Petroleum Helicopters, Inc. v. Nancy T. Garrett, L.P.T., P.C.

                        United States Court of Appeals,

                                     Fifth Circuit.

                                      No. 93-5272.

  PETROLEUM HELICOPTERS, INC. and National Union Fire Insurance
Company of Pittsburgh, Pa., Plaintiffs-Appellants,

                                            v.

 NANCY T. GARRETT, L.P.T., P.C., and Nancy T. Garrett d/b/a East
Texas Physical Therapy Services, Defendants-Appellees.

                                     June 16, 1994.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of Texas.

Before WOOD,1 SMITH, and DUHÉ, Circuit Judges.

       HARLINGTON WOOD, Jr., Circuit Judge.

       This appeal arises from an Administrative Law Judge's order

directing the defendants to reimburse the plaintiffs for payments

they       made     pursuant    to    the   Longshore   and   Harbor   Worker's

Compensation Act for medical care to one of the plaintiffs' injured

workers.          The ALJ determined that the medical care charges were

excessive and ordered the defendants to reimburse the amount of the

excessive charges.             After the defendants failed to repay the

amounts in question, the plaintiffs filed suit in the district

court to enforce the ALJ's order. The district court dismissed the

suit for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and this appeal

followed.

                                            I.

       While employed by Petroleum Helicopters, Inc. ("PHI"), Jeffrey

       1
      Circuit Judge of the Seventh Circuit, sitting by
designation.

                                            1
Shives suffered a work-related injury that was covered under the

Longshore and Harbor Worker's Compensation Act ("LHWCA").           On May

3, 1985, PHI and its worker's compensation carrier, National Union

Fire Insurance Co. of Pittsburgh ("National"), entered into a

settlement with Shives.       PHI and National ("plaintiffs") agreed to

pay Shives "reasonable costs of necessary past and future medical

care and treatment resulting from the work-related injury."

     In 1987, suffering from back pain, Shives began physical

therapy   treatments   with    defendant   Nancy   T.   Garrettt,   L.P.T.2

Plaintiffs paid the charges for these treatments.         Two years later

they disputed the charges by defendants and ceased making payments.

Shives then filed a claim with the Administrative Law Judge ("ALJ")

for a determination of the parties' liability for the medical

treatment charges.     After conducting a hearing on the matter, the

ALJ found that the services defendants provided were unreasonably

lengthy and unreasonably expensive and that the back pain related

from an injury for which PHI was not responsible.            The ALJ then

ordered defendants to reimburse plaintiffs for the amount of the

unnecessary payments.

     Following Shives' Motion to Reconsider, the ALJ confirmed its

findings and ruling.    Neither party appealed that decision to the

Benefits Review Board, which would have been the appropriate course

of action.   20 C.F.R. §§ 702.391, 802.204.        Defendants failed to


     2
      Nancy T. Garrett was an employee of Nancy T. Garrett d/b/a
East Texas Physical Therapy Services. Both the individual and
the organization are defendants in this suit. We refer to them
collectively as "defendants".

                                     2
reimburse the amount of the overcharges.           Plaintiffs then brought

suit under the LHWCA in federal district court seeking enforcement

of the ALJ's order and a money judgment for the amount of the

overpayments.   The district court concluded that the LHWCA did not

provide a cause of action and dismissed the case for lack of

subject matter jurisdiction.

                                 II.

     The LHWCA provides no express cause of action for an employer

to recover overpayments from a medical care provider.           Plaintiffs

argue that an implied cause of action exists under 33 U.S.C. §

921(d) which would allow them to seek enforcement of the ALJ order

compelling the reimbursement.    That section provides as follows:

     If any employer or his officers or agents fails to comply with
     a compensation order making an award, that has become final,
     any beneficiary of such award or the deputy commissioner
     making the order, may apply for the enforcement of the order
     to the Federal district court for the judicial district in
     which the injury occurred....

