97-26258. Disability Insurance Benefits; Reduction Due to Receipt of State Workers' Compensation; Validity of an Amended Stipulation on a Prior Workers' Compensation Settlement Award; Minnesota  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 192 (Friday, October 3, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 51923-51926]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-26258]
    
    
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    SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
    
    [Social Security Ruling, SSR 97-3]
    
    
    Disability Insurance Benefits; Reduction Due to Receipt of State 
    Workers' Compensation; Validity of an Amended Stipulation on a Prior 
    Workers' Compensation Settlement Award; Minnesota
    
    AGENCY: Social Security Administration (SSA).
    
    ACTION: Notice of Social Security Ruling.
    
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    SUMMARY: In accordance with 20 CFR 402.35(b)(1), the Acting 
    Commissioner of Social Security gives notice of Social Security Ruling, 
    SSR 97-3. This Ruling, based on an SSA Regional Chief Counsel opinion, 
    concerns whether the Social Security Administration should give effect 
    to an amended stipulation on a prior lump-sum workers' compensation 
    settlement and whether workers' compensation offset was properly 
    computed on the basis of the amended stipulation. Although this case
    
    [[Page 51924]]
    
    involves a Minnesota workers' compensation stipulation, this Ruling 
    addresses an issue that is becoming a problem nationwide, i.e., the 
    practice of obtaining an addendum to a workers' compensation settlement 
    merely to state that the workers' compensation settlement was based on 
    a low weekly rate using life expectancy, thus attempting to avoid the 
    offset provisions of section 224 of the Social Security Act. This 
    Ruling clearly illustrates the Social Security Administration's policy 
    of not being bound by the terms of a second, or amended, stipulation 
    that would circumvent the workers' compensation offset provisions of 
    section 224 of the Social Security Act.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: October 3, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joanne K. Castello, Division of 
    Regulations and Rulings, Social Security Administration, 6401 Security 
    Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21235, (410) 965-1711.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Although we are not required to do so 
    pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552 (a)(1) and (a)(2), we are publishing this 
    Social Security Ruling in accordance with 20 CFR 402.35(b)(1).
        Social Security Rulings make available to the public precedential 
    decisions relating to the Federal old-age, survivors, disability, 
    supplemental security income, and black lung benefits programs. Social 
    Security Rulings may be based on case decisions made at all 
    administrative levels of adjudication, Federal court decisions, 
    Commissioner's decisions, opinions of the Office of the General 
    Counsel, and other interpretations of the law and regulations.
        Although Social Security Rulings do not have the same force and 
    effect as the statute or regulations, they are binding on all 
    components of the Social Security Administration, in accordance with 20 
    CFR 402.35(b)(1), and are to be relied upon as precedents in 
    adjudicating cases.
        If this Social Security Ruling is later superseded, modified, or 
    rescinded, we will publish a notice in the Federal Register to that 
    effect.
    
    (Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance, Programs 96.001 Social 
    Security--Disability Insurance; 96.005 Special Benefits for Disabled 
    Coal Miners)
    
        Dated: September 22, 1997.
    John J. Callahan,
    Acting Commissioner of Social Security.
    
    Section 224(a)-(b) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 424a (a)-(b)) 
    Disability Insurance Benefits--Reduction Due to Receipt of State 
    Workers' Compensation--Validity of an Amended Stipulation on a Prior 
    Workers' Compensation Settlement Award--Minnesota
    
    20 CFR 404.408
    
        Under section 224 of the Social Security Act (the Act), title II 
    disability insurance benefits may be offset if the disabled worker 
    receives workers' compensation (WC) benefits. The issue here is 
    whether WC offset was properly computed on the basis of an amended 
    stipulation to a prior WC settlement award.
        The disabled worker became entitled to Social Security 
    disability insurance benefits in September 1993. Periodic WC 
    payments were paid to the disabled worker January 31, 1993 through 
    July 11, 1994. The disabled worker subsequently received a lump-sum 
    payment on August 19, 1994. The lump sum was prorated at the weekly 
    rate at which the disabled worker had been receiving benefits before 
    the lump-sum settlement. The lump-sum proration ended December 1997.
        After offset was imposed, and nearly 2 years after the date of 
    the original lump-sum settlement agreement, the disabled worker 
    obtained an amended lump-sum award in which an attempt was made to 
    subject the lump-sum award to proration over the disabled worker's 
    life expectancy to remove the offset.
        Based on section 224 of the Act, case law, and Social Security 
    Administration (SSA) policy, SSA is not necessarily bound by the 
    terms of a second, or amended, stipulation. Instead, SSA will 
    evaluate both the original and amended stipulations and will 
    disregard any language which has the effect of altering the terms in 
    the original lump-sum settlement where, as here, the terms in the 
    amended document are illusory or conflict with the terms of the 
    first stipulation concerning the actual intent of the parties, and 
    would have the effect of circumventing the WC offset provisions of 
    section 224 of the Act.
    
