Janocha's Case ( 2018 )


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    16-P-1181                                             Appeals Court
    ROBERT JANOCHA'S CASE.
    No. 16-P-1181.
    Suffolk.       November 2, 2017. - May 2, 2018.
    Present:    Neyman, Henry, & Lemire, JJ.
    Insurance, Workers' compensation insurance, Self-insurer, Bond.
    Workers' Compensation Act, Reimbursement of insurer,
    Decision of Industrial Accident Reviewing Board.
    Department of Industrial Accidents. Statute, Construction.
    Words, "Uninsured."
    Appeal from a decision of the Industrial Accident Reviewing
    Board.
    Jonathan D. Hacker, of the District of Columbia (John J.
    Canniff, III, also present) for ACE American Insurance Company.
    Douglas S. Martland, Assistant Attorney General, for
    Workers' Compensation Trust Fund.
    Robert H. Barry, Jr., for the employee.
    Rachel J. Eisenhaure, for Self-Insurance Institute of
    America, Inc., amicus curiae, submitted a brief.
    LEMIRE, J.    This is an appeal by ACE American Insurance
    Company (ACE), from a decision of the reviewing board (board) of
    the Department of Industrial Accidents (department).      The board
    held that ACE, rather than the Workers' Compensation Trust Fund
    2
    (trust fund), was responsible for the continued payment of
    compensation benefits to Robert Janocha (employee) because G. L.
    c. 152, § 25A(2)(c), of the Workers' Compensation Act (act),
    G. L. c. 152, as amended, requires ACE as a reinsurer to pay
    benefits in the event of exhaustion of a self-insurer's surety
    bond.    We affirm.
    Factual and procedural background.     All parties agree that
    there are no material facts in dispute.     The employee worked for
    Malden Mills Industries, Inc. (employer), until the date of his
    workplace injury.     The employee's injury resulted in permanent
    and total incapacity for work, and the employee is entitled to
    benefits under the act.
    On the date of the employee's injury, the employer was an
    approved self-insurer pursuant to G. L. c. 152, § 25A(2).     In
    accordance with § 25A(2)(b), the employer also held a surety
    bond in the amount of $2.4 million1 with Safeco Insurance Company
    of America (Safeco or bond holder).     In addition, the employer
    maintained a reinsurance policy with ACE in accordance with
    § 25A(2)(c).2   The reinsurance policy between the employer and
    1 In 2006, the department approved the employer's
    application to reduce the bond amount from $4.3 million to $2.4
    million. The process by which the bond became exhausted is not
    material to our decision.
    2 Although referred to as an "excess policy" in ACE's brief,
    no party disputes that the policy at issue is a reinsurance
    contract as required by G. L. c. 152, § 25A(2)(c).
    3
    ACE contained a retention provision in the amount of $400,000.3
    All terms of the bond and the reinsurance policy were approved
    by the department in accordance with § 25A(2) during initial
    approval and after every yearly review.
    From the employee's date of injury until the employer's
    bankruptcy in 2007, the employer as the self-insurer issued
    direct benefit payments to the employee.   Following the
    employer's insolvency, the bond holder issued direct benefit
    payments to the employee.   In 2012, the $2.4 million bond became
    exhausted and payments to the employee ceased.4   On the date of
    exhaustion, and on the date of oral argument, the employee had
    not reached the $400,000 retention floor contained within the
    reinsurance contract.
    3 The retention provision requires ACE to indemnify the
    employer for covered losses once the retention floor of $400,000
    per qualifying accident is reached. The plain language of G. L.
    c. 152, § 25A(4)(e), precludes interpreting the retention
    provision as a deductible, and the employee's argument to the
    contrary is unavailing.
    4 The employee is not entitled to any recovery under the
    Massachusetts Insurers Insolvency Fund because a self-insurer is
    not an insurer under the definition provided by G. L. c. 175D,
    § 1. See Ulwick v. Massachusetts Insurers Insolvency Fund, 
    418 Mass. 486
    , 490 (1994). See also Massachusetts Care Self-Ins.
    Group, Inc. v. Massachusetts Insurers Insolvency Fund, 
    458 Mass. 268
    , 272 (2010).
    4
    Upon the exhaustion of the bond, the employee filed a claim
    with the department against ACE for resumption of benefits.5
    After a full evidentiary hearing, the administrative judge ruled
    that once the employer's bond was exhausted, the employer became
    "uninsured in violation of [the statute]" under the provisions
    of G. L. c. 152, § 65(2)(e), as amended by St. 1991, c. 398,
    § 85.    The administrative judge concluded that this
    interpretation of the act made the trust fund the "responsible
    party for providing workers' compensation benefits" and that ACE
    was not required to make payments until the employee's benefits
    reached the $400,000 retention amount.    The trust fund appealed
    to the board.
