Northern Virginia Community College/Commonwealth of Virginia v. Jayanthi Easwarachandran ( 2020 )


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  •                                              COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Petty, O’Brien and Senior Judge Frank
    UNPUBLISHED
    Argued by teleconference
    NORTHERN VIRGINIA COMMUNITY
    COLLEGE/COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 0213-20-2                                    JUDGE WILLIAM G. PETTY
    JULY 21, 2020
    JAYANTHI EASWARACHANDRAN
    FROM THE VIRGINIA WORKERS’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION
    Emily O. Sealy, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,
    Attorney General, on brief), for appellant.
    No brief or argument for appellee.
    The Northern Virginia Community College (employer) was ordered to pay Jayanthi
    Easwarachandran (claimant) $778.03, which was the cash value of sick and personal leave claimant
    used during her recovery from a compensable work injury. On appeal, employer argues that the
    Commission erred in finding that employer did not reinstate claimant’s leave and therefore
    awarding claimant $778.03.1 For the following reasons, we disagree and affirm.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Because the parties are fully conversant with the record in this case and this
    memorandum opinion carries no precedential value, we recite only those facts and incidents of
    the proceedings as are necessary to the parties’ understanding of the disposition of this appeal.
    “Under our standard of review, when we consider an appeal from the commission’s decision, we
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    1
    Although employer assigns four separate errors to the Commission’s order, they all are
    resolved by the one question we address here.
    must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the party who prevailed before the
    commission.” K & K Repairs & Const., Inc. v. Endicott, 
    47 Va. App. 1
    , 6 (2005).
    The parties agree that claimant suffered a compensable work-related injury on August 18,
    2016. Claimant was off work from August 18, 2016, to October 14, 2016, and used sick and
    personal leave to cover the gap in pay. Although her claim for benefits was initially denied, by
    early 2017, following her second claim for benefits, the parties agreed to enter a stipulated order
    awarding temporary total disability benefits from August 18, 2016 to October 14, 2016. Based
    on the pre-injury average weekly wage of $968.04, payment of temporary total disability benefits
    for this timeframe would total $5,347.27 ($645.36 per week for the time of disability).
    In 2017, claimant filed a claim for payment of the stipulated award in addition to a
    twenty percent penalty for failure to make timely payment. The parties acknowledged that while
    claimant was not working, the employer compensated her by allowing her to use sick leave and
    personal leave and through payment of short-term disability benefits. She disputed, however,
    that the employer reinstated the expended sick and personal leave time. In response, employer
    defended that the claimant was paid full wages in the form of sick leave and short-term disability
    benefits; therefore, there was no requirement to pay temporary total disability benefits.
    Employer asserted that the claimant was paid $5,272.68 in payments termed “regular pay” and
    $4,671.68 in “disability pay.” Employer sought a credit for the voluntary payments.
    At the subsequent hearing before the deputy commissioner, employer’s human resources
    analyst testified that claimant used sick leave during the first forty hours of her waiting period
    under short-term disability2 and then used personal leave when she fell to eighty percent
    2
    Code § 65.2-509 provides a statutory waiting period after an injury. The statute
    provides,
    -2-
    disability. The analyst explained that when the claim was approved in 2017, she reinstated the
    sick and personal leave that claimant was charged during the waiting period and when claimant
    went into eighty percent. She explained, however, that “because sick leave and personal leave
    [are] only used during the current year and then lost at the end of the year,” claimant could not
    use any of the sick or personal leave reinstated to her because it had effectively expired.
    The deputy commissioner issued an opinion ordering employer to make payment of
    compensation in accordance with the stipulated order plus twenty percent penalties for failure to
    make timely payment. Furthermore, the deputy commissioner held that there was nothing in the
    stipulated order to indicate that employer sought or was entitled to a credit for payment of sick or
    other leave, so that request was denied. Employer requested review of that order.