        A question was raised concerning whether SSA should give effect to 
    a Minnesota amended stipulation on a prior lump-sum WC settlement award 
    which originally resulted in offset of the disabled worker's claim. For 
    the reasons stated below, effect need not be given to an amended 
    stipulation to a WC award if it was amended solely to circumvent the WC 
    offset provisions of section 224 of the Act.
    
    Background
    
        The disabled worker became entitled to Social Security disability 
    insurance benefits in September 1993. He received WC periodic payments 
    of $458.99 weekly from January 31, 1993 through January 30, 1994, and 
    $477.35 weekly from January 31, 1994 through July 11, 1994. The 
    disabled worker subsequently received a lump-sum payment of $85,000 
    less $10,000 withheld for attorney fees based on a stipulation dated 
    August 19, 1994. This lump sum was prorated at the weekly rate of 
    $477.35, the rate at which the disabled worker had been receiving 
    benefits just before the lump-sum award. The lump-sum proration ended 
    December 8, 1997, with a remainder of $31.70 for December 1997.
        After offset was imposed, and nearly 2 years after the date of the 
    original lump-sum settlement agreement, the disabled worker obtained an 
    amended lump-sum award in which an attempt was made to prorate the 
    lump-sum award over the disabled worker's life expectancy, which would 
    result in a weekly benefit of $64.97 and thereby trigger removal of the 
    offset.
    
    Discussion
    
        Section 224 of the Act, 42 U.S.C. 424a, places a ceiling on an 
    individual's combined Social Security disability insurance benefits and 
    State WC benefits. The statute provides that where an individual is 
    receiving both Social Security disability insurance benefits and State 
    WC benefits on account of a disability, his or her Social Security 
    benefits ``shall be reduced'' by the amount necessary to ensure that 
    the sum of the State and Federal benefits does not exceed 80 percent of 
    the individual's average pre-disability earnings. 42 U.S.C. 424a(a); 
    see also 20 CFR 404.408. As the Supreme Court has explained, ``by 
    limiting total state and federal benefits to 80% of the employee's 
    average earnings prior to the disability, [section 224 of the Act] 
    reduce[s] the duplication inherent in the programs and at the same time 
    allow[s] a supplement to workmen's compensation where the state 
    payments [are] inadequate.'' Richardson v. Belcher, 404 U.S. 78, 83 
    (1971).1
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        \1\ SSR 72-37c (C.E. 1971-1975, p. 466).
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        The Act refers only to ``periodic benefits'' arising under a State 
    worker's compensation program based upon the claimant's ``total or 
    partial disability (whether or not permanent).'' 42 U.S.C. 424a(a)(2). 
    By its own terms, the statute encompasses virtually every conceivable 
    form of WC benefits. The Act also requires that lump-sum settlements, 
    if they substitute for periodic benefits, be offset, at a rate that 
    will ``approximate as nearly as practicable'' the rate at which the 
    award would have been paid on a monthly
    
