Elena Hernandez v. Marque Medicos Fullerton, LLC ( 2019 )


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  •                                 In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 18-1789
    IN RE:
    ELENA HERNANDEZ,
    Debtor-Appellant.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 17 CV 3230 — Jorge L. Alonso, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED OCTOBER 26, 2018 — DECIDED MARCH 18, 2019
    ____________________
    Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and SYKES and SCUDDER, Circuit
    Judges.
    SYKES, Circuit Judge. When Elena Hernandez filed a
    voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition in December 2016,
    she reported one sizable asset: a pending workers’ compensa-
    tion claim valued at $31,000. To place that claim beyond the
    reach of creditors, she listed it as exempt under section 21 of
    the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act (“the Act”), 820 ILL.
    COMP. STAT. 305/21 (2011), applicable via 
    11 U.S.C. § 522
    (b).
    Two days after filing for bankruptcy, Hernandez settled the
    claim.
    2                                                     No. 18-1789
    Hernandez owed significant sums to three healthcare pro-
    viders who treated her work-related injuries. The providers
    objected to her claimed exemption, arguing that 2005 amend-
    ments to the Act enable unpaid healthcare providers to reach
    workers’ compensation awards and settlements. The bank-
    ruptcy court denied the exemption and Hernandez appealed.
    The district judge affirmed, concluding that using the work-
    ers’ compensation exemption to thwart this specific class of
    creditors would frustrate the Act’s purpose.
    We confront an important question of statutory interpre-
    tation: whether the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act, as
    amended, allows care-provider creditors to reach the pro-
    ceeds of workers’ compensation claims. Section 21 of the Act
    has been interpreted by bankruptcy courts to create an ex-
    emption for these assets. The 2005 amendments made several
    changes to the Illinois workers’ compensation regime, impos-
    ing a new fee schedule and billing procedure for care provid-
    ers seeking remuneration. Did those changes alter the scope
    of section 21?
    The Illinois Supreme Court hasn’t addressed the interplay
    between these competing components of state workers’ com-
    pensation law. Without that controlling authority, we find
    ourselves genuinely uncertain about the correct interpreta-
    tion. This state-law issue is dispositive, likely to recur, and im-
    plicates the effective administration of workers’
    compensation in Illinois. Therefore, we respectfully certify the
    question set forth in this opinion to the Illinois Supreme
    Court.
    No. 18-1789                                                 3
    I. Background
    In December 2016 Hernandez filed a Chapter 7 bank-
    ruptcy petition in the Northern District of Illinois. Between
    2009 and 2011, she sustained on-the-job injuries and was
    treated at the Ambulatory Surgical Care Facility, Marque
    Medicos Fullerton LLC, and Medicos Pain and Surgical Spe-
    cialists, S.C. In her bankruptcy petition, Hernandez reported
    unsecured claims held by these healthcare providers. She
    owed $28,709.60 to Ambulatory Surgical; $58,901.20 to
    Marque Medicos Fullerton; and $50,161.26 to Medicos Pain
    and Surgical. She reported minimal assets, listing $1,300 in
    bank accounts; some inexpensive jewelry; and her pending
    workers’ compensation claim, which she valued at $31,000.
    Hernandez claimed an exemption for the entirety of that
    claim, citing section 21 of the Illinois Workers’ Compensation
    Act. Two days after filing her bankruptcy petition, Hernandez
    settled the claim with her employer, apparently for
    $30,566.33, without consulting the Trustee. The health- care
    providers objected to Hernandez’s claimed exemption, argu-
    ing that the amended Act empowered them to reach her set-
    tlement. They also urged the court to disallow the exemption
    on grounds that the settlement was the product of fraud. In
    April 2017 the bankruptcy court heard argument on the ex-
    emption. The judge focused on process-based concerns about
    Hernandez’s settlement—including her failure to notify inter-
    ested parties or the Trustee—rather than the statutory argu-
    ments raised by the parties. In the end, the judge summarily
    denied the exemption without a written opinion.
    Hernandez appealed to the district court, and Judge
    Alonso affirmed. His opinion focused exclusively on the in-
    terplay between section 21 of the Act and the 2005
    4                                                     No. 18-1789
    amendments codified at 820 ILL. COMP. STAT. 305/8 and 8.2.
