Lead Opinion
The question in this case is one of statutory interpretation: whether a police officer who has applied or been recommended for a disability retirement pension under the District of Columbia Police and Firefighters’ Retirement and Disability Act (the “Retirement and Disability Act”),
We agree with O’Rourke. We hold that his active membership in the Metropolitan Police Department at the time his retirement on disability was recommended to the Board was sufficient to preserve his
I.
After serving for twenty-six years with the New York City Police Department and for brief stints thereafter with the U.S. Mint Police and the U.S. Federal Protective Service, Joseph O’Rourke joined the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department in 2001. He was then fifty-two years old. O’Rourke was assigned to the Third District, where he served for the next several years as a patrol officer. In July 2007, O’Rourke sustained injuries to his head, hands, and left elbow when he fell onto a concrete walkway while chasing a suspected carjacker. O’Rourke was placed on medical leave; the Director of the Department’s Medical Services Division (the “Director”) classified his injuries as having been incurred in the performance of duty. A year later, after O’Rourke had undergone various unsuccessful medical treatments, the Police and Fire Clinic, with the Director’s approval, recommended to the Retirement and Relief Board that O’Rourke be retired on disability because his “ongoing pain and weakness of his left hand preclude him from carrying out the full duties of a police officer.” [App. 28] Accordingly, the Board held a hearing in February 2009 to determine O’Rourke’s eligibility for a disability retirement pension.
A decision by the Board was not soon forthcoming. Meanwhile, in September 2009, the Police Department served O’Rourke with notice of a proposed disciplinary action, namely termination of his employment. O’Rourke was charged with having secured his appointment to the force in 2001 by falsely stating in his Personal History Booklet that he never had been examined by a physician for “a disease or incorrect functioning of any part of [his] body, when [he] in fact underwent a series of tests to determine [his] qualification for disability” on account of a heart condition after he retired from the New York City police force. [S.A. 1A] In March 2010, following a hearing before a Police Department disciplinary panel, O’Rourke was found guilty of this charge, and the Police Department terminated his employment effective May 7, 2010.
The Board took note of the disciplinary proceedings. On May 27, 2010, it convened in executive session to consider the impact of O’Rourke’s dismissal. Thereaf
II.
The Retirement and Disability Act provides that police and firefighters may be eligible for two types of disability retirement annuities: one for disabling injuries or diseases incurred or aggravated in the performance of official duty (“POD”), as set forth in D.C.Code § 5-710, and the other for disabilities due to injury or disease not received or contracted in the performance of duty, as set forth in § 5-709. The main difference between the two annuities is the rate of compensation.
As the Retirement and Relief Board said in its decision, §§ 5-710 and 5-709 provide for the retirement of a disabled “member.” The term “member” is defined, somewhat circularly, to include “any officer or member of the Metropolitan Police force.”
III.
Our review of the Board’s construction of the Retirement and Disability Act is de novo, for this court is “the final authority on issues of statutory construction”
“The first step in construing a statute is to read the language of the statute and construe its words according to their ordinary sense and plain meaning.”
The Retirement and Relief Board reads the word “member” in §§ 5-709 and 5-710 restrictively, to include only someone who is a “current member” — as opposed to a “current or former member” — when the administrative decision finally is made whether to retire him on disability. If our analysis not only started, but also ended, with the words of the two statutory sections in question, this would be a possible reading. It is not an obvious or necessary reading, however. “[T]here is no temporal qualifier [of the word “member”] in the statute[s] such as would make plain” that only current members may be retired on disability.
Whenever the Board of Police and Fire Surgeons receives a recommendation from the Director for a disability retirement of a Metropolitan Police Department or Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department member pursuant to Chapter 6A of this title, the Board of Police and Fire Surgeons shall make a disability assessment and, if the member is unable to perform the full range of duties, shall retire the member as disabled regardless of whether the member is performing useful and efficient services that are less than the full range of duties. The member shall be retired on an annuity determined in accordance with subsection (e)(2) of this section [explaining how the amount of the annuity is calculated for a member retired for disability incurred or aggravated in the performance of duty]. [Emphasis added.]
