IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, :
Petitioner :
:
v. : No. 995 C.D. 2017
: Submitted: November 22, 2017
Workers’ Compensation Appeal :
Board (Piree), :
Respondent :
BEFORE: HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, Senior Judge
OPINION BY
JUDGE COHN JUBELIRER FILED: April 4, 2018
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (Employer) petitions for review of the
Order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board) that reversed, in part, a
decision by a Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ) and held that Employer was not
entitled to subrogation of a workers’ compensation (WC) lien claimed in a Third
Party Settlement Agreement for the time period in which Jeffrey Piree (Claimant)
was eligible for benefits under both the act commonly known as the Heart and Lung
Act1 and the Workers’ Compensation Act (WC Act).2, 3 The issue on appeal is
1
Act of June 28, 1935, P.L. 477, as amended, 53 P.S. §§ 637-638.
2
Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§ 1-1041.4, 2501-2708.
3
The Board affirmed that part of the WCJ’s Decision and Order denying Claimant’s
Petition to Review Compensation Benefit Offset finding that the disability pension offset
Employer took against Claimant’s WC benefits was appropriate. Claimant does not appeal this
determination.
whether Employer, which is self-insured, is entitled to subrogation against
Claimant’s Third Party Settlement for those benefits he received during the time
period in which he was receiving his full salary under the Heart and Lung Act.
Because under our precedent, Employer was not entitled to subrogation for the
period in which Claimant was eligible for both Heart and Lung and WC benefits, we
affirm the Board’s Order so holding. This is so even though as part of his Third
Party Settlement, he recovered the amounts Employer would have received had it
been entitled to subrogation. However, because, as the Board recognized, Claimant
has begun to receive benefits solely under the WC Act, this matter is remanded for
a determination regarding Employer’s subrogation rights related to those benefits.
Claimant, an agent for Employer’s Office of Attorney General (OAG),
sustained injuries in a work-related motor vehicle accident. Employer accepted the
injuries, in the nature of “left tibial, lateral plateau fracture,” pursuant to a Notice of
Compensation Payable (NCP). (WCJ Decision, Findings of Fact (FOF) ¶ 2.) The
NCP indicated that Claimant’s average weekly wage was $1,152.71, resulting in a
weekly disability rate of $768.48. Claimant was eligible for, and did receive, the
payment of his full salary from the OAG’s payroll fund pursuant to Section 1(a) of
the Heart and Lung Act, 53 P.S. § 637(a).4 Employer had its WC Third Party
4
This section provides, in relevant part, that a special agent of the OAG:
who is injured in the performance of his duties . . . and by reason thereof is
temporarily incapacitated from performing his duties, shall be paid by the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania . . . his full rate of salary, as fixed by ordinance or
resolution, until the disability arising therefrom has ceased. All medical and
hospital bills, incurred in connection with any such injury, shall be paid by the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania . . . . During the time salary for temporary
incapacity shall be paid by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania . . . any workmen’s
compensation, received or collected by any such employe for such period, shall be
turned over to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania . . . and paid into the treasury
2
Administrator, Inservco, pay Claimant’s weekly WC payments from Employer’s
WC fund directly to OAG’s payroll fund. On October 31, 2014, Claimant received
a letter from OAG indicating that his Heart and Lung benefits were ending because
his injuries were found to be permanent in nature and that he would begin receiving
his WC benefits on November 4, 2014.5 (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 77a.)
Claimant ultimately took a disability retirement from his position.
On December 1, 2014, Employer and Claimant entered into a Third Party
Settlement Agreement, reflecting that: Claimant obtained a third party recovery in
the amount of $1.255 million; there was an accrued WC lien in the amount of
$311,824.92; the balance of recovery was $943,175.10; and the net lien amount was
$204,672.78. (Id. at 71a; FOF ¶ 3.) Thereafter, both Claimant and Employer filed
Petitions to Review Compensation Benefits, seeking a determination on whether
Employer was entitled to reimbursement of the $204,672.78 under Section 319 of
the WC Act, 77 P.S. § 671.6 Claimant requested that the WCJ “review [the]
thereof, and if such payment shall not be so made by the employe the amount so
due the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania . . . shall be deducted from any salary then
or thereafter becoming due and owing.
