Aрpellants Nelson County Schools and CompManagement, Inc. (collectively, “employer”) appeal from a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Commission awarding medical benefits to appellee Brenda Ann Woodson (‘Woodson”) pursuant to Code § 65.2-603. The sole issue on appeal is whether the commission erroneously concluded that Woodson could recover medical benefits nоtwithstanding her failure to specifically
I. BACKGROUND
On November 26, 2003, Woodson filed a claim for benefits, alleging that she suffered a work-related injury while checking the oil level in her school bus. Woodson used the commission’s standard application form, which contains a section with the heading: “What specific benefits are you seeking? Check all that apply.” In the following list, Woodson checked the entry “Compensation for total wage loss for the periods listed below.” Woodson did not check the entries “Payment of lifetime medical costs for this injury and/or disease” or “Pay ment of specific medical bills (attach to this form) related to this injury and/or disease.”
During the hearing before the deputy commissioner, employer objected to Woodson’s testimony about her medical treatment, arguing that “our position is medicals are not an issue” because “[t]hat’s not part of the application, and that’s also not part of what was asked for even in the interrogatories.” The commissioner, however, held that a request for medical benefits was “implicit” in the filing of the application for benefits, noting that “[w]hen you have an injury you go to the doctor[,][a]nd to say ... you don’t want your doctor to be paid but you want to be compensated for lost time” is “ludicrous.” Thus, the deputy commissioner awarded Woodson temporary total disability benefits and medical benefits “pursuant to § 65.2-603 for as long as necessary for her August 21, 2003, neck injury.”
Employer appealed to the full commission, which affirmed the decision of the deputy commissioner. The commission “agree[d] with the Deputy Commissioner that it was not necessary for [Woodson] to specifically allege that [she] was claiming medical benefits for treatment related to [her] aсcident,” reasoning that “[s]uch a claim is implicit in an initial claim that alleges disability from work.” The commission also disagreed with employer’s argument that Woodson was required to check the entry on the appliсation indicating that she was seeking “payment of lifetime medical costs for this injury and/or disease,” noting instead that that part of the application “pertains to a medical only claim.” Employer aрpeals.
II. ANALYSIS
Although we defer to the commission in its role as fact finder, we “review questions of law
de novo," Rusty’s Welding Serv., Inc. v. Gibson,
As pertinent here, the Workers’ Compensation Act provides that, “[a]s long as necessary after an accident, the employer
shall
furnish or cause to be furnished, free of charge tо the injured employee, a physician chosen by the injured employee ... and [any] other necessary medical attention” related to the compensable injury. Code § 65.2-603(A)(1) (emphasis added). It is well established that “[t]he medical attention and hospitalization which the employee is entitled to receive and the employer is required to furnish ... is incidental to and a part of the compensation to which the еmployee is entitled under the act.”
Merrimac Anthracite Coal Corp. v. Showalter,
Because “[t]his statutory duty on the еmployer is mandatory,”
Cash v. Am. Health Ins. Corp.,
Employer, however, argues that, even if a compensable injury has been established, an employee cannot recover relief not specifically requested in the employee’s application for benefits, reasoning that, under the circumstancеs of this case, permitting Woodson to recover medical benefits would violate its right to due process of law. We disagree.
“Pleading requirements in administrative proceedings ... are traditionally more informаl than judicial proceedings.” Sergio’s
Pizza v. Soncini,
The circumstances of this case are analogous to those in
Fairfax Hospital,
where the employer contended that the commission erred in awarding the employee the medical costs associated with her work-related injury, arguing “that the issue of liability for such costs was never litigated before the hearing commissioner.”
Similarly, here, “[t]he full medical record was before the Commission,” and employer was provided with an opportunity “to contest the issue of liability for the [ ] medical еxpenses.”
Id.
Employer, moreover, did not request a continuance, nor did it “assert that [it] was unprepared to proceed on this issue or ask the [commission] to consider the merits of the [issue] at a later date.”
Parish v. Spaulding,
Affirmed.
Notes
. We further note that Woodson was not required, by statute оr rule, to file an application listing all of the benefits to which she believed she
was entitled. Commission Rule 1.1 requires only that a claim for benefits “shall” be in writing, and "should” set forth,
inter alia,
the benefits sought. Because "the word ‘should’ ordinаrily implies no more than expediency and is directory only,”
Brushy Ridge Coal Co. v. Blevins,
. We also note that, because no specific payments for medical benefits have been ordered, employer is free to contest the necessity and reasonableness of Woodson’s medical expenses in any subsequent proceeding.
.
But cf. WLR Foods, Inc. v. Cardosa, 26
Va.App. 220, 227-28,
