In Re: Dwyer, C., Appeal of: National Indemnity ( 2017 )


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  • J-A26033-16
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    IN RE: C. DWYER                          :      IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :            PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    :
    :
    :
    APPEAL OF: NATIONAL INDEMNITY            :
    COMPANY                                  :           No. 149 WDA 2016
    Appeal from the Order January 11, 2016
    in the Court of Common Pleas of Indiana County,
    Civil Division, No(s): 12296 CD 2015
    BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., RANSOM and MUSMANNO, JJ.
    MEMORANDUM BY MUSMANNO, J.:                     FILED JANUARY 27, 2017
    National Indemnity Company (“National”) appeals from the Order
    granting the Petition to Transfer Structured Settlement (“Petition to
    Transfer”) filed by DRB Capital, LLC (“DRB”),1 and Cameron Dwyer
    (“Dwyer”), in which Dwyer assigned his weekly payments to DRB at a
    discounted value. We reverse.
    Dwyer (d/o/b 12/27/68), while working as a security specialist for
    Academi LLC (“Academi”), in Afghanistan in 2012 and 2013, injured his
    back, requiring surgery. At the time of the injury, Allied World Assurance
    Company (“Allied”) was the workers’ compensation insurance carrier for
    Academi. Further, at the time of the injury, Dwyer’s average weekly salary
    was $2,103.00. Dwyer filed a claim for benefits due to his injuries under the
    1
    DRB is a factoring company, which typically buys future structured-
    settlement payments in exchange for discounted lump-sum payments.
    J-A26033-16
    Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (“LHWCA”).2                 To avoid
    litigation, the parties negotiated a Section 8(i) Settlement Agreement
    (“Settlement Agreement”) wherein Dwyer would receive a lump sum of
    $134,000.00; a weekly payment of $787.00 for 520 weeks (totalling
    $390,000.00); and $26,000.00 in a lump sum for future medical benefits.
    Pursuant to the terms of the Settlement Agreement, Allied entered into a
    two-party Reinsurance Agreement (“Reinsurance Agreement”) with National
    wherein Allied ceded its responsibilities for the weekly payments to National.
    On November 4, 2014, the United States Department of Labor (“DOL”)
    approved the settlement.3
    On November 16, 2015, Dwyer and DRB filed the Petition to Transfer
    pursuant   to    an   Absolute    Sale    and     Security   Agreement    (“Security
    Agreement”) wherein Dwyer would assign his weekly payments to DRB in
    exchange for a lump sum of $203,754.27.              National filed a Response in
    Opposition,     arguing   that   the   Security   Agreement    violated   the   anti-
    2
    
    33 U.S.C.A. § 901
     et seq. “The LHWCA was enacted by Congress to
    provide workers’ compensation benefits to persons injured in the course of
    maritime employment.” Uveges v. Uveges, 
    103 A.3d 825
    , 828 (Pa. Super.
    2014) (citation omitted).
    3
    The LHWCA requires that all settlements be approved. See 
    33 U.S.C.A. § 908
    (i) (stating that “[w]henever the parties to any claim for compensation
    under this chapter, including survivors benefits, agree to a settlement, the
    deputy commissioner or administrative law judge shall approve the
    settlement within thirty days ….”).
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    assignment provision of the LHWCA4 and the Pennsylvania Structured
    Settlement Protection Act (“SSPA”).5 The trial court granted the Petition to
    Transfer.
    National   filed   a   timely   Notice   of   Appeal   and   a   court-ordered
    Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 1925(b) Concise Statement.
    On appeal, National raises the following questions for our review:
    A. Did the trial court err as a matter of law and abuse its
    discretion in concluding that the underlying payments due to
    [Dwyer] were the result of an annuity agreement, contrary to
    the evidence that the underlying payments were the result of
    [the] [R]einsurance [A]greement, which error contributed to
    the court’s failure to abide by the clear language of the
    applicable statutes?
    B. Did the trial court err as a matter of law and abuse its
    discretion in approving [Dwyer and DRB’s] requested transfer
    of [Dwyer’s] structured settlement payment rights where that
    transfer contravenes federal law ― in particular, the non-
    assignment provisions of the [LHWCA]?