Section 5-709(c) is materially identical. In conjunction with the mandatory character of the language in these provisions, we cannot ignore the fact that “the member” to whom the provisions repeatedly refer is simply the individual who is the subject of the Director’s disability retirement recommendation. Thus, even if considered in isolation, the two statutes may be read as requiring the Board to award a disability pension to a disabled former member who was a current member when the proceedings before the Board commenced. On the face of things, the Board’s contrary interpretation is not the only reasonable one, and the statutes are ambiguous.
Does the Board’s choice deserve our deference? The Board did not provide a reasoned analysis explaining its construction of the disability retirement statutes in light of the broader statutory framework or the primary purpose of the Retirement and Disability Act. For his part, O’Rourke, seeking to cut the Gordian Knot without
An interpretive issue similar to the one we now confront was presented to the Supreme Court in Robinson v. Shell Oil Company,
A similar inquiry into statutory context and purpose in the present case persuades us that the Board’s reading of §§ 5-709 and 5-710 is unreasonable. Admittedly, a review of the usage of the term “member” in the immediate statutory environment surrounding these two sections is inconclusive. Sometimes the term “member” is used in other provisions of the Retirement and Disability Act to include or mean former members. For example, the Act refers to officers who have been separated
Considering how the disability retirement provisions fit into the overall statutory framework, we find that the Board’s interpretation leads to perverse or incongruous consequences. Consider, first, that the Board’s holding is not limited to situations in which the member’s employment was terminated, as in O’Rourke’s case, for misconduct. A member may retire voluntarily by giving advance notice,
Moreover, even if it could be limited to disciplinary terminations, the Board’s ruling poses a problem, for it is in tension with provisions of D.C. Law 13-160, the Omnibus Police Reform Amendment Act of 2000, that were enacted specifically to govern the retirement of police officers who are under disciplinary investigation.
interpret a statutory text in the light of surrounding texts that happen to have been subsequently enacted. This classic judicial task of reconciling many laws enacted over time, and getting them to “make sense” in combination, necessarily assumes that the implications of a statute may be altered by the implications of a later statute.[35]
In D.C. Law 13-160, the Council provided for the completion of disciplinary investigations of members of the Metropolitan Police Department who retire or resign while under investigation for serious misconduct.
Accordingly, if the Retirement and Relief Board had found O’Rourke eligible for retirement on disability before the Police Department concluded its disciplinary proceedings, he would have been entitled under the conditional retirement statute to receive a disability annuity (subject to the Department postponing the effective start of his retirement, finishing its investigation, and assessing the penalty imposed). It is hard to see why it should make a material difference ■ that the disciplinary investigation happened to be concluded first. When retirement and disciplinary inquiries are proceeding contemporaneously on parallel tracks, it is illogical for a member’s entitlement to a disability annuity to turn on irrelevant fortuities like the duration of the administrative or adjudicative processes in his particular matter — a factor that may vary greatly from case to case and that usually is outside the member’s control.
Still less would it be acceptable to construe the Retirement and Disability Act as granting the Board the discretion to manipulate outcomes by deliberately delaying its decisions on disability retirement applications when it learns that the applicant may be terminated.
The Board’s interpretation also conflicts with the primary purpose of the Retirement and Disability Act. That Act serves as the worker’s compensation plan for the District’s police and firefighters.
