IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
RICHARD QUAILE,
Claimant-Below/Appellant,
V. C.A. No. N21A-12-003 JRJ
NATIONAL TIRE AND BATTERY,
Employee-Below/Appellee.
Submitted: April 28, 2022
Decided: July 7, 2022
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Upon Claimant's Appeal from Decision on Remand of the Industrial Accident
Board — REVERSED
Adam F. Wasserman, Esquire, of CICONTE WASSERMAN & SCERBA, LLC,
1300 North King Street, Wilmington, Delaware 19801, Attorney for Claimant-
Below/Appellant.
Keri L. Morris-Johnston, Esquire, of MARSHALL DENNEHEY WARNER
COLEMAN & GOGGIN, 1007 North Orange Street, Suite 600, P.O. Box 8888,
Wilmington, Delaware 19899, Attorney for Employer-Below/Appellee.
Jurden, P.J.
This is an appeal from a decision of the Industrial Accident Board denying
Claimant’s petition for additional compensation for medical expenses incurred
following a work injury. After considering the parties’ briefs, the relevant evidence
in the record and the Board’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, the Court
concludes the Board’s decision must be REVERSED.
L FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On August 31, 2015, Richard Quaile (“Claimant”) sustained work-related
injuries after falling from a ladder (the “2015 work accident”).! TBC Corporation,
a/k/a National Tire and Battery (“Employer”) denied those injury claims on
September 30, 2015 and terminated Claimant’s employment.” On October 20, 2015,
Claimant filed a Petition to Determine Compensation Due (the “First Petition”),
which sought acknowledgment of the injuries he sustained to his right foot and ankle,
right leg and lumbar spine.2 After communicating with Claimant’s counsel,
Employer agreed to acknowledge Claimant’s right foot and ankle injuries, and the
two parties entered into an open Agreement for the payment of temporary total
' Video evidence of Claimant’s fall, which occurred during work hours, is documented. Claimant-
Below/Appellant’s Op. Br. on Appeal (hereinafter “Cl.’s Appeal’) at 1, n.1. Claimant fell off a
ladder and, according to Claimant, suffered immediate injuries to his right foot, right knee and
lumbar spine. Cl.’s Appeal. at 1.
? Id.; The Industrial Accident Board of the State of Delaware’s Decision on Remand (hereinafter
“Bd.’s Dec.”) at 2. Claimant’s termination caused him to lose the private health insurance
coverage he received through Employer. Bd.’s Dec. at 2.
> Cl.’s Appeal at 1.
2
disability on January 29, 2016.4 However, Employer refused to compensate
Claimant pursuant to the other injury claims involving Claimant’s right knee and
lumbar spine; Claimant subsequently withdrew his First Petition.°
After Claimant’s employment had been terminated, he used his spouse’s
private health insurance (the “private health insurance”) to pay for the medical
expenses he incurred related to the injuries Employer refused to acknowledge.®
Claimant underwent multiple surgeries in June and October of 2016.’ On July 14,
2016, Employer filed a Termination Petition alleging Claimant was able to work.
On August 9, 2016, Claimant filed a Petition to Determine Additional Compensation
Due (the “Second Petition”), seeking acknowledgement of the injuries and surgeries
related to his right knee and lumbar spine.’ The Second Petition and the Termination
Petition were consolidated, and the Industrial Accident Board (the “Board”’) held a
hearing on March 23, 2017.!°
* Bd.’s Dec. at 2.
> C].’s Appeal at 2; Employer/Appellee’s Answ. Br. on Appeal (hereinafter “Empl.’s Answ.”) at
2; Bd.’s Dec. at 2.
° Those injuries include Claimant’s right knee and lower back. Cl.’s Appeal at 2. Employer, again,
acknowledged Claimant’s injured right foot. Jd.
7 Bd.’s Dec. at 2.
8’ Empl.’s Answ. at 3.
? Cl.’s Appeal. at 3.
10 Empl.’s Answ. at 3. Prior to the hearing, the Termination Petition was resolved and Employer
issued an open Agreement for temporary partial disability benefits (“TPD”) at $679.63 per week,
effective March 21, 2017, which Employer alleges Claimant continues to receive. /d.
