We hold that under Indiana's Worker's Compensation Act, an employer's worker's compensation liability for an employee's benefits terminates if the employee settles a claim against a third party for the same injury without first obtaining the employer's consent to the settlement. The Board's decision dismissing Smith's Application for Adjustment of Claim is affirmed.
Facts and Procedural History
In August 2003, Jimmie Smith, a truck driver employed by Champion Trucking Co., was injured in an Ohio accident with a third-party motorist. Smith's initial medical expenses in the amount of $4,842.42 were paid by Champion's worker's compensation coverage. He continued to work for a year after the accident, but left Champion's employ in August 2004. 1 According to Smith, he continued to suffer pain related to the accident, and in January 2005 he applied for an adjustment of his worker's compensation claim, asserting a permanent impairment and also seeking compensation for additional medical expenses.
Meanwhile, Smith retained counsel to explore the possibility of recovering from Jeremy Bittner, the third party motorist. At some point, Smith's worker's compensation attorney notified Champion of his intention to sue Bittner, and on July 6, 2005, Champion responded by notifying Smith's attorney in the third-party matter that Champion was entitled to a lien on any settlement proceeds in the amount of Champion's worker's compensation payments to Smith. Smith settled with Bitt-ner for $10,342 on July 22, 2005. According to Smith, he accepted the settlement because, although Bittner was 95% at fault for the accident, he had only $12,000 in liability insurance. The settlement agreement released Bittner from liability for the accident. Smith does not claim that Champion was notified of the time and place of the settlement negotiations, or had any role in the negotiation. Smith's attor
Champion moved to dismiss Smith's application for adjustment of claim, and ultimately the Worker's Compensation Board ruled in July 2008 that Smith's settlement with Bittner terminated Champion's Hability pursuant to an "absolute bar" provision of the statute described below. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that the provision in question did not apply to Smith's claim because his worker's compensation case had not yet been resolved. Smith v. Champion Trucking Co.,
Standard of Review
The Board's factual findings are to be affirmed if they are supported by substantial evidence. Walker v. State,
Settlements with Third Parties Under Indiana's Worker's Compensation Act
Section 13 of Indiana's Worker's Compensation Act (WCA), titled "Claims Against Third Persons; Subrogation; Procedures," contains a number of potentially relevant provisions. 2 Smith argues that none of the provisions of Section 13 bars his claim. Champion responds that this case is governed by language from Paragraph 1, which provides that if an injured employee has received worker's compensation and later settles a claim against a responsible third party, "then from the amount received by the employee," the employer is to be reimbursed for its expenditures, "and the liability of the employer or the employer's compensation insurance carrier to pay further compensation or other expenses shall thereupon terminate." Ind.Code § 22-3-2-18 (2004) (emphasis added). Paragraph 2 has a similar provision applicable to settlements made before any worker's compensation has been paid. 3
A long line of Indiana decisions supports the proposition that an employer's worker's compensation liability terminates when the injured employee settles with a third-party tortfeasor without first obtaining the employer's consent.
4
See Koughn v. Utrad Indust., Inc.,
Smith argues that these "absolute bar" provisions apply only when the amount received from the third party exceeds the total worker's compensation claim. He bases this argument in part on the italicized language quoted above, claiming without further explanation that it implies that the third party damages exceed the worker's compensation claim, and only in that cireumstance does the employer's liability terminate. The directive to reimburse the employer "from" the settlement proceeds suggests an assumption that the settlement amount exceeds the worker's compensation benefit, but the unequivocal bar language is in no way qualified by that requirement.
The cases cited above discussing the effect of a settlement do not specifically address whether the worker's compensation claim was greater or less than the settlement received from the third party. In DePuy, Inc. v. Farmer,
Although we noted the unresolved issue in DePuy, we also found a general consensus that the employee's settlement with a third party without the employer's consent terminates the employer's worker's compensation liability. Id. "[I]f an employee settles a third-party claim without the employer's consent, the employee forfeits any right to future compensation." 6 Larson's Workers' Compensation Law § 116.07[2] (2009). Because the settlement with a third party terminates the employer's opportunity to recover its expenses from the party responsible for the employee's injuries, these absolute bar provisions are designed to prevent employees from settling with third parties without the employer's consent. We have previously noted that the twin purposes of Section 13 are protecting the employer by providing it with subrogation rights, and preventing double recovery by the employee. Koval v. Simon Telelect, Inc.,
Our interpretation of Section 13, as a whole, is the legislature was attempting to protect simultaneously the financial interests of both the employee and employer. Permitting an employee to obtain a "quick and cheap" settlement with the third-party tortfeasor, and then requiring an employer to exchange unlimited benefits for whatever miniscule settlement the employee might enter, does not protect the financial interests of the employer.