    C. Did the trial court err as a matter of law and abuse its
    discretion in approving [Dwyer and DRB’s] requested transfer
    4
    The anti-assignment provision of the LHWCA states the following:
    No assignment, release, or commutation of compensation or
    benefits due or payable under this chapter, except as provided
    by this chapter, shall be valid, and such compensation and
    benefits shall be exempt from all claims of creditors and from
    levy, execution, and attachment or other remedy for recovery or
    collection of a debt, which exemption may not be waived.
    
    33 U.S.C.A. § 916
    .
    5
    40 P.S. § 4001 et seq. The SSPA “is designed to protect beneficiaries of
    structured settlements from being taken advantage of by others.” In re
    Benninger, 
    357 B.R. 337
    , 351 (Bankr. W.D. Pa. 2006).
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    of [Dwyer’s] structured settlement payment rights where that
    transfer contravenes [SSPA]?
    D. Did the trial court err and abuse its discretion in entering final
    [O]rders[,] which expose [National] to duplicative payment
    obligations to both [Dwyer] and [DRB] simultaneously?
    Brief for Appellant at 7 (issues renumbered, capitalization omitted).
    In its first claim, National contends that the trial court erred in
    concluding that the weekly payments were an annuity issued by Columbia
    Insurance Company (“Columbia”). Id. at 30-31. National argues that the
    weekly payments are clearly the product of the Reinsurance Agreement. Id.
    at 31-32.
    DRB concurs with National’s contention and states that the trial court
    erred in finding that the weekly payments were the result of an annuity
    issued by Columbia. Brief for Appellee at 13-15. DRB does not dispute that
    National has a continuing obligation to make weekly payments to Dwyer
    because of the structured settlement.     Id. at 14-15. DRB claims that the
    error was harmless, as it would not affect the approval of the transfer. Id.
    at 13-14. DRB further asserts that under the SSPA, a transfer of rights is
    applicable from either a structured settlement obligor or an annuity issuer.
    Id. at 14.
    Here, the parties agree that the trial court erred in finding the weekly
    payment was an annuity. However, this error does not result in a reversal
    of the trial court’s Order granting the Petition to Transfer because we must
    determine if the transfer of the weekly payments, whether an annuity or a
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    structured settlement, was proper under the LHWCA and SSPA. Thus, while
    the trial court clearly erred in stating that the weekly payments were the
    result of an annuity, we will address National’s remaining claims.
    In its second claim, National contends that the trial court erred as a
    matter of law in concluding that the anti-assignment provision of the LHWCA
    was not applicable. Brief for Appellant at 16, 26. National argues that the
    plain language of Section 916 of the LHWCA states that “no assignment … of
    compensation or benefits due or payable under this Act … shall be valid.”
    Id. at 17 (quoting 
    33 U.S.C.A. § 916
    ).      National claims that because the
    LHWCA governed the weekly payments, and Section 916 is unambiguous,
    the trial court should have found that the Petition to Transfer was barred by
    Section 916. Brief for Appellant at 19, 26. National further asserts that no
    exception applies to the facts of the instant case. 
    Id. at 17-18
    .
    National further argues that the trial court’s reliance upon In re
    Sloma, 
    43 F.3d 637
     (11th Cir. 1995), in conducting a statutory analysis of
    Section 916, was misplaced. Brief for Appellant at 19. National points out
    the Sloma Court’s conclusion that annuity payments were not “due or
    payable” under Section 916, as the payments were being made by a third
    party and the purpose of the anti-assignability provision ended when the
    annuity was purchased. 
    Id. at 21-23
    . National claims the Sloma Court’s
    reliance on the fact that payments made by a third party alters the
    assignability of benefits language in Section 916 is not supported by the
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    plain language of that statute. 
    Id. at 22-23
    . National argues that Sloma
    was a result-oriented decision and does not have persuasive value in this
    case.    
    Id. at 23-24
    ; see also 
    id. at 24-25
     (wherein National cites to an
    unpublished decision from Virginia where the court distinguished Sloma as
    pertaining only to bankruptcy issues, and found that structured settlement
    payments governed by the LHWCA could not be assigned under Section
    916); Reply Brief for Appellant at 14-19.
    “The construction of a federal statute is a matter of federal law.”