3
The Board granted Claimant’s Second Petition on August 15, 2017.'' The
Board found that Claimant’s work accident caused “meniscal tears in Claimant’s
right knee, and aggravated Claimant’s preexisting lumbar spine condition to include
an L3-4 herniated disc and extruded fragment.”!* Employer was ordered to pay the
medical expenses related to Claimant’s right knee and his low back injuries. !?
Claimant’s medical complications continued.’ After a lumbar surgery in
2016, Claimant underwent emergency surgery for a rectal prolapse.'> Additionally,
Claimant developed a torn meniscus in the left knee resulting from his altered gait,
which required surgery as well.’° Employer denied the compensability of these
additional “injuries and conditions” relating to Claimant’s 2015 work accident.'’
In August of 2018, the parties attempted mediation to no success.!® On April
4, 2019, Claimant filed another Petition to Determine Additional Compensation Due
(the “Third Petition”) and a Petition for Disfigurement.'? Claimant presented those
two Petitions to the Board on September 27, 2019.”°
'l C].?s Appeal at 3; See Quaile v. TBC Corp., 1.A.B. No. 1432280 (Aug. 15, 2017).
12 Id.
'3 Td. (citing Qualie, 1.A.B. No. 1432280, at *32 (Aug. 15, 2017)).
14 Tq Claimant contends those complications involved catheterization, anesthesia and constipation
in connection with Claimant’s 2016 lumbar surgery. Jd.
15 Td.
16 Td.
"7 Cl.’s Appeal at 3.
'8 Td. at 4.
'9 Id Bd.’s Dec. at 4. The Third Petition alleged permanent impairment regarding several body
parts and acknowledgement of the left knee injury, erectile dysfunction, rectal injury and all related
medical treatment. /d.
20 C].’s Appeal at 4.
The Board issued its decision concerning the Third Petition and Petition for
Disfigurement on February 7, 2020 (the “February 2020 Decision”).?! The Board
found Claimant’s rectal injury and surgery, as well as the left knee injury and surgery
were “causally related” to the 2015 work accident.”” The Board ordered Employer
to pay Claimant’s compensable medical expenses “according to the fee schedule”
set forth in 19 Del. C. §2322B.3
Claimant still was unsatisfied with the Board’s decision and filed a Motion
for Reargument on March 2, 2020.** That same day, Claimant sent Employer a
Huffman demand* for payment of all outstanding medical expenses with
*I Cl.’s Appeal at 4. See Quaile v. TBC Corp., 1.A.B. No. 1432280 (Feb. 7, 2020).
22 Bd.’s Dec. at 4.
3 Cl.’s Appeal at 4; Quaile v. TBC Corp., 1.A.B. No. 1432280, at *27, n.13 (Feb. 7, 2020).
Claimant filed a motion for reargument, which the Board denied. See Quaile v. TBC Corp., I.A.B.
No. 142280 (Apr. 24, 2020). The Workers’ Compensation Oversight Panel established a fee
schedule (the “fee schedule”) for all Delaware workers’ compensation funded procedures,
treatments and services based on expertise in the field. See 19 Del. C. §2322B(3)(a). A brief history
recitation of Delaware’s current health care payment system (“HCPS”) is relevant for Claimant’s
appeal. In 2008, the Delaware General Assembly enacted the HCPS to streamline medical
payments through a transparent process, “eliminating cost-shifting among health care service
categories and avoiding institutionalization of upward rate creep.” 19 Del. C. §2322B(1). The
HCPS is codified at 19 Del. C. §2322 and sets forth the process by which payments for injuries or
death and incidental benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act (the “Act”’) may be calculated
and furnished; it includes the adoption of a fee schedule.*? The HCPS and the fee schedule apply
to all treatments for sustained injuries covered under the Act if such treatment was provided on or
after May 23, 2008. The parties do not dispute Claimant’s treatments at issue are consistent with
19 Del. C. §2322(a) and incurred after May 23, 2008. Bd.’s Dec. at 10.
*4 Td. at 4. The Motion for Reargument was based on (i) the Board’s denial of permanent
impairment benefits regarding Claimant’s rectal injuries; and (ii) the Board’s order that the
compensable medical expenses were to be paid according to the fee schedule. /d.
*5 A Huffman demand provides the vehicle for a claimant to collect unpaid workers’ compensation.
See, e.g., Ramirez v. Murdick, 948 A.2d 395 (Del. 2008).