53 P.S. § 637(a).
5
This letter also presented Claimant with several options, including the option to take a
disability retirement. Claimant accepted this option, which ultimately resulted in Employer taking
a pension offset against Claimant’s WC benefits.
6
Section 319 states, in pertinent part:
Where the compensable injury is caused in whole or in part by the act or omission
of a third party, the employer shall be subrogated to the right of the employe . . . to
the extent of the compensation payable under this article by the employer;
reasonable attorney’s fees and other proper disbursements incurred in obtaining a
recovery or in effecting a compromise settlement shall be prorated between the
employer and employe . . . . The employer shall pay that proportion of the
attorney’s fees and other proper disbursements that the amount of compensation
3
subrogation agreement to remove payments made pursuant to the Heart and Lung
Act from the calculation of the lien.” (R.R. at 3a.) Employer responded that the
amounts included in the Third Party Settlement Agreement were only the amounts
payable under the WC Act and asserted that it had not yet been paid its net WC lien.
(Id. at 9a, 12a.) The Petitions were consolidated and assigned to a WCJ for
resolution.
The parties jointly submitted the Third Party Settlement Agreement and a
Stipulation of Testimony of Claimant’s Third Party Counsel from his personal injury
action, which provided that Third Party Counsel would have testified as follows.
There was no discussion between Inservco and Third Party Counsel about any other
benefits Employer paid to Claimant, including his full salary under the Heart and
Lung Act, or any discussion about “the interplay of benefits payable pursuant to the
Heart and Lung Act, the [WC] Act, as well as the Medical Cost Containment
Regulations.” (FOF ¶ 4a; R.R. at 75a.) Third Party Counsel was not informed that
the WC indemnity payments made by Inservco were being remitted to OAG while
Claimant was receiving Heart and Lung benefits. In settling Claimant’s third party
action, Third Party Counsel advised the third party carrier that there was a
recoverable WC lien in the amount of $299,322.13.
Employer presented the deposition testimony of Lisa Donovan, Inservco’s
claims adjuster for Claimant’s WC claim, who explained how Employer, through
Inservco, handles WC benefits for its employees who are also entitled to Heart and
paid or payable at the time of recovery or settlement bears to the total recovery or
settlement. Any recovery against such third person in excess of the compensation
theretofore paid by the employer shall be paid forthwith to the employe, . . . and
shall be treated as an advance payment by the employer on account of any future
instalments of compensation.
77 P.S. § 671.
4
Lung benefits. Claimant was paid WC and Heart and Lung benefits concurrently
until his retirement. Before Claimant retired, however, Inservco “reimbursed the
Employer for the amount due under the [WC] claim,” Inservco paid “the benefits
directly to [Claimant’s] department [because he was] receiving Heart and Lung
benefits”; and Employer paid Claimant the Heart and Lung benefits directly. (FOF
¶ 13c.) After Claimant’s retirement, he received the WC benefits directly. The net
subrogation lien listed in the Third Party Settlement Agreement has not been paid to
Employer.
Employer also offered the deposition testimony of Sherri Keiter-Reed,
Director of the Bureau of Employee Absences and Safety in the Governor’s Office
of Administration, to further explain Employer’s policies. Employer maintains a
separate fund for WC payments to which its agencies contribute. Where an
employee is injured on the job and is entitled to both WC and Heart and Lung
benefits, the employee’s Heart and Lung benefits are paid directly from Employer’s
salary system. The employee’s WC benefit payments, once approved by Employer,
are “transferred from the [WC] fund back to the agency’s payroll fund, which is
where Heart and Lung benefits are paid from.” (Id. ¶ 14(b).) All medical bills are
processed through the re-pricing system under the WC Act and then Employer pays
the re-priced bills. Employer “seeks subrogation for only WC benefits.” (Id. ¶ 14(d)
(quoting R.R. at 275a).)
Finding the testimony of Ms. Donovan and Ms. Keiter-Reed credible, the
WCJ concluded that Claimant did not prove that: the amounts identified as the WC
lien in the Third Party Settlement Agreement were anything other than compensation
payable under the WC Act; there was a material mistake made in the preparation of
that agreement; or the payments included in the WC lien were made pursuant to the
5
Heart and Lung Act. The WCJ noted that Employer’s lien was presented by Third
Party Counsel during the course of Claimant’s third party action. Accordingly, the
WCJ found that Employer had met its burden of proving that it had a valid
subrogation lien as set forth in the Third Party Settlement Agreement and that the
lien had not yet been paid. Thus, the WCJ denied Claimant’s Petition to Review
Compensation Benefits and granted Employer’s Petition to Review Compensation
Benefits.