33 U.S.C. § 921(d).     This statute expressly provides a cause of

action only if the beneficiary of a compensation order is seeking

to enforce that order against the employer or its agents.               The

plaintiffs argue that by implication the statute must allow the

employer   to   seek   enforcement       of   an   order   compelling   the

reimbursement of that same compensation;              the only difference

between the two causes of action is that the alignment of the

parties is reversed.

     The plaintiffs suggest that by implying a cause of action for

them to recover overpayments from the medical care provider we

would merely be "filling the gap" that Congress left when they

                                     3
drafted    the    LHWCA.    Contrary       to   the   plaintiffs   assertions,

realignment of the parties is not the only difference between the

language of section 921(d) and this case.             That section speaks of

a beneficiary enforcing a "compensation" order against an employer.

The LHWCA defines compensation as "the money allowance payable to

an employee or to his defendants."          Relying on that definition, we

have previously held that "[i]f an employer furnishes medical

services voluntarily, by paying a health care provider for its

services, it does not pay "compensation' within the meaning of the

Act."     Lazarus v. Chevron U.S.A., Inc., 958 F.2d 1297, 1301 (5th

Cir.1992).       The plaintiffs are seeking reimbursement of payments

they made directly to the medical care provider;             therefore, they

are not seeking reimbursement of "compensation."3              Regardless of

the alignment of the parties, the subject matter of the dispute

simply is not covered by section 921(d) and plaintiffs' argument

must fail.

     Furthermore, even if we were to assume that this case did


     3
      Plaintiffs cite Hunt v. Director, Office Workers'
Compensation Programs, 999 F.2d 419 (9th Cir.1993), for the
proposition that "compensation" should be interpreted more
broadly. In Hunt, the Ninth Circuit interpreted the term
"persons seeking benefits," found in section 928(a) relating to
recovery of attorney's fees, as including medical care providers.
In doing this they stated that "benefits" and "compensation" were
interchangeable terms. Id. at 423. Plaintiffs argue that
"compensation" then must include payments to medical care
providers. The Ninth Circuit's conclusion, however, was based on
the fact that the interpretation would advance the broad policy
interest of protecting the employee's right to benefits. Id. at
424. Such a policy concern is not implicated in the current
case. Nor does the current case involve the interpretation of 33
U.S.C. § 928(a). Therefore we leave the issues raised in Hunt
for another day.

                                       4
involve "compensation," plaintiffs' "fill in the gap" argument

would nonetheless fail.         Section 921(d) is very specific;      it

grants jurisdiction only in actions against the employer.        "There

is a basic difference between filling a gap left by Congress'

silence and rewriting rules that Congress has affirmatively and

specifically enacted."     Mobil Oil Corp. v. Higginbotham, 436 U.S.

618, 625, 98 S.Ct. 2010, 2015, 56 L.Ed.2d 581 (1978).        Allowing a

cause of action when the alignment of the parties is reversed is

not   filling   a   gap   and   effectuating   Congress'   intent,   but

contradicting the plain language of the statute.        Plaintiffs have

identified nothing that would suggest Congress intended anything

but what they included in the statute.      Had Congress intended that

one could bring a cause of action against a medical care provider

under section 921(d), we are at a loss to understand why they

specifically    limited   jurisdiction    to   cases   brought   against

employers or their agents.

      In addition to the clear language of section 921(d), several

other provisions of the LHWCA as well as the legislative history of

the Act demonstrate Congress' intent that the employer should not

have a separate cause of action to seek reimbursement of past

payments.      The LHWCA specifically addresses when and how the

employers may obtain reimbursement for payments already made.         In

three separate sections the statute provides that the employer may

recover past payments from an employee, but only by offsetting

those payments against future compensation installments still due.

See 33 U.S.C. §§ 908(j), 914(j), 922.      The employer does not have


                                     5
a separate cause of action to enforce a reimbursement order against

an employee when no future compensation payments are due.                      Ceres

Gulf v. Cooper, 957 F.2d 1199 (5th Cir.1992).4                  This is true even

if the employee has engaged in fraud to obtain medical benefits.