    Samuel-Bassett v. Kia Motors Am., Inc., 
    34 A.3d 1
    , 51 (Pa. 2011)
    (citation omitted). “Pursuant to federal rules of statutory construction, the
    courts consider the particular statutory language, as well as the design of
    the statute and its purposes in determining the meaning of a federal
    statute.”   
    Id.
       In analyzing a federal statute, “we must first determine
    whether the statutory text is plain and unambiguous.” Carcieri v. Salazar,
    
    555 U.S. 379
    , 387 (2009). Where the statute is clear, “[w]e must enforce
    plain and unambiguous statutory language according to its terms.” Hardt v.
    Reliance     Standard    Life   Ins.   Co.,   
    560 U.S. 242
    ,   251   (2010).
    “[I]nterpretations of a statute which would produce absurd results are to be
    avoided if alternative interpretations consistent with the legislative purpose
    are available.”   Griffin v. Oceanic Contractors, Inc., 
    458 U.S. 564
    , 575
    (1982).
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    Initially, we will review the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals
    interpretation of Section 916 in Sloma. While Pennsylvania courts may use
    federal authority as persuasive authority, “[f]ederal court decisions do not
    control the determinations of the Superior Court.”     Bochetto v. Piper
    Aircraft Co., 
    94 A.3d 1044
    , 1050 (Pa. Super. 2014) (citation omitted).
    Indeed, “[o]ur law clearly states that, absent a United States Supreme Court
    pronouncement, the decisions of federal courts are not binding on
    Pennsylvania state courts, even when a federal question is involved.”   
    Id.
    (citation omitted).
    In Sloma, Lawrence Sloma (“Sloma”) was injured in a work-related
    accident, and filed a claim for damages pursuant to the LHWCA.        In re
    Sloma, 43 F.3d at 638.       Sloma’s employer and its insurance carrier
    negotiated a settlement under which the insurance carrier paid Sloma
    $10,000 in cash, and purchased an annuity from which Sloma was to receive
    $500 per month for twenty years, and then lump sum payments in certain
    specified years, for a total of $180,000. Id. Thereafter, Sloma obtained an
    $85,000 loan to acquire and operate a business and used his annuity
    payments as collateral to secure the loan. Id. The bank initially received
    the monthly payments until Sloma’s business failed, at which point Sloma
    instructed the annuity company to send all future payments to him
    personally and not the bank. Id. at 639. After the bank filed suit against
    Sloma, judgment was entered in favor of the bank in the amount due under
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    the note.     Id.   Thereafter, Sloma filed for bankruptcy, asserting an
    exemption as to the payments due from the annuity company.          Id.   The
    bankruptcy court and federal district court found that the LHWCA prohibited
    the assignment of the annuity to the bank. Id.
    On appeal, a divided Eleventh Circuit studied the language of Section
    916, specifically “due or payable under this chapter,” and determined that
    Sloma received the benefits of $180,000 under the LHWCA through the
    purchase of the annuity and $10,000 in cash. Id. at 640. The Court stated
    that “[t]he payments received by Sloma under the annuity contract were not
    due and payable under the Act; they were payments made to him by a third
    party[.]” Id.; see also id. (quoting McIntosh v. Aubrey, 
    185 U.S. 122
    ,
    125 (1902), and applying the reasoning from that case, involving a different
    statute, and concluding that an anti-assignment exemption protects the
    funds only while in transmission to the annuitant, and once the money has
    been paid to him, it has “inured wholly to his benefit” and could be seized).
    The Court concluded that “[t]he purpose of the anti-assignability provisions
    of the [LHWCA] to benefit an injured employee was served and ended once
    the amount of the award of $180,000.00 was paid to Sloma by the payment
    of $10,000.00 and the purchase, [o]n his behalf, of an annuity for
    $170,000.00.”   In re Sloma, 43 F.3d at 640.      Thus, the Court concluded
    -8-
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    that Sloma’s assignment of the annuity payments to the bank was valid, and
    that Sloma had no right to redirect the payments to himself. Id.6
    The Sloma Court interpreted the phrase “due or payable under this
    chapter” in Section 916 to allow a claimant to assign an already purchased
    annuity, as the claim under the LHWCA was finally resolved, and the
    payments were made pursuant to a contract.          Thus, we must resolve
    whether the plain language of Section 916 prohibits the assignment of
    benefits where the employer/insurer entered into a re-insurance agreement
    with another insurer to pay the structured settlement payments. In other
    words, a determination must be made as to whether Dwyer’s claim under
    the LHWCA was resolved when the Reinsurance Agreement was entered, and
    whether the settlement payouts are being made to him pursuant to a
    contract where he is the third party beneficiary.