Claimant appealed to the Board, arguing that the WCJ erred in concluding
Employer was entitled to subrogation for benefits that were paid to him under the
Heart and Lung Act. The Board reversed the WCJ’s determination based on this
Court’s decision in Stermel v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (City of
Philadelphia), 103 A.3d 876, 877 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014). This Court, in Stermel, held
that self-insured public employers compensating employees injured in motor vehicle
accidents under both the WC Act and the Heart and Lung Act were excluded “from
subrogating any indemnity or medical expenses, regardless of how they were
categorized” by the self-insured employer, “because the claimant was still due full
salary and benefits due to his coverage under the Heart and Lung Act.” (Board Op.
at 3.) Stermel’s holding was reiterated by this Court in Pennsylvania State Police v.
Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Bushta), 149 A.3d 118 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2016),7
in which the Court held that “[s]elf-insured employers are not entitled to be
subrogated for [WC] when these funds are really used to reimburse Heart and Lung
Act benefits.” (Board Op. at 8.) Therefore, because Employer is self-insured and
Claimant was entitled to Heart and Lung benefits concurrently with the WC benefits
7
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court granted the employer’s Petition for Allowance of
Appeal in Bushta, 168 A.3d 1260 (Pa. 2017), and oral argument thereon was heard in October
2017.
6
from his date of injury until his retirement, Employer was “not entitled to
subrogation of the lien for [WC].” (Id. at 9.) The Board recognized, however, that
Claimant’s Heart and Lung benefits ended on November 4, 2014, and, therefore,
Employer “is entitled to subrogation from this date and into the future as outlined in
the Third Party Settlement Agreement.” (Id. at 9 n.5.) Employer now petitions this
Court for review.8
On appeal, Employer argues that, under Section 319 of the WC Act, it is
entitled to subrogation against the proceeds of Claimant’s Third Party Settlement to
the extent of the compensation payable under the WC Act notwithstanding
Claimant’s concurrent receipt of Heart and Lung benefits. Employer maintains that
because WC indemnity benefits were still payable, albeit to Claimant’s department
rather than Claimant, while Claimant received Heart and Lung benefits, it should be
able to subrogate Claimant’s settlement proceeds by the amount its WC fund
reimbursed its payroll fund. To hold otherwise, according to Employer, is contrary
to precedent, such as Wisniewski v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (City
of Pittsburgh), 621 A.2d 1111 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1993), which provides that a claimant
who sustains a work injury and is entitled to Heart and Lung benefits also has rights
under the WC Act which can be pursued in the WC forum. Employer points to
Nelson v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Commonwealth of Pennsylvania)
(Pa. Cmwlth., No. 692 C.D. 2015, filed December 10, 2015), as establishing that the
payment of a claimant’s full salary under the Heart and Lung Act should “actually .
. . be considered [WC]” and “two-thirds of the amount paid automatically represents
8
“Our scope of review is limited to determining whether constitutional rights were
violated, whether the adjudication is in accordance with the law[,] or whether necessary findings
of fact are supported by substantial evidence.” City of Phila. v. Workers’ Comp. Appeal Bd.
(Sherlock), 934 A.2d 156, 159 n.5 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007).
7
[WC] benefits.” (Employer’s Br. at 28 (citing Nelson and quoting Bureau of
Workers’ Comp. v. Workers’ Comp. Appeal Bd. (Excalibur Ins. Mgmt. Serv.), 32
A.3d 291, 294-95 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011)).) Employer contends that applying the
bright-line rule set forth in Stermel and Bushta results in the conclusion that there is,
in fact, no right to compensation under the WC Act in such circumstances.
