The January 2019 issue of the National Association of
Workers' Compensation Judiciary's Lex and Verum (Archive no longer maintained, issue in possession of author) includes
an intriguing article regarding attorney fees: How Many Slices are in a Twelve-Inch Pie? The author is one of the
Virginia Worker's Compensation Commission members, and former chair, Wesley
Marshall. The theme of the article is the increasingly ubiquitous Medicare set aside and the question of obtention of benefits.
The article provides an
overview of the advent of Medicare's involvement in the world of workers'
compensation, the delineation of Medicare as a "secondary payer" (as
in anyone else involved should be the “primary payer”), and the "duty to protect Medicare's
interests when resolving" cases. Though this is a workers’ compensation (WC)
focus, the same “Medicare interests” appear in a variety of other examples
involving some entity with “primary” responsibility for medical care.
Commissioner Marshall discusses two conflicting California
decisions. One concluded the part of the WC settlement proceeds apportioned to
the Medicare Set Aside (MSA) should not be included in the attorney fee
calculation. The California Board reasoned that "the claimant did not
necessarily place herself in a more advantageous position by settling her
medical award." In other words, as America put it in Tin Man in 1974:
"Oz never did give nothing to the Tin Man That he didn't, didn't already
have." That is, perhaps it is valid to question: "What did the
injured worker gain?"
He contrasts that conclusion to a later decision from the
same California Appeals Board. It concluded the MSA funds were a benefit and
should be included in the "obtained benefits" to calculate the attorney
fee. The Board there cited that treatment obtained with the funds in the MSA would
be more readily usable at the patient/worker's discretion. The constraints of
the state workers' compensation system were eliminated by the settlement of the
case, and funding of the MSA. Also, the Board noted that should the worker pass
away, medical benefits under the state workers' compensation law would cease.
However, in such an event, the remainder in an MSA account "would be
payable to the injured workers' estate," at least in some circumstances.
Other state decisions are discussed by the Commissioner, but these two serve as
examples.
Commissioner Marshall concludes that "there is no
federal guidance on whether an attorney's fee for settlement" may or
should include the MSA funds in the calculation. He notes that it might be equitable
to include these amounts in order to avoid "giving Medicare a 'free ride'
either directly or indirectly." He also contends that declining to include
these amounts in the calculation could prove a disincentive to the
representation of workers whose cases would likely involve an MSA. In this
regard, he sees an unintended consequence of such exclusion.
He concedes that some might conclude that the inclusion of that
figure in the calculation, a figure that can only be used to pay specific medical
costs, might result in "most or even all" of the non-MSA settlement
funds (the indemnity portion of the settlement) being depleted through
attorney’s fees. Commissioner Marshall suggests that some formula might be
contrived as a compromise regarding fees for the MSA portion of a settlement,
but cautions that such a formula would have to "balance carefully the need
for attorneys in the system and for them to be compensated fairly against the
ultimate conclusion that a settlement is in an injured worker’s best
interest."
This discussion was interesting for several reasons. First,
from the "Tin Man" argument perspective, perhaps every settlement in
workers' compensation is similar only to what the injured worker "has
coming." That is, is an allocated amount for future medical care really
that different from an allocated amount for any other benefit category? Often,
indemnity benefits in workers' compensation are formulaic. Absent a settlement,
those benefits are generally paid periodically. They are calculated based upon various
statutory criteria such as: loss of function or ability, impairment rating, or
lost wages. Many formulae for such income benefits have been engaged across the
country over the last hundred years. But what they all have in common is that
they are largely mathematical.
Mathematical that is in the sense that those who pay
benefits (employers and their insurance carriers) can reasonably calculate the
probable volume of benefits that will be due to any particular injured worker.
Whether with assumptions regarding impairment or economic loss or with actual
figures and facts, the payers may reach educated conclusions about the
probabilities of the exposure cost. Generally, armed with the knowledge of that
probable expense, the employer or carrier offers settlement by payment of something
less to the injured worker. From the payer's perspective, perhaps that savings
is the motivation for settlement in the first instance?
Certainly, there is also a perceived benefit in claims closure
generally; it means one less file to monitor, to reserve, to manage. Certainly,
the closure of a claim reduces the payer’s transaction costs. For each open
file, there is some expenditure for an adjuster or other claims professional to
both periodically review and process various ongoing payments therein. Thus, a reduction in the number of open claims, through settlement, represents a
reduction in payer overhead. But, generally speaking, there is nonetheless
likely a desire of the payer to pay less than it otherwise predicts or anticipates
based upon the statute and the mathematically calculated payments over time.