    While the LHWCA does not define “due” or “payable,” we must
    construe the words according to their common and approved usage.       See
    Smith v. United States, 
    508 U.S. 223
    , 228 (1993) (noting that “[w]hen a
    word is not defined by statute, we normally construe it in accord with its
    6
    The dissent in Sloma stated that the assignment was invalid under Section
    916. In re Sloma, 43 F.3d at 641. The dissent stated that the majority’s
    interpretation of Section 916 would only prohibit the assignment of future
    payments under the LHWCA. Id. The dissent further argued that even
    under the majority’s narrow interpretation of Section 916, the fact that
    Sloma’s employer purchased an annuity for him did not satisfy the
    employer’s obligation, as it had not made full payment of the funds. Id. at
    641-42. Thus, the dissent stated that the installments of the annuity were
    in the process of being delivered, and was due or payable. Id. at 642.
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    ordinary or natural meaning.”); Zimmerman v. Harrisburg Fudd I, L.P.,
    
    984 A.2d 497
    , 501 (Pa. Super. 2009) (stating that “[a]bsent a definition,
    statutes are presumed to employ words in their popular and plain everyday
    sense, and popular meanings of such words must prevail.”).         “Due” is
    defined as “[o]wing or payable.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 538 (8th ed. 2004).
    “Payable is defined as “([o]f a sum of money or negotiable instrument) that
    is being paid.”   Id. at 1165.     Accordingly, the LHWCA prohibits the
    assignment of any compensation or benefits owed or being paid pursuant to
    a claim under the LHWCA.      See 
    33 U.S.C.A. § 916
     (stating that “[n]o
    assignment, release, or commutation of compensation or benefits due or
    payable under this chapter, except as provided by this chapter … shall be
    valid….”).   Section 916 places no limitation on the type or method of
    compensation, whether by an annuity or structured settlement payment,
    that cannot be assigned. Moreover, the plain language of Section 916 does
    not suggest that the anti-assignment clause only applies to future payments.
    See Bochetto, 
    94 A.3d at 1050
    . In fact, the plain language of Section 916
    applies to any benefits or compensation, either being paid or owed in the
    future.
    In this case, Dwyer entered into the Settlement Agreement with his
    employer, Academi, and its workers’ compensation insurance carrier, Allied,
    arising out of his claim under the LHWCA.      See Settlement Agreement,
    10/14/14, at 1 (stating that Dwyer, Academi, and Allied “have reached an
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    agreement for [s]ettlement of [Dwyer’s] entire claim under the [LHWCA.]”);
    see also 
    33 U.S.C.A. § 904
     (imposing liability upon employer to pay
    compensation for claims under the LHWCA); 
    id.
     § 935 (wherein the LHWCA
    extends liability to the employer’s insurance carrier).    As part of the
    Settlement Agreement, Allied was directed to enter into a reinsurance
    agreement, under which Dwyer would be paid $787.00 per week for 520
    weeks.   See Settlement Agreement, 10/14/14, at 5 (stating that “[u]pon
    approval of his [s]ettlement, the reinsurance agreement will pay, and
    [Dwyer] shall receive, SEVEN HUNDRED EIGHTY SEVEN DOLLARS and
    00/100 ($787.00) per week, beginning December 1, 2014[,] for 520
    weeks.”); see also id. (noting that the “reinsurance agreement is allocated
    for past and future compensation benefits.”).     Allied entered into the
    Reinsurance Agreement with National, which required National to pay the
    structured settlement weekly payments as set forth in the Settlement
    Agreement.    See Reinsurance Agreement, 10/16/14, at 1 (unnumbered)
    (noting that the agreement was based upon the Settlement Agreement and
    identifying the various parties to the Settlement Agreement); id. at 6
    (unnumbered) (stating that the schedule of payments commences on
    December 1, 2014, and that “the sum of seven hundred eighty seven dollars
    ($787.00) shall be payable weekly until 11/11/2024 (520 [c]ertain [w]eekly
    [p]ayments).”). The DOL approved the Settlement Agreement, and required
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    the parties to “pay forthwith all amounts due in accord with the [S]ettlement
    [A]greement[.]” Order, 11/4/14, at 2.
