Respondent, a Federal Government employee injured in an
automobile accident in Pennsylvania while on official business,
received payment from the Government under the Federal Employees'
Compensation Act (FECA) for his medical expenses and lost wages.
Under FECA, the Government is not liable for losses such as pain
and suffering. Respondent subsequently instituted a tort action in
a Pennsylvania state court against the driver of the other
automobile. Such an action is generally limited under the
Pennsylvania No-fault Motor Vehicle Insurance Act to recovery for
noneconomic losses like pain and suffering. After respondent
eventually settled the case for a sum that represented compensation
for noneconomic losses alone, the United States sought to be
reimbursed for its FECA payments out of the settlement, asserting
that it was entitled to reimbursement pursuant to the provision of
FECA (5 U.S.C. 8132) prescribing that, whenever a federal employee
suffers injury or death compensable under FECA "under circumstances
creating a legal liability in a person other than the United States
to pay damages," and the employee or his beneficiaries receive
"money or other property in satisfaction of that liability as the
result of suit or settlement," they "shall refund to the United
States the amount of compensation paid by the United States."
Respondent declined to pay over the requested sum and commenced an
action in Federal District Court, seeking a declaratory judgment
that the Government's right of reimbursement under § 8132 was
confined to recovery out of damages awards or settlements for
economic losses of the sort covered by FECA, and that an award or
settlement confined to noneconomic losses like pain and suffering
was immune from recovery under § 8132. The District Court
granted summary judgment to the United States, but the Court of
Appeals reversed.
Held: Section 8132 entitles the United States to be
reimbursed for FECA compensation out of any damages award or
settlement made in satisfaction of third-party liability for
personal injury or death, regardless of whether the award or
settlement is for losses other than medical expenses and lost
wages. On its face, the statute does not confine the United States
to the rights of a subrogee with respect to the specific classes of
expenses paid by it to injured employees under FECA; instead, it
expressly creates a general right of reimbursement that obtains
Page 467 U. S. 168
without regard to whether the employee's third-party recovery
includes losses that are excluded from FECA coverage. This reading
of § 8132 is reinforced by the parallel terms of § 8131,
which governs the right of the United States itself to prosecute an
employee's third-party action. And nothing in FECA's legislative
history establishes that § 8132 means something less than what
it says. While no-fault automobile insurance statutes were not in
existence when FECA was enacted in 1916, the possibility that
third-party recoveries might encompass compensation for pain and
suffering was well known, and Congress has not subsequently acted
to restrict the types of third-party recoveries from which the
United States may obtain reimbursement. Nor is there any
inconsistency between the interpretation of § 8132 adopted
here and the underlying purposes of the provision. Pp.
467 U. S.
173-179.
710 F.2d 982, reversed.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Federal Employees' Compensation Act (FECA), 5 U.S.C. §
8101
et seq., provides a comprehensive system of
compensation for federal employees who sustain work-related
injuries. As part of that system, an employee who receives FECA
payments is required to reimburse the United States for those
payments, to a specified extent, when he obtains a damages award or
settlement from a third party who is liable to the employee for his
injuries. § 8132. The question presented by this case is
whether the United States may recover FECA payments for medical
expenses and lost wages from an employee whose third-party tort
recovery compensates him solely for noneconomic losses like pain
and suffering.
Page 467 U. S. 169
I
The facts are clear. Respondent Paul B. Lorenzetti is a special
agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation. On November 21,
1977, he was injured in an automobile accident in Philadelphia
while on official business. Federal employees who are injured while
engaged in the performance of their official duties are entitled
under FECA to compensation for medical expenses, lost wages, and
vocational rehabilitation.
See §§ 8102-8107.
Respondent's injuries were not serious enough to require vocational
rehabilitation, but he eventually received, from the Federal
Employees' Compensation Fund, the sum of $1,970.81 for his medical
expenses and lost wages.
