delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Liberty Northwest Insurance Corporation and Intervenor Montana State Fund (Responding Insurers), et al., appeal from the order of the Workers’ Compensation Court (WCC). We affirm.
¶2 The following issues are restated on appeal:
¶3 I. Does the enforcement of Schmill I and Schmill II violate the due process rights of the Responding Insurers?
¶4 II. Does Cassandra Schmill (Schmill) have standing to pursue global common fund benefits and an attorney fees lien on the fund?
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶5 This is the third time we have seen this litigation. In
Schmill v. Liberty Northwest Ins. Corp.,
¶6 In the second appeal,
Schmill v. Liberty Northwest Ins. Corp.,
¶7 Six months after Schmill II was decided, the WCC issued summonses to more than 500 insurers regarding their obligation under Schmill II to identify and pay past Schmill-type claims. Responding Insurers comprise 96 of those insurers and self-insured employers. Responding Insurers moved to dismiss. The WCC referred these issues to Special Master Jay Dufrechou. On July 29, 2008, the WCC entered an “Order Adopting Order of Special Master,” in which the WCC denied the Responding Insurers’ motion and certified the issues as final for purposes of appeal pursuant to ARM 24.5.348(2). The Responding Insurers appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶8 We review the WCC’s conclusions of law to determine whether they are correct.
Lanes v. Mont. State Fund,
DISCUSSION
¶9 Does the enforcement of Schmill I and Schmill II violate the due process rights of the Responding Insurers?
¶10 The Responding Insurers argue that the WCC’s enforcement of Schmill I and Schmill II violates due process under the Montana and United States Constitutions. Responding Insurers argue that they were not named parties and were not given notice or opportunity to be heard when this Court found § 39-72-706, MCA, unconstitutional and when we determined that Schmill I created a global common fund. *91 They aver that the summons, which they call “after-the-fact notice,” failed to satisfy the requirements of due process.
¶11 The WCC held that it is not the Responding Insurers’ status as either a party or nonparty that determines their duty to pay benefits, but rather that a vested right exists for beneficiaries as a matter of law and imposes a corresponding duty on Responding Insurers to retroactively pay all Schmill-type benefits. We affirm.
¶12 We addressed this type of vested right in
Murer,
in which we considered workers’ compensation claims in relation to a temporary cap in benefits articulated in statute.
Murer v. State Comp. Mut. Ins. Fund,
¶13 While Murer addresses a single insurer scenario, the decision establishes the principle that a right to past benefits due arises automatically. Once retroactivity is established, beneficiaries are not required to file a second claim. Qualifying individuals have already filed claims and are entitled to benefits under the statute, regardless of which insurer they happen to be insured under. The beneficiaries’ right to increased benefits arises automatically and the same is true of all insurers’ responsibility to pay each beneficiary.
¶14 This understanding of the relationship between insurers’ statutory obligations and beneficiaries’ automatically-vested rights is buttressed by our decisions following the
Murer
trilogy. We specifically considered retroactivity in
Ruhd v. Liberty NW Ins. Corp.,
¶15 The Murer and Ruhd holdings confirm that claimants have a vested right to payment of past due benefits, regardless of which insurer is responsible. Due process is not violated when a court construes the meaning of a statute applicable to all workers’ compensation insurers bound by uniform laws. Once all potential beneficiaries are granted a vested right, which was manifested in Schmill II, a corresponding duty to pay on the part of all insurers arises automatically as a matter of law.
¶16 The Responding Insurers also argue that the parameters of “paid in full” are unclear. We decline to rule on this issue at the present time.
¶17 II. Did Schmill have standing to pursue a claim for common fund benefits and enforce a common fund attorney fees lien on the fund?
¶18 Responding Insurers argue Schmill lacks standing because she does not allege a personal injury traceable to the Responding Insurers’ conduct. The Insurers argue that all of Schmill’s specific claims were resolved in Schmill I and she failed to appeal the WCC’s decision regarding the award of attorney fees. While Schmill seeks to enforce common fund entitlements and the petitioner’s attorney fees lien, Responding Insurers argue that she has no interest in the outcome of the former and no actual property interest in the latter. That interest, they aver, belongs to her counsel, Laurie Wallace.
¶19 Responding Insurers have misidentified the legal nature of a common fund attorney fees lien. Our Schmill decisions resulted not only in an entitlement to benefits, but an entitlement to payment of benefits owed. The common fund consists of Schmill claimants’ benefits. By filing an attorney fees lien against this fund, Wallace initiated an in rem action. This is an action that simply adjudicates the status of a particular subject matter; here, the common fund from which the fees will be satisfied.
¶20 Schmill’s standing to bring an in rem action to enforce the common fund attorney fees lien is reinforced by our
Murer
decision, in which we held: “[w]hen a party, through active litigation, creates a common fund which directly benefits an ascertainable class of nonparticipating beneficiaries, those non-participating beneficiaries can be required to bear a portion of the litigation costs, including reasonable attorney fees.”
Murer,
¶21 For the above reasons, we affirm.