    The board reversed the administrative judge, interpreting
    § 65(2)(e) to apply only where an employer is uninsured "on the
    date . . . of injury."    Accordingly, the board ordered ACE to
    make direct payments to the employee upon the exhaustion of the
    bond, and to reimburse the trust fund for any payments it had
    made that were not covered by reimbursement from Safeco.    The
    board also ruled that § 25A(2)(c) required ACE to pay the
    employee's benefits because in the event of bond exhaustion, the
    reinsurer must act as a "further guarantee of a self-insurer's
    5 General Laws c. 152, § 11C, provides the department with
    jurisdictional authority to interpret questions of law related
    to the act.
    5
    ability to pay the [employee's] benefits" (emphasis added).6
    Relying on Insurance Co. of the State of Pa. v. Great Northern
    Ins. Co., 
    473 Mass. 745
    , 750 (2016) (Great Northern), the board
    also voided the $400,000 retention provision as a matter of law
    because it is in direct conflict with ACE's "statutory
    obligation to assure that benefits are received by the
    employee."   ACE appealed the board's decision to this court
    pursuant to G. L. c. 152, § 12(2).7
    Standard of review.    We review the board's decision in
    accordance with the standards set forth in G. L. c. 30A,
    § 14(7)(a)-(d), (f), and (g).    See Scheffler's Case, 
    419 Mass. 251
    , 257-258 (1994).    "The board, as the agency charged with
    administering the workers' compensation law, is entitled to
    substantial deference in its reasonable interpretation of the
    statute."    Sikorski's Case, 
    455 Mass. 477
    , 480 (2009).   However,
    this principle is one of deference, not abdication, and
    6 General Laws c. 152, § 25A(2)(c), as appearing in St.
    1949, c. 441, § 4, provides in full:
    "As a further guarantee of a self-insurer's ability to pay
    the benefits provided for by this chapter to injured
    employees, every self-insurer shall make arrangements
    satisfactory to the department, by reinsurance, to protect
    it from extraordinary losses or losses caused by one
    disaster."
    7 Safeco was a party to the proceedings before the
    administrative judge and the board. During the pendency of the
    instant appeal, the parties stipulated to dismissal with
    prejudice as to Safeco pursuant to Mass.R.A.P. 29(b), as
    amended, 
    378 Mass. 943
    (1979).
    6
    "ultimately the duty of statutory interpretation is for the
    courts."    Carpenter's Case, 
    456 Mass. 436
    , 439 (2010) (quotation
    omitted).
    Discussion.      1.   Trust fund's liability.   General Laws
    c. 152, § 65, establishes the trust fund as a State administered
    fund that compensates injured employees and reimburses insurers
    for payment of benefits under statutorily defined circumstances.
    ACE contends that nothing in § 65(2)(e), or the act as a whole,
    supports the board's interpretation that "uninsured in violation
    of [the act]" means uninsured on the date of injury.      After an
    independent review of the text, structure, and purpose of the
    act, we agree with the board's interpretation of § 65(2)(e).
    "[A] statute must be interpreted according to the intent of
    the Legislature ascertained from all its words construed by the
    ordinary and approved usage of the language, considered in
    connection with the cause of its enactment, the mischief or
    imperfection to be remedied and the main object to be
    accomplished, to the end that the purpose of its framers may be
    effectuated."    Scheffler's 
    Case, 419 Mass. at 255
    , quoting from
    Board of Educ. v. Assessor of Worcester, 
    368 Mass. 511
    , 513
    (1975).     Additionally, the act must be analyzed "as a whole
    . . . so that the various portions taken together shall
    constitute a harmonious and consistent legislative enactment."
    7
    Spaniol's Case, 
    466 Mass. 102
    , 107 (2013), quoting from Price v.
    Railway Express Agency, Inc., 
    322 Mass. 476
    , 480 (1948).