Thus, one might validly argue that in a variety of
settlements, the negotiation is not to obtain what a statutory scheme provides,
or greater than what it provides, but instead to obtain less than the injured
worker is otherwise likely entitled. Notably, there is a corresponding benefit to
the worker in settlement. Similarly to the second California logic above,
settlement proceeds remain the injured workers' property following death, when
death would otherwise likely truncate the payer's obligation to pay periodic
workers' compensation benefits.
Second, the "closure" so valued by
the payer may also represent a value to the injured worker (or even Medicare as discussed below). The worker obtains
closure, certainty, and peace of mind as well as the payer. Anyone who has been
involved in workers’ compensation settlements understands that some claimants
do not consider only their economic self-interest in deciding whether or not to
settle. Litigants care about fairness, not just money. Thus, the "Tin
Man" analysis is perhaps less persuasive.
That non-inclusion argument, that the injured worker is
getting in the MSA only that to which she/he is undoubtedly and otherwise
entitled is an arguably accurate description of what is occurring. But, in
contrast, the other settlement value (the indemnity and other incidentals) is
often, and perhaps always, less than that to which the worker is entitled.
Historically, workers' compensation systems have never been concerned with
attorneys earning a fee based upon their negotiation of the obtention of such a
settlement, for less than the worker is otherwise entitled.
Why would that same
system express concern that a fee was similarly calculated on what experts and
soothsayers conclude is the exact value of what would otherwise be provided? If
anything, that alone might convince some that the MSA portion is more of a
benefit than the non-MSA portion?
The second flaw in the logic of treating the MSA settlement
portion differently is simpler. Though the California Board touched on its
perceptions of why a settlement is beneficial to an injured worker, with all
due respect, who should decide if a settlement is what an injured worker really wants?
This is where Commissioner Marshall's analysis of the Virginia Board's role is
critical. He notes that in Virginia the Commission is charged with making a
determination that "a settlement is in the claimant’s best interest."
In a multitude of jurisdictions that is the case. And, if the particular
injured worker is in one of those jurisdictions, then that determination will
necessarily be a holistic one by some regulator or regulatory process.
What has driven legislatures to include that “best interest”
statutory analysis? There is some perception that review is fundamental to the
preservation of the “grand bargain” of workers’ compensation and the
Constitutional guarantees of due process in such an administrative system. Some
perceive the settlement of workers’ compensation as deleterious to what they
characterize as a public commitment to “redistributive justice,” and thus a
process in which protection or review is necessary and appropriate. Still, others believe that injured workers and payers have decidedly unequal
bargaining power, and they perceive the “best interest” analysis as a check and
balance on the inequity perceived.
I note these perceptions and add that in Florida most settlements
no longer require such a judicial or regulatory “best interest” finding or
conclusion. Before 2001, all settlements required such a finding in Florida.
But, then the legislature removed that requirement for judicial oversight if an
injured worker is represented by counsel. In a Florida case in which the worker
is represented, the attorney is thus making the “best interest” determination. Whether
this analysis is judicial, regulatory, or by an attorney, it has to include a
fair and reasoned consideration of all the circumstances of a case.
For example, perhaps the employer is uninsured and teetering
on bankruptcy, then maybe a smaller settlement than otherwise anticipated is
nonetheless in the workers' best interest. Or, the worker suffers from some
unrelated and yet serious or life-threatening medical condition, perhaps a
smaller settlement than otherwise anticipated. Or, if the worker continues to
require significant care and treatment beyond what such an injury might
reasonably be expected to need, perhaps the settlement is larger than otherwise
anticipated. Or, the complexity, medical or legal, of some aspect of a worker's
condition or allegations results in additional administrative time and
attention, perhaps the settlement is, therefore, larger than otherwise
anticipated. Thus, the injury, medical or vocational, is not necessarily settled
in isolation. The value is not necessarily mathematical. The case is settled, and in arriving at what
consideration will be sufficient, the totality of circumstances must be
considered.
That remains true whether a governmental agency or an
attorney is analyzing the "best interest." Regardless, the analysis
may be challenging. The analysis itself may not be mathematical or formulaic.