    Here, the agreements clearly state that Dwyer is scheduled to receive
    weekly payments for a period of 520 weeks.      Thus, based upon the plain
    language of section 916, Dwyer’s receipt of the weekly structured settlement
    payments from National under the Reinsurance Agreement are “due or
    payable.”7
    Further, the structured settlement payments to Dwyer derive directly
    from the LHWCA. Here, the DOL approved the Settlement Agreement that
    Dwyer reached with Academi and Allied, resolving and settling his LHWCA
    claim. As part of the Settlement Agreement, the parties expressly agreed to
    enter into the Reinsurance Agreement as the method to pay Dwyer’s weekly
    payments. Contrary to DRB’s assertion that Dwyer’s claim under the LHWCA
    was finally disposed because his receipt of the structured settlement
    payments arose out the Reinsurance Agreement, not the LHWCA, the plain
    language of both the Settlement Agreement and the Reinsurance Agreement
    state that the payments derive from the settlement of claims arising out of
    the LHWCA.
    7
    Even if we agreed with the Sloma Court’s narrow interpretation of “due or
    payable” under Section 916, Dwyer would be receiving the weekly structured
    settlement payments in the future. See Settlement Agreement, 10/14/14,
    at 5 (stating that that the “reinsurance agreement is allocated for past and
    future compensation benefits.”) (emphasis added); see also Reinsurance
    Agreement, 10/16/14, at 2 (unnumbered) (noting that National’s obligation
    to make periodic payments “is an unfunded and unsecured obligation to pay
    money in the future.”).
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    Moreover, it would be absurd to allow a party, who expressly settled a
    LHWCA claim, to avoid the anti-assignment clause of the LHWCA merely by
    engaging in the common practice of purchasing an annuity or having a
    separate insurance company pay the structured settlement payments. See,
    e.g., First Colony Life Ins. Co. v. Berube, 
    130 F.3d 827
    , 828 (8th Cir.
    1997); In re Sloma, 43 F.3d at 638; In re Benninger, 
    357 B.R. at 342
    ; In
    re Jacobs, 
    936 A.2d 1156
    , 1158 (Pa. Super. 2007); see also 40 P.S.
    § 4002 (defining “[s]tructured settlement obligor” as “the party that has the
    continuing obligation to provide periodic payments to the payee under a
    structured settlement agreement or a qualified assignment agreement.”).
    To utilize the DRB interpretation of Section 916 would effectively render the
    LHWCA inapplicable, as any form of reinsurance agreement or annuity would
    be considered a payment of the outstanding claim. Thus, based upon the
    Settlement and Reinsurance Agreements, Dwyer’s structured settlement
    payment rights are a “due or payable” award under the LHWCA, and cannot
    be assigned pursuant to Section 916. See 
    33 U.S.C.A. § 916
    . Accordingly,
    the Security Agreement is invalid.
    Additionally, because the assignment of Dwyer’s weekly payments
    contravened the LHWCA, the Security Agreement violated the SSPA. See 40
    P.S. § 4003(a)(1) (stating that “[n]o transfer of structured settlement
    payment rights shall be effective … unless the payee has filed a petition
    requesting such transfer and the petition has been granted by final order or
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    decree of a court of competent jurisdiction [and] [t]he transfer complies with
    the requirements of this act and will not contravene other applicable Federal
    or State statutes or regulations ….”).
    Here, the trial court improperly granted Dwyer’s Petition to Transfer.
    Thus, we reverse the trial court’s Order and direct National to continue to
    pay the weekly payments under the Reinsurance Agreement to Dwyer. 8
    Order reversed. Jurisdiction relinquished.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 1/27/2017
    8
    Based upon our disposition, we need not address National’s remaining
    claim on appeal.
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