    Section 65(2)(e) conditions payment of benefits by the
    trust fund to a qualifying employee whose employer is "uninsured
    in violation of this chapter."   While the act contains an
    extensive list of definitions, nothing in the chapter expressly
    defines the word "uninsured," and § 65(2)(e) does not
    specifically identify the applicable operative date of the
    employer's uninsured status.   Despite the absence of a
    definition connecting the employer's uninsured status to the
    date of the employee's injury, viewing the statute as a whole,
    it is clear that the date of injury is essential to determining
    who is eligible to receive benefits as well as who is obligated
    to pay them.   Because § 65(2) is the sole source of the trust
    fund's obligation to pay workers' compensation benefits,
    examining the provisions that surround § 65(2)(e) provides
    clarity as to whether 'uninsured' implicitly means uninsured on
    the date of injury.   See People for the Ethical Treatment of
    Animals, Inc. v. Department of Agric. Resources, 
    477 Mass. 280
    ,
    287-288 (2017), quoting from Kenney v. Building Commr. of
    Melrose, 
    315 Mass. 291
    , 295 (1943) ("A general term in a statute
    or ordinance takes meaning from the setting in which it is
    employed").
    8
    We begin with § 65(2)(a)-(b).    Section 65(2)(a) refers to
    § 34B and § 65(2)(b) refers to § 35C.    This court has concluded
    that both of those cross-referenced sections expressly look to
    the date of workplace injury when considering the insurer or
    self-insurer's right to reimbursement from the trust fund for
    benefits paid to employees under these provisions.   See, e.g.,
    Beatty's Case, 
    84 Mass. App. Ct. 565
    , 568 (2013)
    ("Section 34B[c] goes on to narrow the right to reimbursement by
    the date of injury").
    The date of injury is also implicitly important for other
    cross-referenced provisions in § 65(2).   Section 65(2)(c), (f),
    and (g), by means of § 37, § 26, and § 37A, respectively,
    authorizes certain reimbursements from the trust fund to the
    insurer or self-insurer for payments to an employee who has
    suffered a personal injury "arising out of and in the course of
    his employment."   G. L. c. 152, § 26.   A plain and ordinary
    reading of the "arising out of" condition, which is contained in
    § 26, § 37, and § 37A, imparts a meaning that the date of the
    employee's injury is an essential factor to be considered in
    determining reimbursements from the trust fund to the insurer or
    self-insurer.   See Pearson's Case, 
    341 Mass. 576
    , 576-577 (1960)
    (interpreting "arising out of" necessarily requires examining
    the employee's "place of employment at the time of . . .
    injury").   A contrary interpretation of "arising out of" leads
    9
    to the absurd result that an employee injured outside the course
    of employment on the date of injury would still be entitled to
    benefits under the act.    See Caswell's Case, 
    305 Mass. 500
    , 502-
    503 (1940).
    Here, the relevant surrounding provisions all strongly
    suggest imparting the temporal restriction into § 65(2)(e).
    Thus, the board's interpretation that "uninsured in violation of
    [the statute]" means uninsured on the "date of . . . injury" is
    not reading additional language into the text but, instead,
    constitutes a reasonable interpretation of § 65(2)(e) consistent
    with § 65(2) and the act as a whole.    See Franklin Office Park
    Realty Corp. v. Commissioner of the Dept. of Envtl. Protection,
    
    466 Mass. 454
    , 462 (2013) ("Words grouped together in a statute
    must be read in harmony").
    Even aside from the express language of the statute, the
    system of workers' compensation has long been interpreted to
    rest on the principle that "[a]n insurer is not responsible
    unless the period covered by its policy includes the time of the
    injury."    Crowley's Case, 
    287 Mass. 367
    , 371 (1934) (quotation
    omitted).   See Brophy's Case, 
    327 Mass. 557
    , 559 (1951) ("One of
    the most vital factors in determining to whom and by whom
    compensation is to be paid under the statute is the date on
    10
    which the injury occurs").8   While an explicit legislative
    mandate may have been preferred, the structure, history, and
    purpose of § 65(2)(e) clearly show that "uninsured" status must
    be determined on the date of injury.   To separate "uninsured"
    from the date of injury is inconsistent with the purpose of the
    statute.   The board's interpretation of G. L. c. 152,
    § 65(2)(e), which reads "date of injury" as an implied term of
    § 65(2)(e), is necessary to assure that the distribution of
    benefits from the trust fund will be in harmony with the
    provisions of § 65(2) and, thus, is entitled to deference.9     See
    generally Molly A. v. Commissioner of the Dept. of Mental
    Retardation, 
    69 Mass. App. Ct. 267
    , 280 (2007).   Here, it is
    8 We acknowledge that date of injury is only "[o]ne of the
    most vital factors in determining to whom and by whom
    compensation is to be paid under the statute." Brophy's 
    Case, 327 Mass. at 559
    . In the instant case, no other factor is
    relevant to our interpretation of § 65(2)(e).