    Relying on In re McClure, 
    175 B.R. 21
     (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 1994),
    Judge Alonso held that section 21 creates an exemption for
    workers’ compensation claims but the subsequent amend-
    ments “significantly altered” the Act, striking a “balance” by
    limiting what providers can charge while allowing them to
    resume collection efforts following a settlement. Reading the
    Act as a “harmonious whole” and citing interpretive canons
    against surplusage and absurdity, Judge Alonso rejected Her-
    nandez’s interpretation of the amendments as “not reasona-
    ble” because it would undermine a key purpose of the
    amended Act: ensuring payment for care providers.
    Hernandez moved to alter or amend the judgment. At a
    hearing on the motion, Judge Alonso again rejected her statu-
    tory arguments. This appeal followed.
    II. Discussion
    We apply de novo review to the bankruptcy court’s con-
    clusions of law. First Weber Grp., Inc. v. Horsfall, 
    738 F.3d 767
    ,
    776 (7th Cir. 2013). “A debtor’s entitlement to a bankruptcy
    exemption is a question of law … .” In re Yonikus, 
    996 F.2d 866
    ,
    868 (7th Cir. 1993). Matters of statutory interpretation are like-
    wise questions of law. Boyd v. Ill. State Police, 
    384 F.3d 888
    , 896
    (7th Cir. 2004).
    A bankruptcy estate contains most property interests held
    by the debtor, including pending claims. 
    11 U.S.C. § 541
    (a).
    Under § 522, some assets within the estate are nonetheless
    shielded from creditors by statutory exemptions. Clark v. Chi.
    Mun. Emps. Credit Union, 
    119 F.3d 540
    , 543 (7th Cir. 1997) (ex-
    plaining that under § 522 “an individual debtor can retain cer-
    tain exempt property while the debtor’s non-exempt property
    No. 18-1789                                                      5
    may be used to satisfy creditors’ claims”). The Bankruptcy
    Code recognizes two sources of exemptions: the federal ex-
    emptions outlined in § 522(d) and, essentially, all others (that
    is, federal exemptions beyond § 522(d) and state-law exemp-
    tions). See 
    11 U.S.C. § 522
    (b)(3). The default rule is that a
    debtor chooses between these bodies of law. 
    Id.
     § 522(b)(1).
    However, states may deny debtors that choice and restrict
    them to non-§ 522(d) exemptions. Id. § 522(b)(2). Illinois has
    done so. See 735 ILL. COMP. STAT. 5/12-1201; Clark, 
    119 F.3d at 543
    .
    Illinois law carves out exemptions for a broad range of
    personal property. 735 ILL. COMP. STAT. 5/12-1001. The State’s
    general exemption statute doesn’t mention workers’ compen-
    sation claims or awards. 
    Id.
     Hernandez relies on section 21 of
    the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act, which bankruptcy
    courts have interpreted as an exemption. In relevant part that
    section provides: “No payment, claim, award or decision un-
    der this Act shall be assignable or subject to any lien, attach-
    ment or garnishment, or be held liable in any way for any lien,
    debt, penalty or damages.” 820 ILL. COMP. STAT. 305/21. A ver-
    sion of section 21 has been in place since the early 20th cen-
    tury. See Lasley v. Tazewell Coal Co., 
    223 Ill. App. 462
    , 463 (Ill.
    App. Ct. 1921).
    In the 1994 In re McClure decision, a bankruptcy court clas-
    sified section 21 as a state-law exemption applicable in bank-
    ruptcy proceedings under § 522(b). 
    175 B.R. at
    23–24. The
    court acknowledged that section 21 isn’t codified alongside
    other state-law exemptions and doesn’t use the word “ex-
    empt.” 
    Id. at 23
    . Even so, the court held that the provision’s
    plain “language is effective to exempt workers’ compensation
    claims from judgments of creditors.” 
    Id.
     The court reasoned
    6                                                     No. 18-1789
    that the statutory text may not be overridden by “the place-
    ment of provisions of state law within a particular codifica-
    tion.” 
    Id.
    McClure found support for its conclusion in Mentzer v. Van
    Scyoc, 
    599 N.E.2d 58
     (Ill. App. Ct. 1992). Mentzer involved a
    small-claims dispute in which the trial court ordered a tenant
    to pay $10 per month to her landlord. 
    Id. at 60
    . The tenant’s
    income was comprised entirely of workers’ compensation
    benefits. She objected to the judgment, arguing that section 21
    shielded this income from creditors. The Illinois Appellate
    Court held that “court[s] cannot generally require workers’
    compensation benefits to be applied to the debts of a claimant,
    even when reduced to judgment, unless some specific statu-
    tory provision … so provides.” 
    Id. at 61
    . Nor did Illinois’s
    general exemption statute “supersede or infringe upon the
    protection given by section 21.” 
    Id.