See § 8147. Because the
United States' liability for work-related injuries under FECA is
exclusive,
see § 8116(c), respondent cannot recover
from the United States for losses such as pain and suffering that
are not compensated under FECA.
Respondent subsequently instituted a tort action in a
Pennsylvania state court against the driver of the other
automobile. Respondent's action was subject to the terms of the
Pennsylvania No-fault Motor Vehicle Insurance Act (No-fault Act),
Pa.Stat.Ann., Tit. 40, § 1009.101
et seq. (Purdon
Supp.1984-1985), which substantially alters conventional tort
liability for automobile accidents. Under the No-fault Act, an
accident victim must look to his own insurance carrier to cover
basic economic losses, including an unlimited amount of medical
expenses and up to $15,000 in lost wages. §§ 1009.104,
1009.106, 1009.202. The victim may maintain a tort action against
the driver of the other automobile, but his recovery is generally
limited to noneconomic losses like pain and suffering; he may
recover damages for economic losses only to the extent that they
are not otherwise compensated because they exceed statutory limits
(such as the $15,000 lost-wage ceiling) under the No-fault Act.
§§ 1009.301(a)(4) and (a)(5). In this case, respondent's
medical expenses and
Page 467 U. S. 170
lost wages had been compensated fully by the Federal Government
under FECA. As a result, the driver of the other vehicle moved to
exclude evidence of medical expenses and lost wages from the trial.
The trial court did not rule formally on that motion, but indicated
its agreement that respondent was confined to recovering damages
for noneconomic losses. Respondent eventually settled the case for
$8,500, a figure that represented compensation for noneconomic
losses alone.
The United States thereafter sought to be reimbursed for its
FECA payments out of respondent's tort settlement. [
Footnote 1] FECA contains several provisions
designed to shift the compensation burden from the United States to
any third party who is independently liable for the employee's
injuries. Under § 8131, if an accident for which the United
States is liable under FECA also creates a legal liability in a
person other than the United States to pay damages, the Secretary
of Labor may require the employee either to prosecute an action in
his own name against the third party or to assign to the United
States his right of action to enforce the liability. When an
employee maintains an action in his own name, the United States is
entitled to be reimbursed for its FECA payments in accordance with
§ 8132. This statute in relevant part reads:
"If an injury or death for which compensation is payable under
[FECA] is caused under circumstances creating a legal liability in
a person other than the United States to pay damages, and a
beneficiary entitled to compensation from the United States for
that injury or death receives money or other property in
satisfaction of that liability as the result of suit or settlement
by him or in his behalf, the beneficiary, after deducting therefrom
the costs of
Page 467 U. S. 171
suit and a reasonable attorney's fee, shall refund to the United
States the amount of compensation paid by the United States and
credit any surplus on future payments of compensation payable to
him for the same injury. [
Footnote
2]"
The United States asserted that it was entitled to reimbursement
for its FECA payments in this case pursuant to § 8132.
Respondent declined to pay over the requested sum and, instead,
commenced a declaratory judgment action in the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. He sought
a declaration that the United States' right of reimbursement under
§ 8132 was confined to recovery out of damages awards or
settlements for economic losses of the sort covered by FECA, and
that an award or settlement confined to noneconomic losses like
pain and suffering was immune from recovery under § 8132. In
opposition, the United States took the position that § 8132
created a general right of reimbursement not conditioned on the
nature of the loss for which an employee received payment in his
tort action.
The District Court granted summary judgment to the United
States.
550 F.
Supp. 997 (1982). The District Court relied principally on
Ostrowski v. United States Dept. of Labor, Office of Workers
Compensation Programs, 653 F.2d 229 (CA6 1981),
aff'g
Ostrowski v. Roman Catholic Archdiocese of
Detroit, 479 F.