As a rule, and as we have held in construing the District of Columbia Workers’ Compensation Act, the termination of an employee for reasons unrelated to his injury or claim does not disentitle the employee from receiving disability benefits. There is no reason why it should. In Upchurch v. District of Columbia Department of Employment Services,
This court can find no authority, from any jurisdiction or legal treatise, which would support the proposition that termination severs the causal link between injury and wage loss. To the contrary, according to one of the leading authorities on workers’ compensation law, the “Misconduct of the employee, whether negligent or wilful, is immaterial in compensation law, unless it takes the form of deviation from the course of employment, or unless it is of a kind specifically made a defense in the jurisdictions containing such a defense in their statutes.” 2 ARTHUR Larson, Larson’s Workers’ Compensation Law § 32.00 (2001). If the Director did indeed consider the termination of the petitioner as a basis in law for denying benefits, such a determination would not withstand judicial scrutiny as it would find no support in the District of Columbia Workers’ Compensation Act. Specifically, the Act does not provide that the subsequent termination of an employee, whether related or unrelated to a work injury, is a defense for an employer who denies an obligation to pay disability compensation.[50]
There are some exceptions to that usual rule, but the Board did not rely on them, and it appears that none of them apply here.
In sum, because the Retirement and Disability Act functions as a comprehensive workers’ compensation statute for police and firefighters, it must be construed “liberally in light of its humane purpose.”
We conclude that the Board has adopted an unreasonable interpretation of §§ 5-709 and 5-710, because it is incompatible with the broader statutory context and the humanitarian and remedial policy of the Act. As a result, we are not required to defer to it.
IY.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the decision of the Retirement and Relief Board in this case and remand for further proceedings consistent with our opinion. On remand, the Board should determine whether O’Rourke is disabled within the meaning of the Retirement and Disability Act, and if so, whether his disability is performance-related and what disability annuity he is entitled to receive.
So ordered.
Opinion by Senior Judge SCHWELB, concurring in the judgment.
. D.C.Code § 5-701 et seq. (2008 Repl.). All D.C.Code citations in this opinion are to the 2008 Replacement Edition of the Code unless otherwise indicated.
. O’Rourke’s brief states that his disciplinary termination is currently on appeal to the D.C. Office of Employee Appeals.
. O’Rourke was entitled to this annuity because he had over five years of service with the Metropolitan Police force and had reached the age of fifty-five. See D.C.Code § 5-717.
. For members (like O’Rourke) who joined the Police or Fire Department "after the end of the 90-day period beginning on November 17, 1979,” the POD disability annuity "shall be 70% of [the member’s] basic salary at the time of retirement multiplied by the percentage of disability for such member ..., except that such annuity shall not be less than 40% of his basic salary at the time of retirement.” Id. § 5-710(e)(2)(D). The non-POD disability annuity for such members "shall be 70% of [the member’s] basic salary at the time of retirement multiplied by the percentage of disability for such member ..., except that such annuity shall not be less than 30% of his basic salary at the time of retirement.” Id. § 5-709(b). In contrast, the ordinary deferred annuity under the Police and Firefighters’ Retirement Plan is computed at the rate of 2.5% of the member’s average pay for each year of service (increasing to 3% for each year of service after twenty-five years), and is capped at 80% of the member's average pay. Id. § 5-717.
. See id. §§ 5-709(b), 5-710(e)(1).
. Id. § 5 — 70I(1)(A). The term "member” also encompasses "any officer or member” of the Fire Department and certain other law enforcement and emergency medical personnel. Id. § 5-701 (1)(A), (B) (2011 Supp.).
. Id. § 5-710(c) (“A member shall be retired under this section only upon the recommendation of the Board of Police and Fire Surgeons and the concurrence therein by the Mayor, except that in any case in which a member seeks his own retirement under this section, he shall, in the absence of such recommendation, providé the necessary evidence to form the basis for the approval of such retirement by the Mayor.”); id. § 5-709(b) ("Whenever any member ... completes five years of police or fire service and is found by the Mayor to have become disabled due to injury received or disease contracted other than in the performance of duty, which disability precludes further service with his department, such member shall be retired on an annuity....”).
. See id. § 5-722(a)(l).