    After remanding the matter back to the deputy commissioner for valuation questions, the
    Commission affirmed the award to claimant of the sick and personal leave, which was valued at
    $778.03. However, it reversed the deputy commissioner’s denial of a credit to employer and
    credited employer with $5,347.27 based upon the stipulated dollar value of the short-term
    disability benefits paid during the agreed period of work-related disability from August 18, 2016
    through October 14, 2016.
    No compensation shall be allowed for the first seven
    calendar days of incapacity resulting from an injury except the
    benefits provided for in § 65.2-603; but if incapacity extends
    beyond that period, compensation shall commence with the eighth
    day of disability. If, however, such incapacity shall continue for a
    period of more than three weeks, then compensation shall be
    allowed from the first day of such incapacity.
    Therefore, “[a] timely claim for disability benefits must allege at least eight days of disability
    because the commission cannot award compensation for the first seven days of disability.”
    Hospice Choice, Inc. v. O’Quin, 
    42 Va. App. 598
    , 602 (2004).
    -3-
    II. ANALYSIS
    Employer argues that the Commission erred in finding that employer did not reinstate
    claimant’s leave and therefore awarding claimant $778.03. We disagree.
    It is the burden of employer, the appealing party in this case, to demonstrate on appeal
    that the Commission’s ruling constituted reversible error. Burke v. Catawba Hosp., 
    59 Va. App. 828
    , 838 (2012). “The Commission’s factual findings bind [this Court] as long as credible
    evidence supports them,” Riverside Reg’l Jail Auth. v. Dugger, 
    68 Va. App. 32
    , 37 (2017)
    (quoting Van Buren v. Augusta Cty., 
    66 Va. App. 441
    , 446 (2016)), such that “the existence of
    ‘contrary evidence . . . in the record is of no consequence,’” City of Waynesboro v. Griffin, 
    51 Va. App. 308
    , 312 (2008) (quoting Manassas Ice & Fuel Co. v. Farrar, 
    13 Va. App. 227
    , 229
    (1991)). By statute, we treat the Commission’s factfinding as “conclusive and binding” if it rests
    on a sufficient threshold of evidence. Berglund Chevrolet, Inc. v. Landrum, 
    43 Va. App. 742
    ,
    749-50 (2004) (quoting Code § 65.2-706(A)). “This appellate deference is not a mere legal
    custom, subject to a flexible application, but a statutory command.” Id. (citation omitted). This
    command binds us so long as a “rational mind upon consideration of all the circumstances”
    could come to the conclusion the Commission adopted. K&G Abatement Co. v. Keil, 
    38 Va. App. 744
    , 756 (2002) (quoting Baggett Transp. Co. v. Dillon, 
    219 Va. 633
    , 637 (1978)).
    The stipulated award in this case stated that claimant suffered a compensable injury and
    was entitled to an award from employer in the amount of $645.36 per week from August 18,
    2016 through October 14, 2016, the time in which she was unable to work. Employer was also
    ordered to continue to provide medical treatment for claimant pursuant to Code § 65.2-603.
    However, although employer argues that claimant was paid full wages for the August 18, 2016
    through October 14, 2016 time period, the parties agree that none of the pay claimant received
    -4-
    was from hours worked—it was all funded by the claimant’s sick leave, personal leave, or
    short-term disability benefits.
    It has long been established that where the claimant is entitled to payment of
    compensation benefits under the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Act, the employer may not
    charge the lost time against the claimant’s sick or vacation time. See Cain v. Perdue Farms, Inc.,
    71 O.I.C. 312 (1992); Berg v. City of Richmond, 47 O.I.C. 33 (1965). Furthermore, when
    compensation benefits are owed, the employer is not entitled to take a credit for such benefits
    against the claimant’s accumulated leave. See Cain, 71 O.I.C. at 313; Berg, 47 O.I.C. at 34.
    Because employer was ordered to pay claimant temporary total disability for the agreed
    disability period, any leave charged to claimant during that time should have been reinstated to
    her. However, it was not.
    This Court addressed leave reinstatement in Augusta County School Board v.