Alternatively, Employer argues Stermel is distinguishable and that Bushta
followed Stermel without recognizing the difference in facts and legal arguments
asserted by the employer there. Employer notes that unlike here where it presented
evidence of exactly how much WC indemnity and medical benefits it paid, the
employer in Stermel did not do the same. Finally, Employer argues it is not
asserting, in contradiction of Oliver v. City of Pittsburgh, 11 A.3d 960 (Pa. 2011),
that it is entitled to subrogate any of the amount Claimant received solely as Heart
and Lung benefits and that unlike here there was no assertion in Oliver that the
claimant received benefits other than Heart and Lung benefits. Thus, Employer
urges the Court not to apply Oliver, Bushta, or Stermel in this matter and to reverse
the Board’s determination that it is not entitled to its subrogation lien.
We begin with a review of the three statutes at issue here: the WC Act, the
Heart and Lung Act, and the Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law9
(MVFRL). Under the WC Act, employees who are injured at work are compensated
for medical bills and lost wages, which is two-thirds of their pre-injury wages if they
are prevented from returning to their pre-injury job. Section 306(a) of the WC Act,
77 P.S. § 511(1); Stermel, 103 A.3d at 877. However, certain employees who are
injured performing their work duties and are temporarily unable to perform those
duties are entitled, due to their positions with a public employer, to the payment of
9
75 Pa. C.S. §§ 1701-1799.7.
8
their full salaries as a result of their “serving the public in essential, high-risk
professions.” Oliver, 11 A.3d at 966; Stermel, 103 A.3d at 877. In these
circumstances, both WC and Heart and Lung benefits are paid concurrently, but any
WC payments the employee receives are required to be turned over to the public
employer. Section 1(a) of the Heart and Lung Act, 53 P.S. § 637(a); Stermel, 103
A.3d at 877. Self-insured employers issue an NCP to acknowledge the work injury,
City of Philadelphia v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Ford-Tilghman), 996
A.2d 569, 573 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010), but the unilateral issuance of an NCP by an
employer “does not transform Heart and Lung benefits into [WC]; they are
separate,” Stermel, 103 A.3d at 883.
When an employee’s compensable injury was caused by a third party, Section
319 of the WC Act provides the employer with a right to subrogation against the
employee’s tort recovery. Although the Heart and Lung Act contains no similar
provision, it has been interpreted as providing employers with subrogation rights.
Fulmer v. Pa. State Police, 647 A.2d 616, 619 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1994). But, if the
compensable injury is the result of a motor vehicle accident, the MVFRL is
implicated and its effect on an employer’s subrogation rights must be considered.
Prior to 1993, WC and Heart and Lung benefits were excluded from subrogation
under the MVFRL; however, in 1993, the General Assembly removed the exclusion
against subrogation for WC benefits in Section 25(b) of Act 44,10 which repealed
Section 1720 of the MVFRL, 75 Pa. C.S. § 1720, “insofar as it relate[d] to [WC]
benefits or other benefits under the [WC] Act.” Oliver, 11 A.3d at 965-66; Stermel,
103 A.3d at 878.11 However, Section 25(b) of Act 44 referenced only WC benefits
10
Act of July 2, 1993, P.L. 1990.
11
Oliver and Stermel provide further discussion of the provisions of the pre-1993 MVFRL
and the subsequent amendments set forth in Act 44.
9
and, that language formed the basis for the Court’s interpretation that Heart and Lung
benefits remained excluded from subrogation. Oliver, 11 A.3d at 966. With regard
to the difference in how WC and Heart and Lung benefits are treated, our Supreme
Court explained:
[T]he MVFRL’s remedial scheme has become increasingly
complicated, in light of the need to address premium costs while
maintaining financial viability in the insurance industry. The
Legislature has made numerous specific refinements impacting the
competing, and legitimate, rights and interests of insurers, employers,
and injured persons. In this landscape, where there are mixed policy
considerations involved, we decline to extend clear and specific
refinements beyond their plain terms. . . .
. . . The [Heart and Lung Act] applies to protect employees serving the
public in essential, high-risk professions. The design is to ensure that,
if they are temporarily disabled in the performance of their duties, these
critical-services personnel do not suffer salary losses or incur the
expense of medical care and treatment. Although the WC [Act] also
embodies a similar remedial scheme, the [Heart and Lung Act’s] more
favorable treatment of public-safety employees who are temporarily
disabled suggests against treating an overlap as an equivalency.
Id. (citations omitted).