Supp. 200 (ED Mich.1979), in which the Court of Appeals for the
Sixth Circuit had been presented with the identical question by
virtue of a similar Michigan
Page 467 U. S. 172
no-fault statute, and had resolved the issue in favor of the
Government. Like the courts in
Ostrowski, the District
Court here looked to the language of § 8132 itself. It
observed:
"'There is no language in Section 8132 delineating two classes
of damages -- one of which gives rise to a duty to reimburse and
one of which does not.'"
550 F. Supp. at 999, quoting
Ostrowski, 479 F. Supp. at
203. Instead, the duty to reimburse encompassed all damages
recovered from third parties. The District Court found further
support for its reading of § 8132 both in the regulations
promulgated by the Secretary of Labor under § 8132 and in the
legislative history, which indicated that Congress had been aware
of the possibility of third-party tort recoveries for noneconomic
harms, yet had taken no action to confine the scope of the statute.
550 F.
Supp. at 1000.
On appeal, the United States Court of Appeals for the Third
Circuit reversed. 710 F.2d 982 (1983). Unlike the District Court,
the Court of Appeals made only passing references to the language
of § 8132. It reasoned that, because § 8132 was enacted
prior to the advent of no-fault statutes, "Congress could not have
anticipated this scenario," and the statute "does not speak to this
situation."
Id. at 985. The Court of Appeals addressed
itself instead to what it deemed to be the underlying purposes of
§ 8132 and FECA. In the Court of Appeals' view, the purpose of
§ 8132 was two-fold: to prevent federal employees from
obtaining double recoveries and to minimize the cost of FECA to the
Federal Government.
Id. at 984. These goals, in turn, were
subject to FECA's overarching aim of treating federal employees
"
in a fair and equitable manner.'" Id. at 985, quoting
S.Rep. No. 93-1081, p. 2 (1974).
The Court of Appeals rejected the District Court's reading of
§ 8132 on the ground that it would not serve the purposes of
the statute and would be "manifestly unfair" to federal employees
subject to no-fault statutes. 710 F.2d at 985. The goal of
preventing double recovery does not require that the
Page 467 U. S. 173
United States be reimbursed when an employee's tort recovery
under a no-fault statute is limited to noneconomic damages, since
the Commonwealth's statutory scheme guarantees that the employee's
recovery does not include payment for elements of loss covered by
FECA. At the same time, allowing the United States to obtain
reimbursement out of a tort recovery for noneconomic loss would
frustrate the congressional goal of treating federal employees
fairly and equitably, for the Pennsylvania workmen's compensation
statute does not impose a parallel obligation on private employees
to make reimbursements in the same circumstances.
Id. at
985-986. The Court of Appeals found nothing in the legislative
history of FECA or the regulations promulgated by the Secretary of
Labor under § 8132 that made it improper to read § 8132
analogously to the Commonwealth's workmen's compensation statute.
Ibid. The Court of Appeals recognized, however, that its
interpretation of § 8132 was squarely inconsistent with that
of the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in
Ostrowski. 710 F.2d at 984.
We granted certiorari to resolve the conflict over the scope of
the United States' right of reimbursement under § 8132. 464
U.S. 1068 (1984). We now reverse.
II
The answer to the question presented here is evident on the face
of the statute, it seems to us, for § 8132, by its own terms,
requires respondent to reimburse the United States for the disputed
sum. Section 8132 provides that, whenever a federal employee
suffers injury or death compensable under FECA "under circumstances
creating a legal liability in a person other than the United States
to pay damages," and the employee or his beneficiaries receive
"money or other property in satisfaction of that liability," they
"shall refund to the United States the amount of compensation paid
by the United States." We find little room for confusion about the
meaning of this language. Section 8132 imposes only two
Page 467 U. S. 174
conditions precedent to an employee's obligation to "refund . .
. the amount of compensation paid by the United States." The first
is that the employee must have suffered an injury or death under
circumstances creating a legal liability in a third party to pay
damages. The second is that the employee or his beneficiaries must
have received money or other property in satisfaction of that
liability. Here, both conditions have been met: respondent was
injured in an automobile accident that gave rise to third-party
liability, and he received $8,500 in satisfaction of his claim for
damages. As a result, the United States is entitled to
reimbursement for amounts paid to respondent for medical expenses
and lost wages. Contrary to respondent's argument, § 8132 does
not confine the United States to the rights of a subrogee with
respect to the specific classes of expenses paid by it to injured
employees under FECA; instead, it expressly creates a general right
of reimbursement that obtains without regard to whether the
employee's third-party recovery includes losses that are excluded
from FECA coverage. [
Footnote
3]
Page 467 U. S. 175
This reading of § 8132 is reinforced by the parallel terms
of § 8131, which governs the right of the United States itself
to prosecute an employee's third-party action. Section 8131(a)(1)
requires an employee, at the discretion of the Secretary of Labor,
to "assign to the United States
any right of action he may
have to enforce [a third-party] liability" arising from the
employee's accident (emphasis added). This obligation to assign
causes of action arising from accidents covered by FECA is an
unqualified one; the statute does not excuse an employee whose only
cause of action is for elements of loss that are not compensable
under FECA.
See H.R.Rep. No. 678, 64th Cong., 1st Sess.,
11 (1916) (an injured employee or his beneficiary may be required
to assign "
any right of action" against a third party
whose tortious conduct caused the injury (emphasis added)). In
turn, the Secretary of Labor is authorized to prosecute or
compromise any cause of action so assigned, and to
"deduct [from any recovery] and place to the credit of the
Employees' Compensation Fund the amount of compensation already
paid to the beneficiary,"
reserving for the employee or his beneficiaries not less than
one-fifth of the award or settlement. § 8131(c). There is no
question but that the Secretary of Labor could have required
respondent to assign his cause of action against the other driver
to the United States, on pain of forfeiting his FECA compensation
if he refused to do so, § 8131(b), and could have maintained
the action directly for the benefit of the United States.
Respondent has not explained why this result is unwarranted under
§ 8131, or why
Page 467 U. S. 176
§ 8132 should be construed to diminish the scope of the
United States' reimbursable interest when a third-party action is
maintained by the employee himself. [
Footnote 4]
Nothing in FECA's legislative history persuades us that §
8132 means something less than what it says. FECA was enacted in
1916 as the first comprehensive injury compensation statute for
federal employees. Act of Sept. 7, 1916, ch. 458, 39 Stat. 742,
repealed by Pub.L. 89-554, § 8(a), 80 Stat. 632, 643. Section
27 of the original statute vested the United States with a right of
reimbursement in terms that do not differ materially from the
relevant portions of § 8132 today. [
Footnote 5] The section was adopted
"not for the purpose of increasing [FECA] compensation, but for
the purpose of reimbursing the Government for payments made and
indemnifying it against other amounts payable in the future."
Dahn v. Davis, 258 U. S. 421,
258 U. S. 430
(1922). At no point did Congress suggest in its deliberations that
the federal right of reimbursement was to be limited to particular
categories of third-party recoveries for injury or death. While
no-fault automobile insurance statutes were not in existence in
1916, the possibility that third-party recoveries might
encompass
Page 467 U. S. 177
compensation for pain and suffering was well known,
see,
e.g., 53 Cong.Rec. 10909-10910 (1916) (remarks of Rep.
Barkley); yet no effort was made to reduce the breadth of the
statutory language to insulate such compensation from recovery by
the United States. Congress subsequently provided added protection
for employees under § 8132, most notably by reserving
one-fifth of the net third-party recovery for the employee,
see Pub.L. 89-488, § 10, 80 Stat. 255, but at no
point has it acted to restrict the types of third-party recoveries
from which the United States may obtain reimbursement.
Neither do we find any inconsistency between the interpretation
of § 8132 rejected by the Court of Appeals and the underlying
purposes of the provision. Admittedly, the goal of preventing
double recoveries by injured employees does not demand that an
employee in respondent's position turn over a third-party payment
confined to compensation for pain and suffering. As the Court of
Appeals itself recognized, however, the purpose of § 8132 is
not simply to prevent double recoveries, but to minimize the cost
of the FECA program to the Federal Government.