    9 We acknowledge the amicus brief of the Self-Insurance
    Institute of America, Inc., and its argument that the board's
    interpretation may result in an increase in premiums charged for
    excess workers' compensation insurance. However, the "pay-as-
    you-go" nature of the act, which funds the trust fund through
    annual assessments based on anticipated payments, suggests that
    the burden on self-insurers in the Commonwealth will be minimal.
    See Markos-Waiswilos v. Salem Hosp., 
    67 Mass. App. Ct. 904
    , 905-
    906 (2006). Interpreting "uninsured" to mean "uninsured at date
    of injury" avoids decades-old claims against the trust fund that
    could require the trust fund to obtain supplemental funding from
    employers. Thus, all participating employers may benefit under
    this reading because they avoid increased payments into the
    trust fund as a result of retroactive claims that become ripe
    only when a bond is exhausted. See Beatty's Case, 84 Mass. App.
    Ct. at 571-572.
    11
    undisputed that the employer qualified as a self-insurer on the
    date of the employee's injury, and therefore was not uninsured
    on that date, and in fact paid benefits until it went bankrupt
    some two years later.     Therefore, the trust fund has no
    obligation under § 65(2)(e) to pay compensation benefits to the
    employee.
    2.      ACE's liability.   Having determined that the trust fund
    is not liable to pay the employee's benefits, we now examine
    ACE's statutory obligation.     "In order to promote the health,
    safety and welfare of employees," § 25A of the act, inserted by
    St. 1943, c. 529, § 7, requires every employer operating within
    the jurisdiction of Massachusetts to obtain workers'
    compensation insurance in one of two ways:      employers may either
    purchase insurance, pursuant to § 25A(1), or, as here, they may
    apply to become self-insurers who pay benefits to injured
    employees directly, pursuant to § 25A(2).
    In order to receive or maintain licensure as a self-
    insurer, the department requires the employer to keep either a
    bond or surety running to the Commonwealth for the benefit and
    security of the employees in accordance with § 25A(2)(a) or (b).
    In addition, § 25A(2)(c) requires the employer acting as a self-
    insurer to purchase reinsurance in such amount and form as the
    department may approve.     Section 25A(2)(c), which we have set
    12
    out in the margin (see note 
    6, supra
    ), forms the background for
    the reinsurance policy between the employee and ACE.
    Section 25A, like every part of the act, must be given an
    interpretation that protects the rights of employees because the
    act's exclusivity provision often makes the act the only avenue
    for financial compensation for the impairment of an injured
    worker's earning capacity.   See Walker's Case, 
    443 Mass. 157
    ,
    161 (2004).   The act as a whole "is a remedial statute and
    should be given a broad interpretation, viewed in light of its
    purpose and to 'promote the accomplishment of its beneficent
    design.'"   Neff v. Commissioner of the Dept. of Industrial
    Accs., 
    421 Mass. 70
    , 73 (1995), quoting from Young v. Duncan,
    
    218 Mass. 346
    , 349 (1914).   ACE argues that despite the
    beneficent design of the act as a whole, the reinsurance
    requirement of § 25A(2)(c) was not intended as a protection for
    the injured employee in the event of the self-insurer's
    inability to continue paying benefits but, instead, as a
    protection for the employer from "extraordinary losses or losses
    caused by one disaster."   See note 
    6, supra
    .   We disagree.
    The language of § 25A(2)(c) specifically provides that
    reinsurance shall further guarantee the self-insured's ability
    to pay benefits to injured employees.   To the extent the statute
    is concerned about a self-insurer incurring extraordinary
    losses, it is in the context of ensuring that a self-insured
    13
    will continue to be able to pay benefits to injured employees in
    the event of such losses.     A review of the legislative history
    of § 25A shows that any argument that the statute is concerned
    about the success of the self-insurer separate and apart from
    its ability to pay benefits to injured employees is specious.
    Section 25A was added to G. L. c. 152 in 1943 to require
    every employer to cover workplace injuries through insurance or
    self-insurance, replacing an elective system.     See St. 1943,
    c. 529, § 7.    See also New England Survey Sys., Inc. v.
    Department of Industrial Accs., 
    89 Mass. App. Ct. 631
    , 635
    (2016).    The 1943 legislation also created a reinsurance
    provision, G. L. c. 152, § 25A(2)(c), which applied to self-
    insurers in the discretion of the department.     See St. 1943,
    c. 529, § 7 ("As a further guarantee of a self-insurer's ability
    to pay the benefits provided for by this chapter to injured
    employees, the department may require that a self-insurer
    reinsure his compensation risk against catastrophe" [emphasis
    added]).