Employer argues that it is entitled to subrogation of the amounts it paid that
were WC, i.e., the amounts it paid from its WC fund into its payroll fund and the
amount it paid in medical benefits. These amounts, Employer argues, citing
Excalibur Insurance and Wisniewski, are to be considered WC benefits and,
therefore, are recoverable through subrogation. However, this Court, in Stermel,
held that Wisniewski and Excalibur Insurance were inapplicable to a situation
involving the MVFRL, because neither case involved subrogation nor the MVFRL
and the MVFRL allows subrogation only of WC benefits and not Heart and Lung
benefits. Stermel, 103 A.3d at 885. “Simply, an employer cannot recover Heart and
10
Lung benefits against the third party tortfeasor whose negligence involving a motor
vehicle causes the injury to the public safety employee.” Id. at 883.
In Bushta, the parties entered into a stipulation that divided the amount of
benefits the self-insured public employer paid into payments made, as characterized
by the employer, pursuant to the WC Act and those made pursuant to the Heart and
Lung Act. The employer asserted, like Employer does here, “that a portion of
[c]laimant’s Heart and Lung Act benefits were subject to subrogation because they
were in fact WC benefits.” Bushta, 149 A.3d at 122. This Court disagreed for the
reasons set forth in Oliver and Stermel; specifically, that the General Assembly had
made a determination that excluded Heart and Lung benefits from subrogation and
that to treat “a portion of the Heart and Lung benefits as [WC] payments, [Employer]
extended the legislature’s specific refinements beyond their plain terms.” Bushta,
149 A.3d at 122 (alterations in original) (quoting Stermel, 103 A.3d at 886 (quoting
Oliver, 11 A.3d at 966)). Additionally, in Bushta, this Court recognized that the
Heart and Lung Act provides payment of both wage loss and medical benefits and
that “Act 44 makes no distinction between wage loss or medical benefits” – thus
neither were subject to subrogation. Bushta, 149 A.3d at 122-23.
We have continued to apply Stermel, see, e.g., City of Philadelphia v.
Zampogna, 177 A.3d 1027, 1038 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017) (“the [employer] may not
subrogate a portion of Heart and Lung Act benefits under the artifice that those
benefits are payable as workers’ compensation benefits”), petition for allowance of
appeal filed, (Pa., No. 68 EAL 2018, filed January 26, 2018), and City of
Philadelphia v. Hargraves (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 1928 C.D. 2016, filed February 28,
11
2018), slip op. at 11-1212 (disagreeing with “the employer’s argument that Heart and
Lung Act benefits were subject to subrogation because they were, in fact, workers’
compensation benefits.”).
Given this Court’s continued application of Stermel and Bushta, we are
constrained to apply them here as the issue here is the issue resolved in both Stermel
and Bushta: whether a self-insured employer can subrogate that portion of the
benefits it paid to a claimant pursuant to the Heart and Lung Act that the employer
argues represents the payment of WC benefits under the WC Act. Under Stermel
and Bushta that answer is no.
We recognize that the reason Heart and Lung benefits are not subject to
subrogation is because Section 1722 of the MVFRL, 75 Pa. C.S. § 1722, precludes
plaintiffs from recovering those benefits from the responsible tortfeasors, Stermel,
103 A.3d at 879, and that, here, Claimant did recover the WC lien amount from the
responsible tortfeasor.13 Therefore, that rationale for not permitting the subrogation
is absent here. However, the inclusion of the WC lien in the settlement was the result
of Inservco’s characterization of those benefits to Claimant’s Third Party Counsel
as being WC benefits. Inservco did not discuss with Third Party Counsel any other
benefits Employer paid to Claimant, such as the payment of his full salary under the
12
Although Hargraves is an unreported opinion of this Court and, therefore, can only be
considered persuasive pursuant to Section 414(a) of the Court’s Internal Operating Procedures,
210 Pa. Code § 69.414(a), it reflects the Court’s most recent decision on this issue. Some judges
have lingering questions about the subrogation of Heart and Lung Benefits. See Hargraves,
(Brobson, J., dissenting), slip op. 3-4 (disagreeing that Section 1720 of the MVFRL precludes
subrogation because, inter alia, Heart and Lung Act benefits should not be considered “benefits
paid or payable by a program, group contract or other arrangement whether primary or excess
under Section 1719” of the MVFRL, 75 Pa. C.S. § 1720).