The LHWCA provides for the penalty in the event a claimant engages

in fraud, 33 U.S.C. § 931(a)(1), but the "penalty does not include

recovery of the payments obtained as a result of [the fraud]."

Ceres Gulf, 957 F.2d at 1205.        Consider for example an employee who

fails to report earnings, in violation of section 908(j). Although

according to the statute the employee's failure to report earnings

results in a forfeiture of the right to compensation, Congress has

stated    that   in   such   an    instance      "[t]he     committee    does    not

contemplate that the employer could bring a cause of action to

recover compensation paid in the past."                H.R.Rep. No. 570, 98th

Cong., 2d Sess. pt. I, at 18 (1983) reprinted in 1984 U.S.C.C.A.N.

2734, 2751.      The only means of recovering the payments would be

through the offset methods provided in the statute.                   33 U.S.C. §

908(j).

     Although     the    holding    in       Ceres   Gulf   and    the   statutory

provisions    above     relate    only   to    an    employer     recovering    past

payments from an employee, similar provisions in the Act and

similar comments in the legislative history compel our conclusion


     4
      Defendants have argued that the holding in Ceres Gulf
forecloses an employer's cause of action for reimbursement from
any party. That case, however, addressed only the issue of an
employer seeking reimbursement from an employee, not from a
medical care provider, and its holding was limited that
situation. 957 F.2d at 1204-09.

                                         6
that the    employer    is    foreclosed      from   bringing    an   action   for

reimbursement against medical care providers as well. For example,

the Act provides that medical care providers who knowingly make

false statements, or otherwise employ a fraud in order to receive

payment    for   medical     services,   or    knowingly     submit   bills    for

excessive charges etc., may be disqualified from participating in

the system.      See 33 U.S.C. § 907(c).       In such a case, those medical

care providers are not entitled to receive fees for their services

under the LHWCA.      33 U.S.C. § 907(c)(1)(C).         Congress specifically

noted, however, that "the effect of any such disqualification to

receive fees for medical services, ... [shall] be prospective

only."    H.R.Rep. No. 570, 98th Cong., 2d Sess. pt. I, at 14 (1983)

reprinted in, 1984 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2734, 2747.                     Therefore, this

disqualification would not affect the payments already received.

Even if defendants had been disqualified to participate in the

system, and nothing in the record even hints at such an action,

Congress has made clear that the payments already received would

not be affected.

     These provisions demonstrate that the employer should have no

claim for reimbursement against the health care provider even after

a determination that fraud was involved.              In this case there has

been no finding that defendants defrauded the system and they have

not been    disqualified      from   participating      in   the   system.      If

Congress would preclude a claim for reimbursement in the truly

egregious cases mentioned above, we must conclude that they would




                                         7
similarly reject a claim for reimbursement in this case.5

      Finally the plaintiffs argue that we should imply a cause of

action because having all claims relating to the LHWCA administered

and reviewed under one federal system would be efficient and would

best serve the intent of Congress in passing the Act.               As we

discussed above, Congress intended that an employer not be able to

bring a cause of action to recover overpayments from a medical care

provider.   Therefore implying a cause of action would be not only

an   impermissible   and   unjustified   expansion   of   federal   court

jurisdiction, but would also frustrate, rather than advance, the

efficient use of judicial resources.6

                                 III.

      The district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hear

this matter and its order dismissing the case is

      AFFIRMED.




      5
      Plaintiffs also argue that denying them a cause of action
in this case would result in unjust enrichment for the defendant
medical care providers as they have "bilked" the system of money
to which they are not entitled. Unjust enrichment, however, is
not a principal or even secondary concern in the statutory
framework of the Act. On the contrary, despite the unjust
enrichment that would necessarily result when a medical care
provider obtains payments by way of fraud, Congress nonetheless
has precluded the employer from recovering those payments. We
therefore reject plaintiffs' unjust enrichment argument.
      6
      Defendants also argue that they were not proper parties to
the ALJ proceedings and therefore, the ALJ's order cannot be
enforced against them. Because we affirm the dismissal of this
suit based on the lack of subject matter jurisdiction, we do not
reach this issue.

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