. In Hart v. District of Columbia Police and Firefighters’ Retirement and Relief Board, No. 96-AA-366 (D.C. Oct. 24, 1997), a division of this Court held that the petitioner was not eligible for retirement disability benefits because, having been dismissed from the police force not long after her hearing before the Board, she was no longer a member of the force at the time the Board was ready to render its decision. As the opinion in Hart was unpublished, it is not binding precedent. See D.C.App. R. 28(g).
. Harris v. D.C. Office of Worker’s Comp. (DOES), 660 A.2d 404, 407 (D.C.1995).
. Ridge v. Police and Firefighters Ret. and Relief Bd., 511 A.2d 418, 426 (D.C.1986).
. McCulloch v. D.C. Rental Hous. Comm’n, 584 A.2d 1244, 1248 (D.C.1991).
. See, e.g., Ridge, 511 A.2d at 426 (rejecting Board’s construction of disability retirement statute as unreasonable in view of "the public policy which requires us to construe the retirement statute liberally in light of its humane purpose”); see also, e.g., Proctor v. D.C. Dep’t of Emp’t Seivs., 737 A.2d 534, 538 (D.C.1999) ("[W]hen it appears that the agency ... did not conduct any analysis of the language, structure, or purpose of the statutory provision, it would be incongruous to accord substantial weight to the agency’s interpretation.”) (internal citation, quotation marks, and brackets omitted).
. Hospitality Temps Corp. v. District of Columbia, 926 A.2d 131, 136 (D.C.2007) (internal quotation marks omitted).
. James Parreco & Son v. D.C. Rental Hous. Comm’n, 567 A.2d 43, 45 (D.C.1989).
. Robinson v. Shell Oil Co., 519 U.S. 337, 341, 117 S.Ct. 843, 136 L.Ed.2d 808 (1997).
. FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, 133, 120 S.Ct. 1291, 146 L.Ed.2d 121 (2000) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
. Gondelman v. D.C. Dep’t of Con. & Reg. Affairs, 789 A.2d 1238, 1245 (D.C.2002) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also, e.g., Columbia Plaza Tenants’ Ass’n v. Columbia Plaza Ltd. P’ship, 869 A.2d 329, 332 (D.C.2005) ("The literal words of [a] statute ... are not the sole index to legislative intent, but rather, are to be read in the light of the statute taken as a whole, and are to be given a sensible construction, and one that would not work an obvious injustice.”).
. Robinson, 519 U.S. at 341, 117 S.Ct. 843.
. The Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia was a precursor of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
. 37 App.D.C. 76 (D.C.Cir.1911).
. Id. at 82.
. Unlike the present case, Rudolph involved the right of a firefighter injured in the line of duty to receive payments from a statutory relief fund to which he and other firefighters had been required to contribute via deductions from their pay. Id. at 81. For that reason, the case did not involve a statute comparable to the Retirement and Disability Act now before us. Under that Act, disability annuities are not funded by the members of the Police and Fire Departments.
. 519 U.S. 337, 117 S.Ct. 843, 136 L.Ed.2d 808 (1997).
. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-3(a) (2006).
. Robinson, 519 U.S. at 341, 117 S.Ct. 843.
. Id. at 346, 117 S.Ct. 843.
. See D.C.Code § 5-717(b)(2)(A) ("Any member who, by electing [upon separation] to receive a refund under paragraph (1) of this subsection, loses annuity rights under this subchapter, may reestablish all such rights at any time prior to attaining the age of 55 by redepositing the amount of such refund plus interest computed in accordance with subsection (c) of this section.”); id. § 5 — 717(c)(3) ("If a member elects to make his redeposit in monthly installments, each monthly payment shall include interest on that portion of the refund which is then being redeposited.”).
. See id. §§ 5-718(b) and(c-l) (referring to “any annuity ... which is payable to a member who was an officer or member of the Metropolitan Police force or the Fire Department of the District of Columbia”); cf. § 5-721(b) (providing for medical examinations of members receiving annuities under § 5-709 or § 5-710).
. For example, § 5-701(7) defines an "annuitant” as "any former member who, on the basis of his service, has met all requirements of this subchapter for title to annuity and has filed claim therefor.” See also id. § 5-701(3), (4) (defining the terms "widow” and "widower” to mean the surviving spouse of "a member or former member,” provided certain additional conditions are met); cf. id. § 5-716(b) (addressing surviving spouse’s right to receive an annuity "[i]n case of the death of any member before retirement, of any former member after retirement, or of any member entitled to receive an annuity under § 5-717”).
. Robinson, 519 U.S. at 343-44, 117 S.Ct. 843.
. See D.C.Code § 5-712(a) (providing that an eligible member who wishes to retire voluntarily on a non-disability annuity must give "at least 60 days written advanced notice to his department stating his intention to retire and stating the date of [sic] which he will retire”).
. These provisions are codified in D.C.Code §§ 5-801 to 5-807.
. FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, 133, 120 S.Ct. 1291, 146 L.Ed.2d 121 (2000).
35. United States v. Fausto, 484 U.S. 439, 453, 108 S.Ct. 668, 98 L.Ed.2d 830 (1988). This process of statutory reconciliation is entirely different, the Court emphasized, from "[r]e-peal by implication of an express statutory text,” which is "strongly disfavored.” Id. at 452-53, 108 S.Ct. 668. It likewise is different from relying on statements in the legislative history of a later enactment to construe an earlier one. See Doe v. Chao, 540 U.S. 614, 626-27, 124 S.Ct. 1204, 157 L.Ed.2d 1122 (2004) (“[S]ubsequent legislative history will rarely override a reasonable interpretation of a statute that can be gleaned from its language and legislative history prior to its enactment.”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
. "Resignation” means "the voluntary separation of a member from the Metropolitan Police Department before the member's pension rights have accrued and vested.” D.C.Code § 5-801(3). "Retirement” means the voluntary separation of such a member "after the member's pension rights, retirement pay, or other benefits have accrued and vested_” Id. § 5-801(4).
. Id. § 5-803(a). The Department is required to complete the investigation within twenty-five days from the date on which the member retired or resigned. Id. § 5-803(c).
. Id. § 5-803(b).
. Id. §§ 5 — 803(f), 5-804.
. Id. § 5-804(c).
. Id. § 5-805.
. See Ridge v. Police and Firefighters Ret. and Relief Bd., 511 A.2d 418, 426-27 (1986) (holding that when the Board restores disability payments to a temporarily ineligible annuitant, the effective date is when the annuitant became eligible again, not the later date on which the Board reached its decision).
. See id. at 427 ("We search in vain for countervailing considerations which would support the Board's position that it may, in its discretion, withhold annuity payments falling due before the date of its reestablishment decision.... No legitimate interest of the Board is served by denying a reestablished annuitant entitlements backdated to the date of eligibility.”).
. Allen v. D.C. Police and Firefighters’ Ret. and Relief Bd., 560 A.2d 492, 501 (D.C.1989).
. See Robinson v. Shell Oil Co., 519 U.S. 337, 345, 117 S.Ct. 843, 136 L.Ed.2d 808 (1997).
. Ray v. District of Columbia, 535 A.2d 868, 871 (D.C.1987); see also Lewis v. District of Columbia, 499 A.2d 911, 913 (D.C.1985) (explaining that the Act "was promulgated to provide a compensation scheme for District of Columbia uniformed personnel, who were excluded from coverage under the statute generally applicable to other District of Columbia employees, the Federal Employees Compensation Act”).
. Vargo v. Barry, 667 A.2d 98, 101 (D.C.1995) (quoting Brown v. Jefferson, 451 A.2d 74, 77 (D.C.1982)) (emphasis added). In exchange for that assurance, the remedies against the District provided by the Retirement and Disability Act to police and firefighters injured in the performance of their duties are exclusive. Id.
. Brown v. Jefferson, 451 A.2d 74, 77 (D.C.1982).
. 783 A.2d 623 (D.C.2001).
50. Id. at 627 (citation omitted).
. Asylum Co. v. D.C. Dep't of Emp’t Servs., 10 A.3d 619, 628 (D.C.2010) (quoting Dowling v. Slotnik, 244 Conn. 781, 712 A.2d 396, 412 (1998) (quoting 2 A. Larson & L. Larson, Workers’ Compensation § 35.20 (1997))).
. Asylum, 10 A.3d at 628; see also id. at 628, 634 (holding that an unauthorized alien who used false documents to obtain his job is not precluded for that reason, or because his contract of employment violated federal immigration law, from pursuing a claim for workers’ compensation benefits).
. Cf. Marboah v. Ackerman, 877 A.2d 1052, 1059 (D.C.2005) (rejecting legal malpractice claim of unauthorized alien who obtained work and filed for Virginia workers’ compensation benefits using another person’s name and documents, because this fraud rendered him ineligible for those benefits under Virginia law).
. See, e.g., Dulin v. Levis Mitsubishi, Inc., 836 So.2d 340, 346 (La.Ct.App.2002) (employee held disqualified from receiving disability benefits in connection with his work-related back injury because the employee willfully concealed his history of back ailments from his employer when he answered a medical questionnaire at the time of hiring).
. "Where there is no causal connection between the lie and the injury itself, the courts will generally look beyond the false statement and award compensation.” 2 A. Larson & L. Larson, Larson’s Workers’ Compensation Law § 39.03 (2011).
. Ridge v. Police and Firefighters Ret. and Relief Bd., 511 A.2d 418, 426 (D.C.1986).
. Id.
. District of Columbia v. Tarlosky, 675 A.2d 77, 81 (D.C.1996).
. We express no opinion as to whether, or under what circumstances, membership at an earlier point also may be sufficient.
. Ridge, 511 A.2d at 426-27.
Concurrence Opinion
For several reasons set forth below, I find this case substantially more difficult than my colleagues in the majority do. Nevertheless, and especially in light of this court’s decisions in Upchurch v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs., 783 A.2d 623 (D.C.2001), and Asylum Co. v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs., 10 A.3d 619 (D.C.2010), I
I.
“When faced -with a problem of statutory construction, this Court shows great deference to the interpretation given the statute by the officers or agency charged with its administration.” Udall v. Tollman, 380 U.S. 1, 16, 85 S.Ct. 792, 13 L.Ed.2d 616 (1965); see also Chevron, U.S.A. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842-45, 104 S.Ct. 2778, 81 L.Ed.2d 694 (1984); Howard Univ. Hosp. v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs., 952 A.2d 168, 173 (D.C.2008). To be sure, “Ht is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.” Harris v. District of Columbia Office of Workers Comp., 660 A.2d 404, 407 (D.C.1995) (quoting Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 177, 2 L.Ed. 60 (1803)); see also United Parcel Serv. (UPS) v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs., 834 A.2d 868, 871 (D.C.2003). Nevertheless, in conformity with Udall v. Tollman and its progeny:
We will defer to any agency’s interpretation of a statute that it administers so long as it is not plainly wrong or inconsistent with the legislature’s intent. We must sustain the agency’s interpretation even if a petitioner advances another reasonable interpretation of the statute or if we might have been persuaded by the alternate interpretation had we been construing the statute in the first instance.
Howard Univ. Hosp., 952 A.2d at 173-74 (emphasis added) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). In other words, regardless of what our own view may be, we must sustain the Board’s construction as long as it is reasonable and consistent with the language and history of the statute. See Asylum, 10 A.3d at 625.