13
Unlike the settlement agreement at issue here, the third party settlement at issue in
Stermel “was not broken down into components and did not include the amount representing either
[the claimant’s WC] or Heart and Lung benefits paid by [the employer].” Stermel, 103 A.3d at
881 n.8.
12
Heart and Lung Act, the interplay between the WC Act and the Heart and Lung Act,
or the use of the Medical Cost Containment provisions of the WC regulations. (FOF
¶ 4.) Consequently, Third Party Counsel included the WC lien in Claimant’s
demand for resolution to the third party insurer. However, Inservco’s
mischaracterization of the benefits paid to Claimant as being WC benefits subject to
a lien, cannot provide the basis upon which to subrogate those funds. To do so would
defeat the Court’s understanding of the legislative intent of the statute, and create an
incentive for future mischaracterizations of benefits. While, here, this Claimant’s
tort recovery will include an amount that should not have been recoverable, that was
the result of Inservco’s error. We note, however, that Claimant is now receiving his
WC benefits because his Heart and Lung benefits have ended, and the Board
recognized that Employer “is entitled to subrogation from this date and into the
future . . . .” (Board Op. at 9 n.5.)
Finally, Employer contends that applying Stermel and Bushta would result in
there being no right to compensation under the WC Act, thereby overruling
numerous cases referring to the concurrent payment of both types of benefits.
However, here, while Claimant’s work injury was deemed temporary, Employer
paid Claimant his full salary under the Heart and Lung Act and paid itself the WC
benefits it would have otherwise paid to Claimant. Employer essentially shifted
funds from one of its accounts to another. In other situations, a self-insured public
employer would not make the separate WC payments because “they would simply
be returned.” Stermel, 103 A.3d at 877-78. Although Employer may characterize
part of those benefits as WC, pursuant to the Heart and Lung Act’s requirement that
covered employees be paid their full salary, the entire amount paid to Claimant until
November 4, 2014, was Heart and Lung benefits.
13
Having concluded that under our precedent, Employer was not entitled to
subrogation while Claimant was entitled to both Heart and Lung and WC benefits,
we address Employer’s argument that this matter should be remanded “to determine
[its] entitlement to subrogation for benefits paid solely while the Claimant was
entitled to benefits under the [WC] Act.” (Employer’s Br. at 48.) Employer
correctly notes that, after November 4, 2014, Claimant was entitled only to WC
benefits, and argues that Employer should be allowed subrogation based on those
payments, which the Board recognized in its opinion, (Board Op. at 9 n.5).
Employer points out, however, that “while the Board noted that there would be a
credit provided as to future benefits as per the reimbursement rate provided on the
Third Party Settlement Agreement, the figures reflected on that document would
need to be revised . . . upon remand” because if “no net lien or a lesser net lien [was]
recovered, then the balance of recovery amount would need to be adjusted to reflect
a lesser accrued lien asserted, net lien recovered and larger balance of recovery.”
(Employer’s Br. at 48-49.) Claimant, in his brief, did not object or otherwise respond
to Employer’s request for a remand or contention that the current Third Party
Settlement Agreement does not accurately reflect the proper reimbursement rate.
Accordingly, we remand this matter for the WCJ to determine Employer’s
entitlement to subrogation for benefits paid solely while the Claimant was entitled
to benefits under the WC Act.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the determination that Employer is not
entitled to subrogation for the payments it made to Claimant pursuant to the Heart
and Lung Act, but we remand for a determination regarding Employer’s entitlement
to subrogation for benefits paid solely while Claimant was entitled to benefits under
the WC Act.
14
_____________________________________
RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
15
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, :
Petitioner :
:
v. : No. 995 C.D. 2017
:
Workers’ Compensation Appeal :
Board (Piree), :
Respondent :
ORDER
NOW, April 4, 2018, the Order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board,
entered in the above-captioned matter, is AFFIRMED to the extent that it held that
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (Employer) is not entitled to subrogation for
the payments it made to Jeffrey Piree (Claimant) pursuant to the Heart and Lung
Act, Act of June 28, 1935, P.L. 477, as amended, 53 P.S. §§ 637-638. We
REMAND this matter for a determination regarding Employer’s entitlement to
subrogation for benefits paid solely while Claimant was entitled to benefits under
the Workers’ Compensation Act, Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S.
§§ 1-1041.4, 2501-2708.
Jurisdiction relinquished.
_____________________________________
RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge