Source: http://wcc.state.ct.us/crb/2001/4337crb.htm
Timestamp: 2015-01-27 05:46:02
Document Index: 225743422

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 31', '§ 31', '§ 31', '§ 31', '§ 31', '§ 31', '§ 31', '§ 55', '§ 31']

Fiorillo v. City of Bridgeport
CASE NO. 4337 CRB-4-01-1
The claimant was not represented at oral argument. Notice sent to Stephen B. Alderman, Esq., 201 Center Street, West Haven, CT 06516.
This Petition for Review from the December 28, 2000 Finding of the Commissioner acting for the Fourth District was heard July 20, 2001 before a Compensation Review Board panel consisting of the Commission Chairman John A. Mastropietro and Commissioners Ernie R. Walker and Stephen B. Delaney.
JOHN A. MASTROPIETRO, CHAIRMAN. The respondent Second Injury Fund has petitioned for review from the December 28, 2000 Finding Re: C.G.S. § 31-307a(c) of the Commissioner acting for the Fourth District. The Fund contends on appeal that the trier incorrectly ordered it to reimburse the respondent City of Bridgeport for all cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs) that it has paid to the claimant during her period of temporary total disability. We find no error, and affirm the trial commissioner’s decision.
The parties have stipulated to the following set of facts. The claimant sustained a compensable injury on January 13, 1995, and has been receiving total disability benefits from May 8, 1995 to the present. She was paid $11,797.95 in retroactive COLAs on June 2, 2000, which sum covered the time period from May 8, 1995 to May 7, 2000. The city has continued to pay temporary total disability benefits from May 8, 2000 to the present sans COLAs on a “without prejudice” basis. The city seeks reimbursement from the Fund for both the retroactively-paid COLAs and for the portion of the weekly temporary total disability payment that represents future COLAs payable. Based upon the language of § 31-307a(c), the trier granted the city’s request. The Fund has appealed that ruling.
Section 31-307a(c) reads as follows:
This statute was passed in 1997 via Public Act No. 97-205, and was designed to restore cost-of-living adjustments to totally disabled claimants who had been injured following Public Act 93-228’s statutory elimination of COLAs, which affected all injuries on or after July 1, 1993. Our focus here is on the reimbursement provision at the end of § 31-307a(c), which is the subject of the instant dispute.
The Fund argues that this language should be interpreted with an eye toward the legislature’s intent in passing Public Act No. 95-277 two years earlier. At that time, the Fund faced substantial unfunded claims for payment, which led the legislature to limit the future liability and exposure of the Second Injury Fund by prohibiting transfer of second injury claims based on injuries occurring after July 1, 1995. See Cece v. Felix Industries, Inc., 248 Conn. 457, 463-64 (1999); Masko v. Wallingford, 4076 CRB-8-99-7 (July 11, 2000). Because the payment of COLAs pursuant to § 31-307a(c) would also draw moneys from the Fund if reimbursement were allowed, the Fund contends that the statute should be read in a manner that is limited and specific, rather than capable of creating open-ended, indeterminate financial liability for the future. Thus, it asserts that it should only be required to reimburse employers for the COLAs due on benefits payable between July 1, 1993 and September 30, 1997.
If one’s exclusive focus were on the importance of curbing future Fund liability, it would be understandable for one to have a tendency to read “adjustments, including lump sum payments, payable under this subsection for compensable injuries occurring on or after July 1, 1993 and before October 1, 1997” as referring to adjustments paid between the listed dates rather than to injuries that have occurred between those dates. However, such an interpretation of the statute would be inappropriate. First, the phrase “for compensable injuries” and the word “occurring” would have to be ignored, contrary to the doctrine of statutory construction that presumes there is a purpose “behind every sentence, clause or phrase in a legislative enactment.” Biasetti v. Stamford, 250 Conn. 65, 81 (1999). Not only would those words be superfluous, as there are no adjustments payable under § 31-307a(c) for either non-compensable injuries or injuries occurring before July 1, 1993 or after October 1, 1997, but their only conceivable function would be to mislead the reader. The legislature could easily have referred to “adjustments payable under this subsection on or after July 1, 1993 and before October 1, 1997,” but it did not. The inclusion of the words “for compensable injuries occurring” thus supports the reading that the trial commissioner gave to the statute.
Second, in other instances where our legislature has made COLAs retroactively payable for workers’ compensation benefits arising from past injuries, it has always provided that such COLAs will be paid initially by the employer or insurer, who is then eligible for reimbursement by the Fund upon presentation of any vouchers and information that the Fund’s Treasurer should require. See, e.g., § 31-307a(b) (COLAs made payable for injuries occurring prior to October 1, 1969); § 31-306(a)(2)(B) (COLAs made payable for dependents receiving compensation for deaths occurring prior to October 1, 1977). In contrast, reimbursement provisions are not present in statutes that impose COLA obligations prospectively for future injury dates. The reason for this distinction is clear: our law prohibits the imposition of new substantive obligations on any person or corporation on a retrospective basis. Coley v. Camden Associates, Inc., 243 Conn. 311, 316 (1997); § 55-3 C.G.S. Translated into the workers’ compensation forum, where the “date of injury” rule applies, our law would allow the legislature to require employers to begin paying COLAs for future injuries, but would not allow the legislature to require those employers to pay COLAs to claimants whose injuries had already occurred unless making such payments did not amount to a substantive obligation. The legislature’s solution in such cases has been to impose an administrative duty on employers to begin paying COLAs retroactively, with a right to be reimbursed for any such sums by the Second Injury Fund. No substantive obligation is being imposed just as long as the employer continues to be entitled to reimbursement as long as benefits and their accompanying COLAs are being paid.
The interpretation of § 31-307a(c) proposed here by the Fund would violate that principle, as employers would have liability for COLAs payable after September 30, 1997 imposed upon them even though the law in effect at the time of injury did not provide for the payment of such COLAs. Such a result cannot be favored by this board, particularly where the plainest reading of the statute provides for perpetual reimbursement rights. Therefore, we hold that the trier correctly ruled that the Fund was required to reimburse the respondent employer for all COLAs paid to the claimant through May 7, 2000.
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