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    basis and explicitly delegates to the Commissioner the authority to 
    determine the appropriate method of prorating such a lump-sum benefit. 
    42 U.S.C. 424a(b). As a result, receipt of WC compensation benefits, 
    whether or not in a lump sum, may subject Social Security benefits to 
    reduction.
        The issue of whether SSA correctly reduced or offset Social 
    Security benefits due to the settlement of a WC claim is governed by 
    Federal, not State, law. The Eighth Circuit, which is controlling for 
    Minnesota cases, has expressly concluded that the resolution of these 
    issues is entirely a ``federal question'' to be answered by ``the 
    federal statute and its underlying policy, notwithstanding conflicting 
    state law.'' Munsinger v. Schweiker, 709 F.2d 1212, 1217 (8th Cir. 
    1983); 2 see also Campbell v. Shalala, 14 F.3d 424, 427 (8th 
    Cir. 1994) (holding that Federal, not State, law governs whether WC 
    payments could be offset against Social Security disability insurance 
    benefits); 3 Krysztoforski v. Secretary of Health and Human 
    Services, 55 F.3d 857, 859 (3rd Cir. 1994) (noting that section 224 of 
    the Act does not refer to or defer to State law for the determination 
    of whether a person's periodic benefits are subject to offset, the 
    Third Circuit held that Federal law governs in determining whether a WC 
    award should be offset against disability benefits).
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        \2\ SSR 85-6c (C.E. 1981-1985, p. 692).
        \3\ In addition, it is the disabled worker's burden to prove 
    that a lump-sum payment paid by a WC carrier is not subject to 
    offset against the claimant's Social Security disability insurance 
    benefits. Campbell, 14 F.3d at 427-28.
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        In Munsinger, the Eighth Circuit held that the terms of the lump-
    sum settlement represented periodic payments which, without an offset, 
    would result in duplicate benefits and that ``to deny [the 
    Commissioner] an offset of the settlement would frustrate congressional 
    intent.'' This same reasoning applies to amendments or addenda to lump-
    sum settlements--that is, the terms of both the original stipulations 
    and the amendments to stipulations for settlements should be evaluated 
    in light of the Federal statute and its underlying policy to avoid 
    duplication in benefits. If the original language of the settlement 
    establishes receipt of benefits, establishes the classification of 
    benefits, triggers an offset, and/or establishes an appropriate offset 
    rate, SSA is not bound by any language in a subsequent amendment or 
    addendum which conflicts with, or alters, those terms. If the amended 
    terms have no factual basis or were made solely to circumvent the 
    offset provisions of section 224 of the Act, the use by SSA of such 
    amended terms would frustrate congressional intent to avoid duplicate 
    benefits and will be disregarded.
        This is the approach followed in Fox v. Chater, No. 4-95-235 (D. 
    Minn. Feb. 20, 1996), in which the District Court agreed that SSA was 
    not bound by the terms of an amended stipulation. In Fox, after 
    plaintiff received partial disability, temporary partial disability and 
    permanent partial WC benefits, he entered into a stipulation for 
    settlement which was approved by a WC judge, and he was awarded a lump-
    sum settlement as full and final settlement of any claims for WC 
    benefits. The parties disputed, and left unresolved, whether plaintiff 
    was permanently and totally disabled. In the meantime, the plaintiff 
    applied for, and was awarded, Social Security disability insurance 
    benefits. SSA subsequently determined that the lump-sum payment was 
    subject to offset and reduced the plaintiff's disability benefits. 
    After offset was imposed, the parties entered into a second stipulation 
    which added a provision indicating that the parties agreed that the 
    plaintiff had been permanently and totally disabled as a result of his 
    personal injuries and that the WC benefits he received prior to the 
    stipulation were subject to Minnesota's Social Security offset 
    provisions and that the lump-sum payment agreed upon included a 5 
    percent reduction in the benefits payable for the Social Security 
    offset. The plaintiff argued that the two stipulations established that 
    the payments made before the stipulation were subject to SSA offset and 
    that the subsequent lump-sum settlement was, therefore, subject to the 
    reverse offset provisions of the Minnesota WC statute.4
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        \4\ Under Minnesota law, after permanent total disability 
    benefits of $25,000 have been paid, WC will reduce permanent total 
    disability benefits in order to reflect the disability insurance 
    benefits that an individual is receiving from SSA. Minn. Stat. Ann. 
    Sec. 176.101, Subd. 4; McClish v. Pan-O-Gold Baking Co., 336 N.W.2d 
    538 (Minn. 1983). Acknowledging this ``reverse offset,'' SSA stops 
    its own offset. POMS DI 52001.226.
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        In Fox, the District Court rejected the plaintiff's arguments and 
    affirmed the administrative law judge's (ALJ) determination not to 
    apply reverse offset on the basis of the ``illusory'' terms of the 
    amended stipulation. The Court concluded that Mr. Fox's belated claim 
    that the Social Security offset had been considered in the first 
    stipulation was illusory. Noting that the parties did not recognize an 
    offset in the first stipulation and never provided for additional WC 
    benefits if the Social Security disability insurance benefit claim were 
    denied, the Court found that, despite his belated claim in his second 
    stipulation, the plaintiff failed to make a sufficient showing that he 
    had made a settlement which accounted for future Social Security 
    benefits. The Court also rejected plaintiff's argument that both 
    stipulations showed that the parties intended the lump-sum payment to 
    be a permanent total disability benefit because, despite the language 
    in the second stipulation that both parties agreed that Mr. Fox was 
    permanently and totally disabled, the first stipulation was ``very 
    clear that the parties do not agree that Fox was permanently and 
    totally disabled.'' Thus, the Court found that the ALJ was not bound to 
    accept the illusory terms of the second stipulation.
        Although unpublished, the holding of Fox is directly applicable to 
    this case. Like Mr. Fox, the disabled worker's belated claim that the 
    original award was to be prorated over his life expectancy appears 
    illusory.5 The original award did not state that the lump-
    sum settlement was subject to proration over the disabled worker's life 
    expectancy. A lump sum of $85,000, less attorney's fees, was awarded 
    pursuant to the 1994 lump-sum stipulated settlement. Although the 
    original stipulation did not specify the rate at which the lump sum 
    would be prorated, it noted that a prior weekly rate had been paid. The 
    original stipulation contained no other reference to the proration rate 
    of the lump-sum award, much less any reference to the life expectancy 
    of the disabled worker. The lump sum was prorated, then, at the prior 
    weekly rate of $477.35.6
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        \5\ This Ruling does not address the related issue of the 
    validity of stipulated lump-sum settlements where the original 
    settlement contains a term purporting to prorate a lump sum over the 
    life expectancy of the worker. This Ruling only addresses later-
    added amendments, addenda, etc. whose terms conflict with or change 
    the original terms and where the purpose of these amendments is to 
    circumvent the offset provisions of the Act.
        \6\ As noted above, Federal law requires that lump-sum awards be 
    offset at a rate that will ``approximate as nearly as practicable'' 
    the rate at which the award would have been paid on a monthly basis. 
    42 U.S.C. 424a(b); 20 CFR 404.408(g). The Commissioner has issued 
    guidelines for calculating the rate at which lump-sum awards should 
    be prorated based on an established weekly rate. See POMS DI 
    52001.555C.4. The guidelines provide a 3-step priority for 
    establishing weekly rates: first, the rate specified in the award; 
    second, if no rate is specified in the award, the periodic rate paid 
    prior to the lump sum; and third, if no rate was established in the 
    award and there was no preceding periodic benefit, the State's WC 
    maximum weekly rate in effect at the time of the WC injury. POMS DI 
    52001.555C.4.a-DI 52001.555C.4.c.
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        Two years later, in 1996, after offset was imposed, the disabled 
    worker obtained an amended stipulation which
    