Moreover, we have repeatedly held that “[t]he deference which courts owe to agency interpretations of statutes which they administer is, of course, at its zenith where the administrative construction has been consistent and of long standing.” Tenants of 738 Longfellow Street, N.W. v. District of Columbia Rental Hous. Comm’n, 575 A.2d 1205, 1213 (D.C.1990); accord, UPS, 834 A.2d at 871; Superior Beverages, Inc. v. District of Columbia Alcoholic Beverage Control Bd., 567 A.2d 1319, 1325 (D.C.1989). In this case, as revealed in this court’s unpublished Memorandum Opinion and Judgment (MOJ) in Hart v. District of Columbia Police & Firefighters Relief & Ret. Bd., No. 96-AA-368 (D.C. Oct. 24, 1997), see maj. op., ante, at p. 383 n. 9, the Board has adhered to a construction of the statute which it has applied at least since January 1996, when it entered the order denying benefits to a former employee which this court affirmed in Hart. The apparent consistency of the Board’s construction over a protracted period of time adds to the deference which we are obliged to accord it.
Finally, the question whether O’Rourke is entitled to retirement benefits is one within the specialized expertise of the Board. This case is unlike one in which we review a decision of the Office of Administrative Hearings, which “is vested with the responsibility for deciding administrative appeals involving a substantial number of different agencies,” and cannot be expected to have specialized knowledge as to all of them. Washington v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Public Works, 954 A.2d 945, 948 (D.C.2008). This is an additional reason for heightened deference here. See also Udall, 380 U.S. at 16, 85 S.Ct. 792.
It is also my view that by dismissing the Hart MOJ in a footnote, ante n. 9, on the ground that an unpublished MOJ does not constitute binding precedent,
As I see it, there is nothing in the language of the statute that is more consistent with the majority’s construction than with the Board’s. There likewise appears to be no legislative history that addresses this specific issue. Although we are dealing here with remedial humanitarian legislation, and although O’Rourke’s injuries in the line of duty (regardless of how he secured that duty) may generate some sympathy for his circumstances, I do not believe that these considerations dictate the result here. In light of the legislature’s use of the phrase “former member” elsewhere in the statute, the apparent consistency over the years of the Board’s construction, and our affirmance of that construction in Hart, I find it difficult indeed to conclude that the Board’s ruling in this case was unreasonable. If reasonable people might either agree or disagree with the Board’s interpretation, then we are ordinarily obliged to sustain it.
II.
, There is an additional reason, not addressed by the parties, for my hesitation in joining the majority’s, disposition of this petition for review. For me, it is important that O’Rourke was not fired because he engaged in misconduct during his service as a member of the MPD. Rather, he
The case thus arguably implicates “the maxim that no man may take advantage of his own wrong.” Glus v. Brooklyn E. Disk Terminal, 359 U.S. 281, 232, 79 S.Ct. 760, 3 L.Ed.2d 770 (1959). This principle is “[d]eeply rooted in our jurisprudence,” and it “has been applied in many diverse classes of cases by both law and equity courts.” Id. at 232-33, 79 S.Ct. 760. Specifically, it has been invoked by this court in a case which has much in common with the present one.
In Marboah v. Ackerman, 877 A.2d 1052 (D.C.2005), the plaintiff had been injured in a work-related accident, and he had applied for workers’ compensation. Because he was an illegal alien and was not eligible either to work in this country or to receive workers’ compensation, he had used another man’s name and social security card, both to secure employment and, following his accident, to apply for benefits. He subsequently sued his attorney for legal malpractice after the latter failed to file an action on Marboah’s behalf to challenge the denial of benefits. Relying heavily on Glus, we affirmed the entry of judgment in favor of the attorney on the ground that Marboah’s underlying claim for compensation benefits was lacking in merit. We held, in pertinent part:
Any purported entitlement that Marb-oah could have had to workers’ compensation was founded upon misrepresentation and fraud as to his eligibility for compensation, and this court will not aid Marboah to vindicate that fraud-induced entitlement through this action for legal malpractice. Accordingly we decline to permit Marboah to recover, as damages from his attorneys, “lost” workers’ compensation which the defendants’ negligence allegedly prevented him from recovering, but to which in fact he was not legally entitled at all. If Marboah had not concealed the truth, inter alia, from his employer, from the employer’s carrier, and from the defendants (who were his attorneys in the workers’ compensation claim), his claim would never have been favorably considered, for as a matter of [Virginia] law, ... Marboah’s status as an illegal alien would have disqualified him from any recovery.