     Mentzer relied on an earlier
    Illinois Supreme Court case addressing a claim against a
    guardianship whose sole asset was a workers’ compensation
    award. In re Estate of Callahan, 
    578 N.E.2d 985
     (Ill. 1991). Calla-
    han, in turn, held that section 21 prevented the claimant from
    reaching an award under the Act; in so holding, the court re-
    lied in part on a dictionary definition of “debt.” 
    Id. at 989
    .
    We don’t have a dispositive Illinois Supreme Court opin-
    ion clarifying the boundaries of section 21 or even classifying
    it as an exemption. The parties agree that section 21 creates an
    exemption and thus haven’t briefed that question, so for the
    time being we assume that the interpretation embraced in
    McClure is correct. The crux of the dispute is whether the ex-
    emption applies to the claims of healthcare providers after the
    2005 amendments.
    No. 18-1789                                                     7
    We turn now to the text of those amendments. First, the
    General Assembly created a detailed schedule limiting the
    fees providers may charge for their services to treat job-re-
    lated injuries or illnesses. 820 ILL. COMP. STAT. 305/8.2. Under
    section 8.2(a), the Workers’ Compensation Commission (“the
    Commission”) is empowered to set and adjust price ceilings
    for medical care on a regional basis across Illinois.
    The General Assembly also altered section 8(a), requiring
    employers to “pay the negotiated rate, if applicable, or the
    lesser of the health care provider’s actual charges or [fees] ac-
    cording to a fee schedule … in effect at the time the service
    was rendered for all the necessary” medical care “reasonably
    required to cure or relieve from the effects of the accidental
    injury.” 820 ILL. COMP. STAT. 305/8(a). Section 8(a) also in-
    structs employers to pay undisputed medical bills directly to
    care providers on the employee’s behalf. 
    Id.
    To accompany the new fee schedule, the amendments in-
    stalled new billing and collection rules. Under section 8.2(d):
    “When a patient notifies a provider that the treatment[] … be-
    ing sought is for a work-related illness or injury and furnishes
    the provider the name and address of the responsible em-
    ployer, the provider shall bill the employer or its designee di-
    rectly.” If the “bill contains substantially all the required data
    elements necessary to adjudicate the bill,” the employer has
    30 days to pay the providers involved in the claim. 
    Id.
     §
    8.2(d)(1). Claim denials or disputes must be communicated to
    the provider within 30 days. Id. § 8.2(d)(2). Unpaid undis-
    puted bills accrue statutory interest. Id. § 8.2(d)(3).
    The amendments also curtailed a billing practice known
    as “balance billing,” whereby providers attempted to collect
    from an employee the remaining balance on an undisputed
    8                                                    No. 18-1789
    bill paid only partially by an employer. “Except as provided
    in subsections (e-5), (e-10), and (e-15),” the Act now bars pro-
    viders from “hold[ing] an employee liable for costs related to
    a non-disputed procedure, treatment, or service rendered in
    connection with a compensable injury,” or “bill[ing] or other-
    wise attempt[ing] to recover from the employee the difference
    between the provider’s charge and the amount paid by the
    employer … on a compensable injury.” Id. § 8.2(e).
    Subsections (e-5), (e-10), and (e-15) address procedures in
    the event of a dispute between the employer and the provider
    over a medical bill. If an employer determines that an injury
    or illness is noncompensable under the Act and refuses to pay
    the entire bill, the provider is entitled to seek payment from
    the employee. Id. § 8.2(e-5), (e-10). But if the employee notifies
    the provider that he has filed an application with the Com-
    mission to resolve the dispute, the provider “shall cease any
    and all efforts to collect payment,” and the statute of limita-
    tions on the debt is tolled. Id. During the pendency of the dis-
    pute, providers are permitted to mail payment reminders—
    but not bills—to the employee. Id. § 8.2(e-15).
    Finally, the General Assembly addressed collection proce-
    dures after an award or settlement of a disputed claim:
    Upon a final award or judgment by an Arbitra-
    tor or the Commission, or a settlement agreed to
    by the employer and the employee, a provider
    may resume any and all efforts to collect pay-
    ment from the employee for the services ren-
    dered to the employee and the employee shall
    be responsible for payment of any outstanding
    bills for a procedure, treatment, or service
    No. 18-1789                                                    9
    rendered by a provider as well as the interest
    awarded under subsection (d) of this Section.
    Id. § 8.2(e-20). After the claim is adjudicated or settled, the
    provider may seek collection from the employee, capped at
    the fee schedule’s price ceiling if the care is compensable. Pay-
    ment for noncompensable services “is the responsibility of the
    employee unless a provider and employee have agreed oth-
    erwise in writing.” Id.