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    expressly confirmed the 1994 Stipulation for Settlement. Nevertheless, 
    the amendment purports to ``clarify'' the terms of the settlement by 
    attempting to characterize the lump-sum award as prorated over the 
    disabled worker's life expectancy. The amended stipulation, however, 
    did not change the dollar amounts of the award, did not involve any 
    appeal of the award sought or change in the actual amount of WC 
    benefits, and did not affect in any way the rights, liabilities or 
    obligations of the parties with respect to the actual WC award. Its 
    terms modify the original document which did not specify that the lump 
    sum should be prorated over the disabled worker's life expectancy. It 
    contained no supporting factual information that the original 
    stipulation had, in fact, been based on life expectancy.
    
    Conclusion
    
        Based on section 224 of the Act, case law, and SSA policy, SSA is 
    not necessarily bound by the terms of a second, or amended, stipulation 
    in determining whether and by what rate a disabled worker's Social 
    Security disability insurance benefits should be offset on account of a 
    WC lump-sum payment. SSA will evaluate both the original and amended 
    stipulations and disregard any language which has the effect of 
    altering the terms in the original lump-sum settlement where the terms 
    in the amended document are illusory or conflict with the terms of the 
    first stipulation concerning the actual intent of the parties, and 
    where, as here, the terms in the amended document would have the effect 
    of circumventing the WC offset provisions of section 224 of the Act. To 
    give effect to such illusory terms would frustrate Congress' intent to 
    avoid duplicate benefits.
    
    [FR Doc. 97-26258 Filed 10-2-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4190-29-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
10/3/1997
Published:
10/03/1997
Department:
Social Security Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of Social Security Ruling.
Document Number:
97-26258
Dates:
October 3, 1997.
Pages:
51923-51926 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Social Security Ruling, SSR 97-3
PDF File:
97-26258.pdf