Marboah, 877 A.2d at 1059.
Although there are significant differences between Marboah and this case, and although Marboah’s fraud was far more extensive than O’Rourke’s, there is also a fundamental similarity. Both men were injured on the job. Both men lied to obtain their employment. If either man had told the truth, he probably would not have obtained the job. Marboah was denied relief on account of his lies. O’Rourke asserts that he is entitled to compensation notwithstanding his lie. In my view, the Glus maxim should at least arguably have a role to play in deciding whether O’Rourke should be permitted to receive benefits when he apparently might not even have been working as a police officer if he had told the truth.
III.
Having voiced my reservations, however, I am unable to reconcile the agency’s
[misconduct of the employee, whether negligent or willful, is immaterial in compensation law, unless it takes the form of deviation from the course of employment, or unless it is of a kind specifically made a defense in the jurisdictions containing such a defense in their statutes.
783 A.2d at 627 (quoting 2 Arthur Larson, Larson’s Workers’ Compensation Law § 32.00 (2001)) (internal quotation marks omitted). If, as we held in Upchurch, an employee’s misconduct is irrelevant, then the employer cannot be permitted to circumvent that rule by discharging the employee and then denying benefits on the grounds that the employee is no longer employed. The remedial humanitarian legislation here at issue surely “forecloses sophisticated as well as simple-minded modes of nullification or evasion.” Richman Towers Tenants’ Ass’n v. Richman Towers, LLC, 17 A.3d 590, 602 (D.C.2011) (internal quotation marks omitted); see Lane v. Wilson, 307 U.S. 268, 275, 59 S.Ct. 872, 83 L.Ed. 1281 (1939).
We have also held that the fact that a claimant secured his employment by fraud likewise does not affect his right to receive disability benefits. In Asylum, 10 A.3d at 628, 630, this court held that an illegal alien who used false documents to obtain his job, and whose employment contravened our immigration statutes, was not precluded from pursuing a claim for workers’ compensation benefits. Although there is arguably some tension between our decisions in Marboah and Asylum,
. I cannot and do not quarrel with the proposition that an unpublished MOJ is not binding on us, but I do not believe that this makes what we decided in Hart inconsequential.
. I recognize, however, that the Board did not base its decision on Glus, or even on
. In Asylum, 10 A.3d at 627 n. 10, this court distinguished Marboah principally on the ground that Marboah "was ineligible under then-current Virginia law to recover workers' compensation," while the claimant in Asylum applied in the District, where there was no comparable explicit bar to recovery. As the author of the court’s opinion in Marboah, I question whether the result would have been different had the case arisen in the District, for our reasoning was dominated by the Glus maxim. When there is a conflict between two of our decisions, we have held that
[w]here a division of this court fails to adhere to earlier controlling authority, we are required to follow the earlier decision rather than the later one.
Sutton v. United States, 988 A.2d 478, 482 (D.C.2010) (quoting Thomas v. United States, 731 A.2d 415, 420 n. 6 (D.C.1999)); see M. A. P. v. Ryan, 285 A.2d 310, 312 (D.C.1971). Because Asylum can be distinguished from Marboah, however; because this case falls on the Asylum side of the distinctions; and because the Board did not rely on the Glus maxim, I prefer not to open a Pandora’s box by addressing the question whether the two decisions are consistent.