5
instructions to remit payment directly to Claimant.?° Claimant’s Huffman demand
sought payment of the entire amount of Claimant’s medical expenses billed to the
private health insurer — $226,408.93.?’ If Employer disputed Claimant’s entitlement
to the full amount of bills, however, Claimant demanded, at a minimum, he be paid
the amount that would have been payable under the fee schedule of the Workers’
Compensation Act (the “Act”).”8 As a result of the Huffman settlement, Employer
paid Claimant (i) $49,820.08 representing the fee schedule amount of Claimant’s
medical bills; and (ii) $42,679.92 for Huffman damages, plus attorney’s fees,
prejudgment interest and court costs.””? The Board eventually denied the Motion for
Reargument on April 24, 2020 (the “April Order’).°°
Claimant appealed the Board’s February 2020 Decision and the April Order
to this Court, arguing the Board “erred by precluding [Claimant] from recovering
26 Bd.’s Dec. at 5. Claimant enclosed a spreadsheet tallying the total amount of bills for each
provider but did not include supporting medical records. Jd. Claimant contends Employer was
already in possession of the relevant medical records by virtue of discovery exchanged in
connection with the 2017 and 2019 hearings. /d.
27 Id. at 6. These costs include coverage for Claimant’s treatments concerning his right knee, low
back, rectal prolapse and left knee. Empl.’s Answ. at 2. The private health insurance company
paid $89,290.74 of Claimant’s medical expenses. /d.
28 Bd.’s Dec. at 6.
29 Empl.’s Answ. at 5. According to Employer, workers’ compensation paid Claimant $4,066.42
and workers’ compensation adjustments totaled to $5,734.56. Jd. at 2.
30 Bd.’s Dec. at 4. The Board denied the Motion for Reargument for both (i) the permanent
impairment issue and (ii) the medical expenses/fee schedule issue. /d.; see supra n. 24. The Board
denied Claimant’s claims because his treatment service dates were all rendered after May 23, 2008
and, as such, those expenses were subject to the fee schedule under Section 2322B of the Act. /d.
at 5.
6
the total amount of medical expenses billed to his private health insurance, pursuant
to the collateral source rule and 19 Del. C. §2322(b).”3! Section 2322(b) reads:
If the employer, upon application made to the employer,
refuses to furnish the services, medicines and supplies
mentioned in subsection (a)°? of this section, the employee
may procure the same and shall receive from the employer
the reasonable cost thereof within the above limitations.*?
On November 10, 2020, this Court reversed and remanded the Board’s
February 2020 Decision and the April Order with instructions “for the Board to
determine whether the collateral source rule and 19 Del. C. §2322(b) remain viable
theories of recovery in workers’ compensation, despite the enactment of the fee
schedule.’4
3! C].’s Appeal at 4-5.
3? 19 Del. C. §2322(a) reads: “During the period of disability the employer shall furnish reasonable
surgical, medical, dental, optometric, chiropractic and hospital services, medicine, and supplies,
including repairing damage to or replacing false dentures, false eyes or eyeglasses and providing
hearing aids, as and when needed, unless the employee refuses to allow them to be furnished by
the employer.”
3 To avoid confusion, the Court reminds the reader to observe the difference between 19 Del. C.
§2322(b) and 19 Del. C. §2322B. (emphasis added). Compare Section 2322(b) “Medical and other
services, and supplies as furnished by the employer” with Section 2322B “Procedures and
Requirements for Promulgation of Health Care Payment Systems.”
34 C].’s Appeal at 5; Quaile v. TBC Corp., 2020 WL 6588746 (Del. Super. Nov. 10, 2020). The
Court’s ruling affirmed the Board’s decision not to award Claimant permanent impairment benefits
pursuant to the AMA Guides, finding that decision was supported by substantial evidence. Bd.’s
Dec. at 6. But in light of 19 Del. C. §2326(g), the Court reversed the Board’s decision not to award
permanent impairment benefits absent an ongoing condition. /d. at 6-7. The Court remanded the
case to the Board to determine: (1) the amount of permanent impairment benefits owed; and (2)
whether the collateral source rule and 19 Del. C. §2322(b) remain viable theories of recovery in
workers’ compensation law despite the enactment of the fee schedule. /d. at 7. The parties advised
the Board they settled the remanded permanent impairment issue. /d. at 7. The issue before the
Board, therefore, only involved the collateral source rule and 19 Del. C. §2322(b). Id.
