The Tennessee Court of Appeals recently decided
a case that dealt with a situation where the plaintiff employer was ordered to
pay for the workers’ compensation benefits (including medical treatment) of an
employee. See Roadway
Express, Inc. v. Sammy T. Robertson, No. E2013-02797-COA-R3CV, 2014 WL 4793022
(Tenn. Ct. App. 2014). The
employer made those payments but appealed the Trial Court’s decision. Ultimately, the Tennessee Supreme Court
Special Workers’ Compensation Appeals Panel vacated the Trial
Court’s Order and found there was no subject matter jurisdiction by the Trial
Court and, therefore, dismissed the employee’s Petition. The problem was, the employer had already
paid $152,511.59 towards the employee’s medical treatment.
As a result, Roadway Express Inc. filed
suit against its employee to recover the payments made pursuant to the Trial
Court’s Order in the workers’ compensation case. The Trial Court dismissed the employer’s
claim and found that the action was a workers’ compensation law cause of action
and therefore the appropriate Tennessee workers compensation procedures had to
be complied with in order to proceed with the cause of action. Due to the fact there was no benefit review
conference conducted, the Complaint was dismissed due to a lack of subject
matter jurisdiction. This issue was
appealed.
The Tennessee Court of Appeals found the
trial court wrongly decided this issue. Specifically,
in a prior Tennessee Supreme Court decision, McCall
v. National Health Corp., 100 SW.3d 209, 213 (Tenn. 2003), the Court
specifically stated that “as we previously stated, a trial court can order the
employee to reimburse any funds that were improperly paid to the
employee.” As a result, the Robertson
Tennessee Court of Appeals’ decision found the Tennessee Supreme Court had
previously held and acknowledged that a Trial Court may order an employee to
reimburse his or her employer when the employee was wrongfully paid funds by
the employer in a workers compensation case, as ordered by a court. Robertson
at 4. As a result, this suit by
Roadway Express is an appropriate way to seek reimbursement from an employee by
an employer when workers compensation benefits are wrongly paid.
This is an interesting case because the
employer filed suit against the employee outside the scope of a workers’
compensation case. Under the McCall
decision, the Tennessee Supreme Court certainly implied that an employer can
seek reimbursement from an employee directly in this context. Obviously, this can be difficult to collect;
however, in this case the employer actually pursued this option against the
employee. This case therefore supports
the position that an employer can sue an employee directly, outside a workers
compensation case, to get reimbursement of money improperly paid pursuant to a
court order.
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