This is an appeal1 by Larry Pitt, Esquire, from an order of the Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Board) affirming a referee’s decision which denied him an award for counsel fees.
The relevant facts are as follows. Pitt represented Arnold McEachin (Claimant) in a workmen’s compensation matter from September 1988 to April 1990. Claimant signed a contingent fee agreement providing that Pitt would receive 20% of all awarded compensation. In April, 1990, Claimant discharged Pitt and chose a new attorney, Anthony Witlin.
In January 1991, the referee granted Claimant’s claim petition and awarded benefits. The referee also awarded counsel fees at Claimant’s direction to Witlin in the amount of 20% of benefits awarded to Claimant. Pitt appealed nunc pro tunc the referee’s decision and also filed a “Petition for Approval of Counsel Fees Pursuant to Section 501 of the Workmen’s *62Compensation Act”2 with the Board. The Board remanded the entire matter to the referee for farther proceedings and ordered him to issue findings of fact and conclusions of law on payment of attorney’s fees and costs. Without taking additional evidence, the referee issued a second opinion affirming his original opinion and stating that “the Worker’s Compensation Act is not designed to involve itself in fee disputes between different attorneys representing the Claimant or the Defendant.” The Board affirmed this judgment. Pitt appealed and contends that the referee, erred as a matter of law in awarding all attorney fees to one attorney without issuing specific findings of fact distinguishing the amount and degree of difficulty of work by participating counsel.
In this appeal, we address for the first time a question never before presented: Where a claimant fires one attorney and hires another and the referee, in addition to granting the claimant’s petition for benefits, awards counsel fees, does the referee also have jurisdiction to decide a fee dispute between the lawyers and may he apportion the counsel fees?
The answer to the question lies in the realization that the only case in controversy that was before the referee to resolve was Claimant’s claim petition for compensation under Section 301(c) of the Act.3 That statutory cause of action carried with it a statutory requirement that the referee approve “all counsel fees, agreed upon by claimant and his attorneys for services performed in matters before any referee or the board ... providing the counsel fees do not exceed twenty per centum of the amount awarded.”4 (Emphasis added.) That independent cause of action is distinct from any claim which a discharged lawyer might assert against his former client, or that client’s subsequent counsel, over his discharge and replacement. Pitt, before this Court, is not representing a party to the worker’s compensation claim and litigation, but himself, litigating in his own interest a cause of action which is either a *63common law claim for breach of contract, or a claim on principles of quantum meruit, or an equitable claim for damages under a theory of unjust enrichment.
Under any theoiy, however, neither the Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board, nor the referee, is vested with authority to adjudicate such an issue, nor does the Board or referee have any particular expertise in this area of the law. Quite the contrary, if Claimant’s defense here is that his first attorney, Pitt, breached his duty of professional representation, it places the referee and Board in an area completely foreign to their expertise. Moreover, it is possible that Claimant himself might be obligated to the discharged attorney on grounds totally different from, and perhaps even in conflict with, Pitt’s representation of him before the worker’s compensation adjudicative tribunals. A client always has the right to discharge a lawyer at any time, with or without cause, but if the reason for the discharge is because counsel would not pursue an imprudent or repugnant objective, or refuses to engage in reprehensible conduct, there could be liability for counsel fees apart from the ordinary considerations in a worker’s compensation case. See Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.16 (1988). We conclude therefore that Pitt, as a litigant, lacked the direct interest in the subject matter being litigated to confer standing in the resolution of the worker’s compensation claim of Claimant. William Penn Parking Garage Inc. v. City of Pittsburgh, 464 Pa. 168, 346 A.2d 269 (1975). We strongly suggest that, if at all possible, Pitt’s claim for counsel fees should voluntarily be submitted to the appropriate committee of the bar association where all three interested parties could be heard and the dispute resolved expeditiously.
There are as well other major impediments that would deny Pitt standing to litigate his claim for counsel fees in this case. First, Pitt’s “appeal nunc pro tunc” was not timely filed. The first opinion of the referee, dated January *6415, 1991, was circulated On January 31, 1991.5 Pitt filed his “appeal nunc pro tunc” on April 19, 1991, well beyond the twenty days within which he had to file his “appeal.” See Section 423 of the Act, 77 P.S. § 853. Such a failure is jurisdictional. Pittsburgh Moose Lodge No. 46 v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Grieco, Jr.), 109 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 53, 530 A.2d 982 (1987).