7
A remand hearing was held before the Board on August 24, 2021.°° Claimant,
again, sought an award for the full amount of medical expenses billed to the private
health insurance, less the amount Employer already paid pursuant to the fee schedule
as a result of the Huffman litigation, the value of which was $176,588.85.°° The
parties stipulated that the total amount of medical expenses billed to Claimant’s
private health insurance was $226,408.93, of which private health insurance paid
$89,290.74. There were private health insurance adjustments and/or reduction in the
amount of $120,181.11 and a balance of $16,818.86.
On December 10, 2021, the Board entered a decision (the “2021 Decision”)
finding, in light of the fee schedule, the collateral source rule and 19 Del. C. §2322(b)
are no longer viable theories of recovery under workers’ compensation law.’ The
Board declined to award Claimant any additional medical expenses because
Employer had already paid Claimant the fee schedule rate as a result of the Huffman
litigation.2® Claimant was unsatisfied with the 2021 Decision and filed the instant
appeal.
35 Bd.’s Dec. at 8.
36 Cl.’s Appeal at 6. The value is calculated by subtracting the fee schedule amount ($49,820.08)
from the full amount paid by the private health insurance ($226,408.94). /d. (citing A23 § 22. Tr.);
Empl.’s Answ. Ex. B, Appx.
37 C].’s Appeal at 6; Quaile v. TBC Corp., 1.A.B. No. 1432280 (Dec. 10, 2021).
38 C].’s Appeal at 6.
8
Hi. STANDARD OF REVIEW
When reviewing an appeal from a decision of the Industrial Accident Board, the
Court’s role is (1) to examine the record for errors of law; and (ii) determine whether
the Board’s findings of fact and conclusions of law are supported by “substantial
evidence.’*’ Substantial evidence is relevant evidence that a reasonable mind might
accept as adequate to support a conclusion.*” The Court does not weigh the evidence
' Those functions
before it, evaluate credibility or make its own factual findings.*
are vested in the Board.”
Pertinent to this appeal, errors of law are reviewed de novo. Absent such error,
the standard of review for a Board’s decision is abuse of discretion.” The Court will
find abuse of discretion only when a Board’s decision exceeds the bounds of reason
when considering the circumstances.“* In the absence of an error of law, lack of
3° Person-Gaines, v. Pepco Holdings, Inc., 981 A.2d 1159, 1161 (Del. 2009).
“0 Olney v. Cooch, 425 A.2d 610, 614 (Del. 1981) (citing Consolo v. Federal Maritime
Commission, 383 U.S. 607, 620 (1966)). The Board reviewed (i) Claimant’s testimony, (ii)
spreadsheets, (iii) a copy of Section 2322(b), and (iv) the first page of the Department of Labor’s
Public Notice of the Instructions and Guidelines surrounding the original proposal for the
establishment of the Health Care Payment System for purposes of its decision. Bd.’s Dec. at 8-9.
The evidence became part of the record without objection. Jd. at 8. The parties do not dispute
whether the above constitutes “substantial evidence.” See Cl.’s Appeal; Empl.’s Answ.
41 Person-Gaines, v. Pepco Holdings, Inc., 981 A.2d at 1161.
42 Johnson v. Chrysler Corp., 213 A.2d 64, 66 (Del. 1965).
3 Person-Gaines, v. Pepco Holdings, Inc., 981 A.2d at 1161 (Del. 2009) (citing Stanley v. Krafi
Foods, Inc., 2008 WL 2410212, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct., Mar. 24, 2008)).
= Stanley v. Kraft Foods, Inc., 2008 WL 2410212, at *2 (internal citations omitted).
9
substantial evidence or abuse of discretion, the Court will not disturb the decision of
the Board.”
I. DISCUSSION
This appeal involves the interplay between two provisions of the Act, Section
2322(b) and Section 2322(B). Section 2322(b) permits a claimant to recover medical
expenses from an employer where the employer refuses to pay for the expenses and
the employee procures treatment for same. Section 2322(B), enacted in 2007, well
after the adoption of §2322(b), establishes the fee schedule for medical expenses
under the Act. The precise question in this case is whether a claimant who pursues
medical expense benefits under §2322(b) is limited in his claim to the fee schedule
amounts as controlled by §2322(B). To answer this question, the Court must engage
in an interpretation of these two sections of the Act.