    Humphreys, 
    53 Va. App. 355
     (2009). In that case, in consideration of a statute of limitations
    question, this Court affirmed the Commission’s interpretation of Code § 65.2-5203 that “claimant
    is not required to buy back her leave balances, and the employer is entitled to a credit for wages
    it paid for sick leave, where such leave has been reinstated.” Id. at 363 (internal quotation marks
    omitted). “In other words, the claimant gets her leave restored, and her workers compensation
    benefits[,] while the employer is granted credit against owed workers’ compensation indemnity
    benefits for wages paid through the now-restored leave.” Id. We noted in Humphreys that
    [w]hile the Virginia appellate courts have not addressed Code
    § 65.2-520 in the context here presented in a published decision,
    3
    Code § 65.2-520 states, in relevant part,
    Any payments made by the employer to the injured
    employee during the period of his disability, or to his dependents,
    which by the terms of this title were not due and payable when
    made, may, subject to the approval of the Commission, be
    deducted from the amount to be paid as compensation . . . .
    -5-
    the commission, in applying this statute, has consistently held, at
    least since 1988,
    that the payment of wages to the employee based
    upon sick or annual leave may be credited to the
    employer under the provisions of Code § 65.1-72
    [now Code § 65.2-520] when leave is reinstated. In
    the absence of an outstanding award of
    compensation, salary paid to the employee during
    his disability may be considered to be payment of
    compensation in the discretion of the Industrial
    Commission for purposes of “credit” under Code
    § 65.1-72.
    Id. at 362 (emphasis added) (quoting Dyson v. Commonwealth, VWC File No. 129-25-08
    (Va. Wrk. Comp. Comm. Oct. 11, 1988)). Furthermore, the Supreme Court, citing Humphreys,
    noted “that such approval of the treatment of sick leave pay as payment of workers’
    compensation benefits is conditioned upon the employer simultaneously reinstating the
    employee’s sick leave.” City of Danville v. Tate, 
    289 Va. 1
    , 3 n.4 (2015) (emphasis added).
    In this case, employer received a benefit in that it did not have to pay compensation for
    that period the claimant used her accrued leave to compensate for time lost from work.
    However, instead of simultaneously reinstating the leave back to claimant, employer waited until
    the leave had expired before it was reinstated. This was the functional equivalent of giving the
    claimant a check drawn on a closed account. Employer agrees that the leave credited back to
    claimant in 2017 was of no value—it could only be used during the calendar year in which it
    accrued and could not be carried into the following calendar year. Nevertheless, employer
    argues that despite the reinstatement being of zero benefit to claimant, it should count for
    compliance with the stipulated order. Black’s Law Dictionary defines “reinstate” as “[t]o place
    again in a former state or position; to restore.” Reinstate, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed.
    2019). Clearly, claimant was not restored to her former position in this case by the purely
    ceremonial reinstatement of her lost 2016 leave. She could not use the reinstated leave or benefit
    -6-
    from it in any way; therefore, she was not placed in her former position of having that amount of
    leave available to her for use.
    Employer essentially argues it is unfair for claimant to receive a windfall of the value of
    unusable reinstated leave; this argument is without merit. As noted above, the parties do not
    dispute the amount of leave charged to claimant and then unusable by her after the ineffectual
    reinstatement. They also do not dispute the valuation of the short-term disability to which she
    was entitled/paid. In fact, employer received a credit against that award for the disability it paid
    out to claimant already. Accordingly, because the leave used during the period of disability is
    now useless to claimant, employer did not comply with the stipulated award and must now pay
    claimant the dollar value of the leave used by claimant. The Commission’s factual finding that
    the leave was not simultaneously reinstated was supported by credible evidence and is affirmed.
    See Dugger, 68 Va. App. at 37. Therefore, we also affirm the $778.03 award to claimant.
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the Commission.
    Affirmed.
    -7-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 0213202

Filed Date: 7/21/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 7/21/2020