This is an appeal by Darlene Waldor Wisniewski Costa (Claimant) from an order of the Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Board) which denied Claimant’s request for rehearing. Claimant had sought a rehearing from the Board after it upheld a referee’s decision to terminate her benefits under The Pennsylvania Workmen’s Compensation Act, Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§ 1-1031.
The pertinent facts are as follows. From November 1979 until August 8, 1982, Claimant was employed by the City of Pittsburgh (Employer) as a police officer. On August 8, 1982 Claimant sustained a work-related injury to her arm, knee and back. Employer, who is self-insured, issued a notice of compensation payable dated August 17, 1982. The notice indicated,
inter alia,
that Claimant’s weekly disability rate was $263.91; that that rate was based upon an average weekly wage of $395.86; that payments began on August 9, 1982, for
On December 18, 1986, Employer filed a termination petition contending that Claimant was no longer disabled from her work-related injury. Based upon the deposition of Employer’s doctor, the referee determined that Claimant was fully recovered and could return to her time-of-injury job without restriction. He thus granted the termination petition. Claimant appealed and the Board affirmed in an order dated July 26, 1989. Thereafter, on December 21, 1990, Claimant timely petitioned the Board for a rehearing.
1
In her rehearing petition Claimant alleged that because she was receiving her full rate of salary “in lieu of workmen’s compensation benefits” and because “she had never actually received workmen’s compensation benefits,” those benefits could not be terminated until she actually began receiving them. In her petition she cited as authority for her position
City of Scranton v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Stone),
123 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 310,
Thereafter, the Board, in an opinion dated April 1, 1991, denied the petition for rehearing, opining that
Stone
held only that an employer could not modify benefits for a one-year period where it had agreed to pay the Claimant his wages in lieu of compensation during that year. The Board further stated that
Stone
was “never intended to prevent [an employer] from terminating compensation based upon a recovery merely because the Claimant received 100% of his ‘wages’ pursuant to the Heart and Lung Act.” It is significant that
Claimant appealed the Board’s denial of reconsideration to this Court. 2 We are now asked to decide whether the Board abused its discretion in denying the rehearing on the basis that the referee could not terminate workmen’s compensation benefits when Claimant never actually received those benefits in the first place.
We note initially that although the issue presented here was first raised in the petition for rehearing, there is no waiver as it raises a question of subject matter jurisdiction which can be first considered at any phase of the proceedings. Rice.
Before reaching the question of whether the referee could terminate the workmen’s compensation benefits in this case, it is helpful to review the substance of the Heart and Lung Act. Section 1 of that act provides for certain types of employees, including local police officers, to receive their “full rate of salary” if they are temporarily disabled due to a work-related injury. The Act also provides that any workmen’s compensation benefits the employee receives or collects while receiving Heart and Lung Act benefits are to be turned over to the employer. If this is not done then the employer is to deduct that amount from the employee’s salary which the employer pays under the provisions of the Heart and Lung Act.
In the instant case Employer is self-insured for workmen’s compensation purposes. Accordingly, when it began making payments pursuant to the notice of compensation payable two-thirds of the monies Claimant received represented workmen’s compensation benefits. However, as indicated on the notice of
The workmen’s compensation referee in this case had jurisdiction only to terminate the workmen’s compensation benefits and that is all his adjudication did. Employer, however, unilaterally ceased payments of
all
monies to Claimant apparently believing that the referee’s order allowed it to do so. We hold, however, that Claimant’s Heart and Lung Act benefits could not be terminated without a hearing,
Callahan v. Pennsylvania State Police,
The error here was not with the referee or the Board and, hence, we uphold the denial of a rehearing. The error was with Employer’s mistaken belief that the termination order extended to the Heart and Lung Act benefits. Since it did not, we advise Employer to reinstate those benefits, ie., Claimant’s full salary, immediately until a proper termination hearing can be held under Callahan. 5
The issue which then presents itself is
who can
adjudicate the termination of Heart and Lung Act benefits. As this Court has previously observed, the legislature has not designated a forum to adjudicate such matters.
See Wydra v. Swatara Township,
136 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 164, 174 n. 7,
In summary, we acknowledge that the Board has broad powers to grant a rehearing “when justice requires.”
Cudo v. Hallstead Foundry, Inc.,
NOW, February 9, 1993, the order of the Workmen’s Compensation appeal Board in the above-captioned matter is hereby affirmed.
Notes
. Claimant’s petition for rehearing was brought within eighteen months of the Board’s original order. Therefore, it tolled the eighteen month period in which the Board must act to grant a rehearing.
See Rice v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Roclcwell International Corp./ Spring Division),
138 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 555,
. Claimant did not appeal the underlying Board order disposing of the merits of the case.
. While in Walsh and Stone the employer, City of Scranton, was self-insured, as a check of the paperbooks in those cases confirms, inexplicably no workmen’s compensation benefits were ever paid to the claimants in those cases during the period the City attempted to modify or terminate benefits. We held in both cases that workers’ compensation benefits could not be modified until a claimant began to receive such benefits. What the claimants had been receiving were Heart and Lung Act benefits.
As for
Brown v. Workmen’s Compensation Board of Review (City of Pittsburgh),
134 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 31,
. The Act of September 2, 1961, P.L. 1224. This act covers certain Department of Public Welfare employees and county boards of assistance workers who are injured by their patients/clients. It had its genesis in the Act of December 8, 1959 P.L. 1718 which covers employees of state penal and correctional institutions who are injured by the act of an inmate. Under both acts benefits totalling the employee’s full salary are allowed for a temporary disability.
. We are cognizant that Employer may be able to assert collateral estoppel on the issue of Claimant’s medical recovery at the time of the Heart and Lung Act hearing.
See Kohut v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Township of Forward),
153 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 382,
. For a more complete discussion of this problem, see Debra Punsky Rand, Pennsylvania’s Heart and Lung Act: All Substance — No Forum, 2 Widener J.Pub.L. 43 (1992).
.
Kohn v. Kaplan,
31 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 166,
.
See, e.g., Cunningham v. Pennsylvania State Police,
.
Huffman v. Borough of Millvale,
139 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 349,
.
City of DuBois v. Beers,
120 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 103,
.
Wydra,
136 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. at 174 n. 7,
. We are not suggesting, because of the immense volume of cases the worker's compensation referees, and Board, already are burdened with, that the system is equipped to accept any additional caseload.
. Section 553 of the Local Agency Law, 2 Pa.C.S. § 553, states that “no adjudication of a local agency shall be valid as to any parly unless he shall have been afforded reasonable notice of a hearing and an opportunity to be heard.” Section 504 of the Administrative Agency Law, 2 Pa.C.S. § 504, is identical, except that it applies to Commonwealth agencies.