Certain guiding principles control how this Court goes about its task of
interpretation. First, if the intent of the legislature is clear by the plain language then
the words of the statute will control.*° If the statute is not clear and there are two
conflicting sections of the statute that are in play, this Court is obligated to construe
the two sections of the statute in a way that reads both sections together so as to
make one harmonious whole of the statute.*’ The Delaware Supreme Court has made
4° Sweeny v. Delaware Dept. of Transp., 2013 WL 1859339 (Del. Super. Ct. Apr. 26, 2013).
46 State v. Cephas, 637 A.2d 20, 23 (Del. 1994).
47 In Re: Port of Wilmington Gantry Cane Litigation, 283 A.3d 921 (Del. 2020).
10
it clear that, when interpreting the Act, courts must liberally construe the Act because
of the benevolent purpose of the Act.*®
Section 2322(b), by its plain language, permits an employee to procure the
medical treatment where the employer refuses the treatment and allows the
employee to receive from the employer the reasonable cost of the same. The only
limitation under §2322(b) is that the costs be “reasonable.” Section 2322(b) is surely
consistent with the overreaching purpose of the Act which is the prompt payment of
benefits, including medical treatment, without regard to fault.”
As set forth in Section 2322(B), known as the Workers’ Compensation Health
Care Payment Rates for Physicians and Hospitals, the purpose of the fee schedule
iS:
[T]o establish a system that eliminates outlier charges and
streamlines payments by creating a presumption of
acceptability of charges implemented through a transparent
process, involving relevant interested parties, that
prospectively responds to the cost of maintaining a health care
practice, eliminating cost shifting among health care services
categories, and avoiding institutionalization of upward rate
creep.
= Mosely v. Bank of Delaware, 372 A.2d 178 (Del. 1977); Zallea Bros. v. Cooper, 166 A.2d 723,
726 (Del. 1960).
4° Champlain Cable Corp. v. Employers Mut. Liability Ins. Co. of Wisconsin, 479 A.2d 835, 840
(Del. 1984).
11
In short, the fee schedule sets rates of payment for treatment of workers
compensation injuries making the need for claimants and/or qualified medical
providers to obtain pre-authorizations for most treatment unnecessary.
Nothing in the clear words of §2322(B) addresses the issue that arises when
an employee is forced to procure and pay for medical services that an employer
refuses to cover. As such, the Court must liberally construe the statute to ensure that
the overriding purpose of the statute is achieved. When the statute is liberally
construed, the only conclusion that can be reached is that the provisions of §2322(b)
were not rendered nonviable by the adoption of §2322(B). The Court rejects the
Board’s legal conclusion that the plain language of the Act no longer allows
reimbursement of medical expenses at a rate higher than the fee schedule amount.
To adopt the Board’s rationale violates a crucial purpose of §2322(b), which
is to provide a remedy in situations where claimants are forced to pay for their own
medical expenses following an employer’s refusal to pay and such expenses are later
found compensable. When an employee is forced to seek and pay for medical
treatment that an employer refuses to pay, the employee does not have the benefit of
the fee schedule which limits what the employee can be charged. The employee is
forced to pay whatever the market demands for that payment. To leave the employee
in a situation where he is responsible for amounts beyond those provided by the fee
12
schedule, where there has been a refusal to pay, violates the very purposes
underlying the Act.
Having found that §2322(b) remains a viable cause of action, the question
becomes what the Claimant is entitled to recover. Claimant maintains that the
collateral source rule applies to this case and, as a result, Claimant is entitled to the
full amount of the medical bills incurred regardless of any health insurance
reductions, write offs or balances remaining. Employer maintains that the collateral
source rule is not applicable to this case.
The parties’ focus on the applicability of the collateral source rule as to what
is recoverable by the Claimant is misplaced. The guidepost on what Claimant is
entitled to recover is the “reasonable” requirement found in §2322(b). To permit
another approach, namely recovery beyond what the Claimant lost, would violate
the purposes of both §2322(b) and §2322(B). By focusing on what is the reasonable
cost, under the circumstances of this case, the purposes behind both §2322(b) and
§2322(B) are achieved.
A reasonable cost does not equate to recovery for the undiscounted medical
bills because such an approach violates Section 2322(B). The reasonable cost in this
case is the actual loss that the claimant suffered because he was forced to pursue the
13
medical treatment, due to the employer’s refusal to pay for the treatment.°° In this
case, that means the Claimant is entitled to recover the amount of his outstanding
balances that his private health insurer did not pay.’! The parties have stipulated that
the Claimant’s outstanding balance totals $16,818.86 — the reasonable cost in this
case.