At the end of the day, regardless of whether an attorney is making the
"best interest" analysis for the worker or whether the attorney is
building the case for the settlement in order to demonstrate "best
interest" to some adjudicator or regulator, that "best interest"
process must be fulfilled. Whether stated in a statute or not, the worker's attorney must be focused on the client's best interest.
Thus, either the injured worker is successful in settling or she/he is not. Similarly, the attorney delivers value in that
process or she/he does not. Either her/his fee is thus reasonable or it is not. And that is a
holistic decision that compels the consideration of what has been obtained, in
exchange for what has been foregone. The effort of the attorney and the benefit to the client are important considerations. To suggest that such a "best
interest" analysis should ignore or exclude certain facts, such as the
value of medical benefit determined, potentially raises more questions than it
answers.
I would suggest that the Tin Man argument perhaps applies
most logically to Medicare itself. Commissioner Marshall notes that Medicare
should not enjoy a “free ride.” However, I perceive Medicare has nothing to
lose, or frankly to gain in the settlement process.
Commissioner Marshall
disagrees. He contends that through settlement, Medicare’s reimbursement regarding
certain treatment or care becomes a known and fixed amount. He argues certainty
in itself is a benefit, whether it is certainty of a full measure of expense
recovery, something more, or less. In considering whether there is or is not
benefit in that certainty, the touchstone may be that Medicare will not
“profit,” that is “gain” income, from any over-estimate of probable future
expense, but may face unreimbursed expense if it under-estimates that future
probability. In approving a set-aside, does Medicare gain or lose?
Perhaps there is a benefit at least as regards the Medicare
“transaction costs,” similar to the corresponding benefit to the payer (or worker, as discussed above)? In this
regard at least, perhaps there is substantiation for Commissioner Marshall’s
contention that the benefits to Medicare are a “free ride” if those future
medical payment estimates are not included in the calculation of the attorney
fee?
But, in no regard is Medicare paying an attorney fee,
whether the MSA value is included in the fee calculation or not. The fee being
paid to the attorney is either being paid by the employer (or its carrier) or
the injured worker. Thus, if you accept Commissioner Marshall’s argument that
it receives value, Medicare is benefiting at the expense of the payer. Or, if
you accept that Medicare neither gains nor loses in the process of settlement,
the fact remains that it pays no portion of the fee regardless.
There are various potential scenarios worth mentioning. In a denied case, one
in which the employer resists paying any benefits, a settlement might be the
only process through which Medicare enjoys any benefit. Certainly, such a case
might be tried to a conclusion. In that outcome, a victory for the employer (payer)
means no recovery or forbearance for Medicare.
But, a victory for the worker is likely also a significant victory for
Medicare, leading to recovery of expended funds. But, Medicare would similarly
have no liability for attorney fees in that litigation process, and could be as
accurately characterized there as enjoying a “free ride.”
But, in a case in which an employer is providing benefits,
Medicare will usually receive its reimbursement from the employer (or its
carrier), the “primary payer.” If such a non-disputed case is settled, then
Medicare will receive some avoidance of future payment, during the time the worker
provides for her/his care from the MSA proceeds, significantly similar to Medicare receiving
reimbursement. Arguably, the settlement changes only whether the “payer” as
regards that care is the employer (or its carrier) directly or the injured
worker (indirectly, with money from the settlement portioned into an MSA).
Arguably, in the non-denied case, the payment is not changed, only the identity
of the payer.
Perhaps Medicare has no interest as between these
two. In the settlement of an accepted and compensable case, with the MSA, Medicare gets nothing that it did not
already have. And thus, it seemingly has no interest in a case settling. It
arguably has no interest whatever in whether attorney fees are paid or not paid
regarding any or all of such a settlement, or whether they are sufficient or insufficient.
Medicare may simply have no interest and is thus absolutely the inappropriate
entity to discuss or regulate attorney fees as regards those MSA funding
amounts.
At the end of the analysis, it seems that interesting
arguments have been made both for inclusion and exclusion. That there are
seemingly conflicting decisions in that regard may reflect differences in adjudicator perspective or in various lawyering skills demonstrated in the prosecution of
the arguments or perspectives. What is clear, is that there remains
discussion and debate regarding the complexity of the MSA questions. Time will
perhaps bring clarity to that discussion.
Note: Commissioner Marshall was provided a draft of this post and commented on it significantly. His contribution thus to the discussion, perspective and debate cannot be overstated. His participation is gratefully acknowledged and appreciated.