Id. at 893.
This reasoning applies equally to Paragraphs 1 and 2 (Le., whether the employee has or has not already received some benefits). More importantly for our purposes, the reason for the bar applies with greater force where the settlement is for less than the anticipated benefits. In this case, any addition or shortfall in the settlement amount will merely augment or reduce the amount of the employer's lien. Because the settlement releases the third party, ultimately the employer's money via the statutory lien, not the employee's, is at stake in the settlement negotiations. Other courts under similar benefit programs have reached the same conclusion. See Villanueva v. CNA Ins. Cos.,
We are mindful that the WCA is to be "construed to effectuate its humane purposes and doubts in the application of terms are to be resolved in favor of the employee." Christopher R. Brown, D.D.S., Inc. v. Decatur County Mem'l Hosp.,
Despite its unfortunate result in this case, we think the language of both Paragraph 1 and Paragraph 2 of Section 13 of the WCA unequivocally impose a bright Tine rule that settlement with a third party without the employer's consent bars a worker's compensation claim. Moreover, there are important reasons for the statutory scheme to insist that the employee obtain the employer's consent before settling with a third party. First, this rule eliminates satellite litigation over the adequacy of the settlement. Second, notice and consent to settlement will not often be a burdensome requirement. Although it may complicate and delay settlement negotiations in some cireumstances, in many the practical limits of recovery will be evaluated equally by both employee and employer. Third, Paragraph 9 of Section 13 includes a provision that settlements made without the written consent of the employer are "invalid" unless the employer is "indemnified or protected by court order." The clear implication is that the employer's written consent to a third-party settlement will constitute a waiver of the absolute bar provisions of Section 13. Any other reading would preclude the employer, the employee, and the third party from voluntarily entering into an arrangement that is in the interests of all parties.
Finally, where the third party recovery is less than compensation benefits, it is not obvious why pursuing a third party claim is in the employee's interest. The employee's attorney, however, may have an incentive to pursue it. Section 13 provides a claimant's attorney with a higher percentage of the recovery for pursuing third party claims than is allowed by statute for pursuing a worker's compensation claim.
5
The cases cited by Smith in support of his claim are not inconsistent with our holding today. See Roberts v. ACandS Inc.,
Smith also contends that footnote 4 in the Doerr opinion mandates that Paragraph 1 of Section 13 is inapplicable to his claim. We disagree. The cited footnote merely points out that if the third party's liability is greater than the worker's compensation liability, the employee is permitted to keep the excess after reimbursing the employer for its worker's compensation outlay. Doerr,
The Court of Appeals suggested that Champion could have challenged the settlement amount as "inadequate." Smith,
Conclusion
The finding of the Full Worker's Compensation Board dismissing Smith's Appli-eation for Adjustment of Claim is affirmed.
Notes
. The parties dispute whether Smith quit or was fired.
. These provisions inexplicably consist of one section covering three printed pages of the Indiana Code, and containing nine lengthy unnumbered paragraphs, each consisting of several unnumbered sentences. For convenience, we refer to the nine unnumbered paragraphs as if they bore numbers.
. Smith correctly asserts that the Board erroneously relied on Paragraph 2 in denying his claim. Paragraph 2 is inapplicable here, because it deals only with situations where the employee, "not having received compensation," settles with a third party. In that event, Paragraph 2 provides that the employer "shall have no liability" to pay worker's compensation benefits to an employee who has settled with a third party. ILC. § 22-3-2-13. It is undisputed that Smith received over $4,000 in worker's compensation benefits before settling with Bittner.
. We refer to "the employer" because that is the situation in the case before us. The WCA in many places uses language that expressly includes the employer's worker's compensation carrier in some provisions applicable to the employer. For readability we omit these references to the carrier here with no implication that the provisions do not also apply to carriers.
. IC. § 22-3-1-4(d) provides that attorneys who represent employees in a successful
. a fee of ... 25%, if collected without suit, of the amount of benefits actually repaid after the expenses and costs in connection with the third party claim have been deducted therefrom, and a fee of ... 33 1/3%, if collected with suit.
I.C. § 22-3-2-13.
. In Insurance Company of North America v. Andrew,
