to return to work and refuses to do so, he or she will be denied further disability benefits. The system is structured to encourage employees to work instead of collect disability payments.
The police department in the instant case made every effort to accommodate Petitioner, following her injury, with lighter duty assignments when her back injury caused her pain and limited her ability to perform her duties. Such efforts to retain injured officers in the workforce are not unheard of with regard to the Baltimore City Police Department. See
Furthermore, we have rejected the notion that statutes of limitations, similar to the present statute, are illogical or irrational in the sense that they destroy a potential claim for disability before the disability arises. Statutes of limitations re-enforce predictability, which is a cornerstone of such benefit statutes. See DeBusk, 342 Md. at 440, 677 A.2d at 76. We explained in DeBusk, in the context of a workers’ compensation case, that:
Predictability and administrative ease, in the workers’ compensation statutory plan as in all things, come at the price of some flexibility in unique or unusual circumstances. Objective standards and bright-line rules such as statutes of limitations are the very keys to predictability, in the sense that everyone is treated in the same manner and everyone knows or can discover the rules in advance of their application. By their very nature, though, such rules and standards cannot make exceptions for every scenario which might arise. First, no lawmaker could construct a statute which foresaw each individual application of the statute and exception which might present itself. In addition, a statute which attempted to address not only the rule but all its possible exceptions would likely lose its valuable characteristic of predictability, because it would be that much more subject to manipulation in a courtroom than a statute which merely stated the rule and any major exceptions. Moreover, bright-line rules by definition cannot depend upon a factfinder‘s case-by-case assessment of the subjective knowledge of a person.
A statute of limitations which is triggered by an externally verifiable date is a classic example of an objective, bright-line rule which fosters predictable outcomes in otherwise unpredictable situations.
Id. at 438-39, 677 A.2d at 76 (emphasis in original).
Petitioner‘s undisputed date of injury within the meaning of
II.
Petitioner argues in the alternative that, if her date of injury under
The application mailed on February 12, 1997, was signed and dated February 12, 1997, by the [Petitioner]. [Respondent] acknowledged receipt of the application on February 18, 1997, by letter dated February 19, 1997, which was sent to [Petitioner‘s prior] attorney along with the application
lacking notarization. Thereafter, a notarized application was docketed as received by [Respondent] on February 25, 1997. Therefore, [Respondent] was notified of [Petitioner‘s] application only five days after it claims limitations expired on February 13, 1997, and received the properly notarized application only seven days after it was first notified of the claim.
It is unfortunate that the mailing of [Petitioner‘s] application for special disability benefits occurred just prior to Valentine‘s Day and President‘s Day weekend. As the letterheads of both [Petitioner‘s] prior attorney and the Retirement System demonstrate, both parties’ addresses are located in the same zip code. Therefore, under usual circumstances, [Petitioner‘s] application would have been received by [Respondent] the day after it was mailed, and been timely by [Respondent‘s] standards. However, the unusually heavy mail which flows around a holiday such as Valentine‘s Day, as well as the following President‘s Day weekend, in which there was no mail on President‘s Day Monday, explains the surprising delay in [Respondent‘s] receipt of the application, which did not occur until on February 18, 1997, the Tuesday after President‘s Day. The reasonableness of [Petitioner‘s prior] attorney in expecting that the application would be received on February 13, 1997, the day after it was mailed, is supported by well recognized legal presumptions for mail receipt. Evidence that mail was properly addressed, stamped, and mailed “raises a presumption that it reached it [sic] destination at the regular time and was received by the person to whom it was addressed.” [citations omitted][emphasis by Petitioner]. Accordingly, [Petitioner‘s prior] attorney‘s belief that the application would be received the day after it was mailed to an address in the same zip code, demonstrates substantial compliance in filing by February 13, 1997.
Furthermore, although the application was not notarized, it was complete in all other manners, as well as dated and signed by the [Petitioner]. Therefore, [Respondent] had notice of [Petitioner‘s] claim in every respect upon its
receipt of the application. Under such circumstances and in light of the purpose of statutes of limitation, as previously quoted, [Petitioner‘s] application was in substantial compliance with the limitations period enumerated in
Article 22, § 34(e) .
We find the doctrine of substantial compliance inapplicable to this case. “We have long adhered to the principle that where the legislature has not expressly provided for an exception in a statute of limitations, the court will not allow any implied or equitable exception to be engrafted upon it.” Booth Glass Co., Inc. v. Huntingfield Corp., 304 Md. 615, 624, 500 A.2d 641, 645 (1985). See also Colao v. County Council of Prince George‘s County, 346 Md. 342, 362-63, 697 A.2d 96, 106 (1997); Hecht, 333 Md. at 333, 635 A.2d at 399. Petitioner was required to file, not mail, her claim of disability within five years of her date of injury on 13 February 1992. See
[We do] not allow any implied or equitable exception to be engrafted on the statute of limitations merely on the ground that such exception would be within the spirit of the statute. To the contrary, [we look] to the public policy served by the defense of limitations, and permit[] it to function arbitrarily, without discrimination between the just and unjust claim, or the avoidable and unavoidable delay.
Beall, 97 Md.App. at 602, 631 A.2d at 508 (citations omitted). See also DeBusk, 342 Md. at 438-39, 677 A.2d at 76.
JUDGMENTS AFFIRMED; COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER.
ELDRIDGE, J., dissents.
For the reasons urged by the petitioner and outlined at the beginning of Part I of the majority‘s opinion, the Court‘s interpretation of the Baltimore City statute is harsh and makes no sense as a matter of public policy. The majority‘s interpretation violates the settled principle that courts should adopt “that construction [of a statute] which avoids an illogical or unreasonable result,” Kaczorowski v. City of Baltimore, 309 Md. 505, 513, 525 A.2d 628, 632 (1987), quoting Tucker v. Fireman‘s Fund Ins. Co., 308 Md. 69, 75, 517 A.2d 730, 732 (1986). I would reverse.
Notes
(Emphasis added).Any member who has been determined by the hearing examiner to be totally and permanently incapacitated for the further performance of the duties of his job classification in the employ of Baltimore City, as the result of an injury arising out of and in the course of the actual performance of duty, without willful negligence on his part, shall be retired by the Board of Trustees on a special disability retirement. For any employee who became a member on or after July 1, 1979, any claim for special disability benefits must be filed within five (5) years of the date of the member‘s injury.
If neither party files an appeal, then upon the expiration of thirty (30) days following the notice of the hearing examiner‘s written finding of fact, the hearing examiner‘s determination shall be final and binding, subject to the Panel of Hearing Examiners’ right to re-examination as provided for in
Section 34(g) .
The final determination of the hearing examiner shall be presumptively correct and shall not be disturbed on review except when arbitrary, illegal, capricious or discriminatory. If either party is aggrieved by a decision of the Baltimore City Court, the aggrieved party may further appeal such decision to the Court of Special Appeals, subject to review by the Maryland Court of Appeals.