In his “appeal nunc pro tunc” Pitt asserts that the referee failed to forward a copy of the decision to him and that he filed the appeal nunc pro tunc immediately after he became aware of the decision. On the bottom of the appeal form, where it requires the designation of the “name of [the] party taking [the] appeal (Claimant or Defendant),” Pitt typed in “Claimant,” which was clearly a misnomer. We conclude that the reason Pitt was not sent a copy of the referee’s award or was not otherwise notified of the referee’s decision was because he was not a party in the case, nor did he represent a party in the case. Simply stated, he was not entitled to notice.
At the same time Pitt filed his “appeal nunc pro tunc,” he also filed with the Board a “Petition for Approval of Counsel Fees Pursuant to Section 501 [77 P.S. § 1021] of the Worker’s Compensation Act.” The Board remanded both the matter of the petition for counsel fees and the appeal nunc pro tunc to the referee “for further proceedings and issuing of findings of fact and conclusions of law on payment of attorney’s fees and costs.”6 The referee, without taking additional evidence, concluded all matters before him by a decision and order dated October 22,1991, “circulated” October 23,1991. However, the *65referee made only three findings of fact in that decision, which essentially stated that he “adopted” his previous findings of fact and conclusions of law from his previous decision of August 30, 1991, which decision is nowhere in this record. The referee’s order merely denied the “claim for attorney fees by Larry Pitt, Esquire.” No other reason or explanation was given by the referee regarding the basis upon which the referee awarded 100% of the 20% counsel fee to attorney Witlin, and nothing to attorney Pitt. The Board, in the appeal by Pitt, merely affirmed the decision of the referee and explained that “nothing in the prior remand order of this Board required that additional hearings be held.” Although this answered the only allegation of error raised by Pitt in his second appeal to the Board,7 it fails completely to articulate any reasoning for the division of the attorney’s fee.
With regard to Pitt’s separate petition, nowhere under any provision of the Act is a claimant’s former attorney given statutory leave to file such a petition. Section 501 of the Act is an old carryover provision adopted in 1915 as part of the original workmen’s compensation statute and which, for all practical purposes, has been replaced by Section 442 of the Act, 77 P.S. § 998. Technically Section 501 provides a procedure for an attorney to assert an “enforceable lien — against the amount paid as compensation.” It requires that the fee agreement be first filed with the Department of Labor and Industry. Nowhere in Pitt’s petition is it alleged that he properly filed such an agreement with the Department. Furthermore, there could not be a claim for counsel fees under both Section 442 of the Act, the issue on appeal, and under Section 501. Of particular note is the fact that nowhere in Pitt’s brief to this Court is Section 501 of the Act even mentioned or obliquely referred to. Of further note is that Pitt’s argument on his entitlement to a “reasonable” fee rests entirely on case law dealing with the award of counsel fees against the employer for an unreasonable contest under Sec*66tion 440 of the Act, which is an issue not present in this appeal.
In conclusion therefore, we quash Pitt’s appeal in this case on the grounds that Pitt lacks standing and because his appeal was untimely filed. Section 423 of the Act, 77 P.S. § 853. Pitt’s petition to the Board is likewise quashed for those same basic reasons as well as for the additional reasons stated, viz., that there is no statutory basis for such a petition by a claimant’s former counsel and, even assuming there was such a basis, the issue has been abandoned. Pa.R.A.P. 2116; General Electric Co. v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Valsamaki), 140 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 461, 593 A.2d 921, petition for allowance of appeal denied, 529 Pa. 626, 600 A.2d 541 (1991).
ORDER
NOW, December 29, 1993, the petition for review of Larry Pitt, Esquire, in the above-captioned matter is hereby quashed.
. This case was reassigned to the opinion writer on September 15, 1993, after reargument was granted, and the case was directed to be submitted on briefs to the Court en banc.
. The Pennsylvania Workmen’s Compensation Act (Act), Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. 1021.
. 77 P.S. § 411.
. Section 442 of the Act, 77 P.S. § 998.
. The referee’s decision and order are dated January 15, 1991, but a computer cover sheet states that the date of "circulation” was January 31, 1991, which we take to mean the date of mailing notice as required under Section 406 of the Act, 77 P.S. § 717, to begin the period of time within which an appeal must be filed. See Section 423 of the Act, 77 P.S. § 853; Riley Stoker Corp. v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board, 9 Pa.Commonwealth Ct. 533, 308 A.2d 205 (1973).
. The Board further granted a supersedeas regarding the attorney’s fees and costs, and ordered SEPTA to hold all such fees and costs in escrow "until further order by the Referee and this Board.”
. Pitt states in his appeal "the referee failed to hold any hearings or accept any evidence in this matter which was specifically remanded to the referee by the Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board.”