    The healthcare providers here argue that these amend-
    ments carve out an exception to the exemption in section 21
    for care providers who treat an employee’s work-related inju-
    ries or illnesses. Their argument focuses squarely on statutory
    purpose. Leaving the exemption intact would “obviate the
    plain meaning” of section 8.2(e-20) by placing a workers’
    compensation settlement “outside the reach of a specific class
    of creditors … [that] the Act has now gone to extraordinary
    lengths to protect.” Hernandez emphasizes statutory text, ar-
    guing that the General Assembly knew how to create an ex-
    ception to the exemption but conspicuously left out any
    language to that effect. Thus, while the amendments ensure
    that providers can seek recourse against an employee follow-
    ing a settlement, section 21 continues in force as an exemp-
    tion, walling off the proceeds of this particular exempted
    claim.
    The healthcare providers’ interpretation carried the day
    below. The district judge concluded that section 21 continues
    to exempt workers’ compensation claims as against general
    creditors “but not as against medical providers after the
    debtor settles her … claim with her employer.”
    10                                                  No. 18-1789
    We apply Illinois’s rules of statutory construction when
    interpreting an Illinois statute. Zahn v. N. Am. Power & Gas,
    LLC, 
    815 F.3d 1082
    , 1089 (7th Cir. 2016). “The primary rule of
    statutory construction is to ascertain and give effect to the in-
    tent of the legislature,” and “[t]he best evidence of legislative
    intent is the statutory language.” People v. Donoho, 
    788 N.E.2d 707
    , 715 (Ill. 2003). When assessing legislative intent, “courts
    should consider, in addition to the statutory language, the
    reason for the law, the problems to be remedied, and the ob-
    jects and purposes sought.” 
    Id.
     Statutory provisions should
    not be read in isolation but “as a whole; all relevant parts of
    the statute must be considered when courts attempt to divine
    the legislative intent underlying the statute.” People v. NL In-
    dus., 
    604 N.E.2d 349
    , 356 (Ill. 1992).
    Illinois law recognizes interpretive canons against sur-
    plusage and absurdity. “We must construe the statute so that
    each word, clause, and sentence, if possible, is given a reason-
    able meaning and not rendered superfluous, avoiding an in-
    terpretation [that] would render any portion of the statute
    meaningless or void,” and “presume that the General Assem-
    bly did not intend absurdity, inconvenience, or injustice.” Syl-
    vester v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    756 N.E.2d 822
    , 827 (Ill. 2001)
    (citations omitted). This statute in particular “is to be inter-
    preted liberally[] to effectuate its main purpose—providing
    financial protection for interruption or termination of a
    worker’s earning power.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    Applying these interpretive rules, we see plausible argu-
    ments on both sides. The amendments constructed a payment
    process designed to balance the interests of healthcare provid-
    ers, employees, and employers. For instance, by tolling the
    statute of limitations during payment disputes, the General
    No. 18-1789                                                     11
    Assembly clearly sought to “protect[] providers’ ability to ul-
    timately receive payment.” Marque Medicos Fullerton, LLC v.
    Zurich Am. Ins. Co., 
    83 N.E.3d 1027
    , 1036 (Ill. App. Ct. 2017).
    Hernandez’s interpretation incentivizes strategic behavior
    and unquestionably undermines healthcare providers. It
    places the only asset that employees necessarily possess after
    receiving a workers’ compensation award or settlement—the
    award or settlement itself—beyond the reach of providers.
    Moreover, ensuring that providers are paid helps guarantee
    that employees receive care in the first place—surely a goal of
    the workers’ compensation regime. Applying the exemption
    in section 21 to the claims of care providers creates tension
    with the rest of the Act. It’s at least possible that Hernandez’s
    interpretation generates the “absurdity, inconvenience, or in-
    justice” that Illinois law seeks to avoid. Sylvester, 
    756 N.E.2d at 827
    .
    On the other hand, Hernandez is correct that the plain text
    of the amended Act doesn’t contain specific language of an
    exception to section 21. If the drafters wanted to place work-
    ers’ compensation settlements within the reach of these cred-
    itors, they could have altered section 21 or explained that
    section 8.2(e-20) enables providers to reach those assets.