The Employer contends that §2322(b) was never triggered because the
Claimant never asked the Employer to approve the treatment. On this point, the
Board held that the “employer/insurance carrier were not formally asked to approve
or deny the relevant treatment, and therefore,” there was never a refusal or a formal
denial issued to trigger §2322(b). The Board’s holding on this point is legally
erroneous and unsupported by the evidence.
In Ralyea v. KF Envtl. Tech,>* the Court addressed the precise issue presently
before the Court. In Ralyea, the Court reversed the Board’s decision finding that the
claimant failed to meet the requirements of §2322(b) because he did not first request
°° Entitlement to benefits under §2322(b) does not depend on whether the employer had a good
faith basis to deny benefits. To read a good faith basis into the statute would render the statute
meaningless and would leave a claimant without a remedy where the employee can prove that the
medical expenses were related to a work injury.
>! The parties have agreed that there is no claim in this case for subrogation in favor of Claimant’s
private health care carrier. As such, the Court will not consider this claim nor whether those
amounts are reasonable under the instant circumstances.
2.2005 WL 697942 (Del. Super. Ct. Feb. 28, 2005).
14
medical treatment from the employer before seeking treatment on his own.>’ The
Court explained:
The language of Section 2322(b) states the general principle that
“the employee should ordinarily not incur medical expenses
without first giving the employer a reasonable opportunity to
furnish such services, and an employee who does so will be liable
for that expense.” The purpose behind this notice requirement is
to protect the employer against unreasonable charges and
possible fraudulent claims. The employer must have “some
knowledge of accompanying facts connecting the injury or
illness with the employment, and indicating to a reasonably
conscientious manager that the case might involve a potential
compensation claim.” The employee need not give formal notice
in order to recover as long as the employer has “sufficient
knowledge of the injury.” Once the employee has “furnished the
employer with the facts of the injury” the employer must then
instruct the employee on how to seek treatment.™4
Section 2322(b) does not expressly say that a claimant who fails to obtain a
prior refusal from the employer is barred from recovering for reasonable and
necessary medical treatment.
The Ralyea Court further held:
[W]here the record shows that the employer was aware that a
work-related injury had occurred, ... the employer should
identify some prejudice, or some knowing failure of the
employee to follow company policy, or some _ other
circumstances sufficient to justify relieving it of the obligation to
pay for the employee's medical treatment.
°3 Id at *10.
*4 Jd. at *10, 12 (emphasis added) (citations omitted).
15
In the instant case, Employer was well aware of Claimant’s injury. The
accident was captured on video, immediately reported to employer and the carrier
and Claimant received emergency medical care. Employer also terminated
Claimant’s employment one month after the accident because the Claimant’s injuries
prevented him from performing his job duties. Moreover, neither Employer nor the
Board identified any prejudice or other circumstance (outside the fee schedule)
which would justify relieving Employer of the obligation to pay the medical
expenses at issue.
Even if the law required an employer’s denial of treatment to trigger §2322(b),
Claimant could easily make such a showing here. Indeed, the carrier denied the
entirety of Claimant’s claim as early as September 30, 2015.°° In December 2015,
Employer reiterated its denial in writing.°° The carrier also accommodated
Claimant’s request for a letter denying treatment for the back injury, specifically in
order for Claimant to utilize his private health insurance for lumbar surgery.°’ To
require the employee to continue to ask for payment of bills where the claim has
been denied is not required and would be a futile exercise.”
>> A29-A30.
°° A28.
°7 A31.
°8 See Lukk v. State Farm Mut. Auto Ins., Co., 2014 WL 4247767 (Del. Super. Ct. Aug. 27, 2014).
16
Accordingly, the Board’s finding that under §2322(b), a “formal request” and
“formal denial” were both required, and absent, is legally erroneous and unsupported
by the evidence.
Under the facts of this case and established law, §2322(b) was triggered and
Claimant is entitled to recover the reasonable cost of his medical treatment from
employer which, in this case, are the outstanding amounts of his medical bills in the
amount of $16,818.86
CONCLUSION
The Board’s December 10, 2021 Decision is REVERSED. Claimant is
awarded $16,818.86 in medical bills.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
C-Iph RNJusdén, President Judge
Original to Prothonotary
17