    Five years later, § 25A(2)(c) was amended to add what is
    now a second paragraph.     That amendment expressly extended the
    department's regulatory authority beyond solely the self-insurer
    to the reinsurer as well.     See St. 1948, c. 176.   The section
    was again amended in 1949 to add new language to the second
    paragraph.     The 1949 amendment requires reinsurance proceeds to
    14
    be used exclusively for the benefit of injured employees by
    precluding creditors from attaching the reinsurance proceeds,10
    and making the use of "any money received by a self-insurer . .
    . subject to the approval of the [department]."    St. 1949, c.
    441, § 4.
    These amendments demonstrate that the Legislature's purpose
    in fashioning the workers' compensation reinsurance provision
    was the protection of injured employees.    If the primary purpose
    of § 25A(2)(c) were to protect the employer rather than the
    employee, the Legislature would have permitted creditors to
    attach reinsurance proceeds like any other corporate asset
    rather than allow department regulation of reinsurers once an
    employer becomes insolvent.
    The 1949 amendment to § 25A(2)(c) additionally made
    reinsurance mandatory for self-insurers; previously, this had
    been left to the discretion of the department.    Making
    reinsurance mandatory, instead of merely at the discretion of
    the department, shows that the phrase "further guarantee of
    [the] ability to pay . . . benefits" in § 25A(2)(c) is
    10   The 1949 amendment provides, in pertinent part:
    "[N]o . . . money [received by a self-insurer under the
    reinsurance provision] shall be assignable or subject to
    attachment or be liable in any way for the debt of the
    self-insurer unless incurred under this chapter."
    St. 1949, c. 441, § 4.
    15
    controlling because even self-insurers with a low risk of
    catastrophic injuries to their workers were required to obtain
    reinsurance.
    In sum, the amendments to § 25A(2)(c), which has remained
    largely unchanged since 1949, demonstrate a clear legislative
    intent to continually strengthen the reinsurance requirement not
    for the employer's protection from "extraordinary losses or
    losses caused by one disaster," but primarily to "further
    guarantee [payment of] benefits . . . to injured employees."
    Reading these amendments in light of the broad public
    policy to provide compensation for injured workers, we agree
    with the board's interpretation that the "further guarantee"
    clause of § 25A(2)(c) requires the reinsurer to pay benefits to
    employees in the event the self-insurer becomes insolvent and
    the bond becomes exhausted, avoiding an otherwise inevitable gap
    in coverage.   See New England Survey Sys., Inc., 89 Mass. App.
    Ct. at 635 ("The fundamental aim of public policy in the area of
    workers' compensation is to provide relief to injured workers
    and their families and remedy the deprivation of wages that
    results from their injuries").
    ACE contends that despite this statutory obligation, the
    insurance policy's retention provision precludes ACE's payment
    of benefits to the employee until the $400,000 amount is
    reached.   However, a party is unable to contract away its
    16
    statutory obligation, and we routinely void provisions that run
    contrary to the law.11   This is especially true in the instant
    context because "[w]orkers' compensation insurance is a creature
    of statute, and all workers' compensation insurance policies
    must be interpreted to comply with applicable statutes and
    regulations governing workers' compensation."   Great 
    Northern, 473 Mass. at 750
    .   See Frost v. David C. Wells Ins. Agency,
    Inc., 
    14 Mass. App. Ct. 305
    , 307 (1982).   Simply put, ACE
    entered into a reinsurance policy between itself and the
    employer with full knowledge that the act required ACE to
    "further guarantee" payment of compensation to the employee.
    Accordingly, the instant retention provision is null and void,
    and ACE must assume its obligation to pay benefits to the
    employee under § 25A(2)(c).
    Decision of the reviewing
    board affirmed.
    11Because of the unique nature of the act, other cases in
    which Massachusetts courts have refused to void insurance
    retention policies are inapplicable. Compare Great 
    Northern, 473 Mass. at 750
    -751 (nullifying policy provision in context of
    workers' compensation insurance) with Vickodil v. Lexington Ins.
    Co., 
    412 Mass. 132
    (1992) (motor vehicle liability insurance);
    Massachusetts Bay Transp. Authy. v. Allianz Ins. Co., 
    413 Mass. 473
    , 479-480 (1992) (liability insurance); and Allmerica
    Financial Corp. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's, London, 
    449 Mass. 621
    , 623 (2007) (professional services liability
    insurance).