    Reading these amendments to create an implicit exception to
    section 21 is not a lightly taken step. In re Michael D., 
    69 N.E.3d 822
    , 825 (Ill. 2015) (“It is never proper to depart from plain
    language by reading into a statute exceptions, limitations, or
    conditions [that] conflict with the clearly expressed legislative
    intent.”). The Act never discusses which assets are available
    to healthcare providers seeking to vindicate their collection
    rights. So while the purpose of the amendments may have
    been to protect care providers, it’s not obvious that the Gen-
    eral Assembly effectuated that purpose by exposing a
    12                                                            No. 18-1789
    heretofore-exempt asset. And while Hernandez’s interpreta-
    tion might hinder the Act’s effectiveness, it wouldn’t make
    any provision “meaningless or void,” triggering the canon
    against surplusage. Sylvester, 
    756 N.E.2d at 827
    .
    Without guidance from the Illinois Supreme Court, we de-
    cline to hold, as the district court did, that section 21 no longer
    blocks this class of creditors. That’s one reasonable interpre-
    tation of the amended Act, but it’s also possible that the Gen-
    eral Assembly’s silence on the matter means the workers’
    compensation exemption remains intact.
    In her appellate brief, Hernandez moves to certify this
    question to the Illinois Supreme Court.1 The healthcare pro-
    viders join her motion. We may certify a question if “the rules
    of the highest court of a state provide for certification to that
    court.” 7TH CIR. R. 52(a). The Illinois Supreme Court permits
    certification provided the question is one of state law, “deter-
    minative of the said cause,” and unanswered by “controlling
    precedents.” ILL. S. CT. R. 20(a).
    In exercising our discretion to certify a question, “the most
    important consideration is whether we find ourselves genu-
    inely uncertain about a question of state law that is key to a
    correct disposition of the case.” Lyon Fin. Servs., Inc. v. Ill. Pa-
    per & Copier Co., 
    732 F.3d 755
    , 766 (7th Cir. 2013). For the rea-
    sons discussed above, we have “serious doubt[s] about how
    [the] state’s highest court would resolve” this question of stat-
    utory interpretation. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Pate, 
    275 F.3d 666
    , 672 (7th Cir. 2001) (quotation marks omitted).
    1A party is permitted to move for certification in his brief without filing a
    separate motion. 7TH CIR. R. 52(a) (“A motion for certification shall be in-
    cluded in the moving party’s brief.”).
    No. 18-1789                                                   13
    Neither the Illinois Supreme Court nor the state appellate
    court has addressed the interplay between section 21 and the
    2005 amendments to the Act. Lyon, 732 F.3d at 766 (explaining
    that certification is warranted “where the state supreme court
    has yet to have an opportunity to illuminate a clear path on
    the issue”). And the answer to that question determines the
    outcome in Hernandez’s case—a requirement for certification
    under our caselaw and the Illinois Supreme Court’s rule.
    Zahn, 815 F.3d at 1086.
    There is an added layer of uncertainty here because the Il-
    linois Supreme Court hasn’t answered a key preliminary
    question: whether section 21 creates an exemption in the first
    place. To be sure, a federal bankruptcy court has construed
    section 21 to do so, see In re McClure, 
    175 B.R. at 24
    , and other
    bankruptcy courts have followed suit. But that’s not disposi-
    tive. Without an authoritative interpretation of section 21
    from the state courts, our evaluation of the interaction be-
    tween that section and later enactments is yet more uncertain.
    Our decision to certify also considers whether “the case
    concerns a matter of vital public concern” or is an “issue likely
    [to] recur in other cases.” Zahn, 815 F.3d at 1085 (quotation
    marks omitted). Of course, Hernandez won’t be the last bank-
    ruptcy debtor with unpaid medical bills and a workers’ com-
    pensation settlement. In many low-asset bankruptcies, access
    to the proceeds of a workers’ compensation claim will deter-
    mine whether healthcare providers receive compensation at
    all. Whether the Act permits providers to reach that asset im-
    plicates the state’s ability to administer a fair and efficient
    workers’ compensation regime.
    We respectfully ask the Illinois Supreme Court, in its dis-
    cretion, to answer the following certified question:
    14                                                No. 18-1789
    After the 2005 amendments to 820 ILL. COMP.
    STAT. 305/8 and the enactment of 305/8.2, does
    section 21 of the Illinois Workers’ Compensa-
    tion Act exempt the proceeds of a workers’ com-
    pensation settlement from the claims of
    medical-care providers who treated the illness
    or injury associated with that settlement?
    Nothing in this certification should be read to limit the
    scope of the Illinois Supreme Court’s inquiry, and the justices
    are invited to reformulate the certified question. Further pro-
    ceedings in this court are stayed while this matter is under
    consideration by the Illinois Supreme Court.
    QUESTION CERTIFIED.