See Dahn v.
Davis, 258 U.S. at
258 U. S. 430;
cf. H.R.Rep. No. 678,
supra, at 13-14. It is
self-evident that the latter goal is directly advanced by allowing
the United States to obtain reimbursement out of any third-party
recovery, regardless of whether the third-party recovery includes
compensation for losses other than medical expenses and lost wages.
When Congress has chosen to subordinate the goal of minimizing FECA
expenditures to other concerns, as it did when it amended §
8132 to reserve one-fifth of the net third-party recovery for the
employee, it has done so explicitly. We are not at liberty to
fashion an additional limitation on that goal without express
authorization from Congress.
The Court of Appeals believed that allowing the United States to
recover in this case would be inconsistent with Congress' declared
intent that federal employees "be treated in a fair and equitable
manner" under FECA, and that the United
Page 467 U. S. 178
States "strive to attain the position of being a model
employer." S.Rep. No. 93-1081, p. 2 (1974). However useful these
general statements of congressional intent may be in resolving
ambiguities in the statutory scheme, they are not a license to
ignore the plain meaning of a specific statutory provision. The
language relied on by the Court of Appeals concerned a wide variety
of amendments to FECA enacted in 1974, none of which materially
altered the balance struck in § 8132 between the interests of
employees and the interests of the Federal Government. In addition,
as this case amply demonstrates, any unfairness or inequity arises
not from the operation of § 8132 alone, but from the
provision's interaction with distinct state statutory schemes. Even
if Congress' desire that the United States be "a model employer"
were a sufficient basis for interpreting § 8132 to avoid
intrinsic inequities, it hardly would be a sufficient basis for
inferring that Congress meant to sacrifice the substantial federal
interest in reimbursement in order to avoid extrinsic complications
introduced by independent state legislative actions. Nor is it
true, as the Court of Appeals seemed to believe, that interpreting
§ 8132 to require reimbursement here will leave federal
employees systematically worse off than their counterparts in the
private sector; the prevailing rule under state workmen's
compensation statutes is that an employer is fully entitled to be
reimbursed from third-party recoveries for pain and suffering, even
when the portion of an award attributable to pain and suffering is
clearly separable from the portion attributable to economic losses.
See 2A A. Larson, The Law of Workmen's Compensation §
74.35, pp. 14-476 to 14-478 (1982).
The Court of Appeals also sought to justify its conclusion on
the ground that Congress could not have anticipated the adoption of
no-fault automobile insurance statutes and the attendant
restriction on third-party tort liability for economic losses. As
pointed out above, the fact that Congress could not foresee
no-fault statutes does not mean that Congress did
Page 467 U. S. 179
not foresee the risk that federal reimbursement rights would
trench on third-party recoveries for noneconomic losses. More
important, the fact that changing state tort laws may have led to
unforeseen consequences does not mean that the federal statutory
scheme may be judicially expanded to take those changes into
account.
See Morrison-Knudsen Construction Co. v. Director,
Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, 461 U.
S. 624,
461 U. S.
635-636 (1983). It is for Congress, not the courts, to
revise longstanding legislation in order to accommodate the effects
of changing social conditions. Congress simply has not done so
here.
III
For these reasons, we hold that § 8132 entitles the United
States to be reimbursed for FECA compensation out of any damages
award or settlement made in satisfaction of third-party liability
for personal injury or death, regardless of whether the award or
settlement is for losses other than medical expenses and lost
wages. The judgment of the Court of Appeals, accordingly, is
reversed.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
After deducting the Government's share of a reasonable
attorney's fee,
see 5 U.S.C. § 8132, the United
States arrived at a reimbursement figure of $1,620.24. This roughly
represents one-fifth of the sum received by respondent in the
settlement of his third-party action.
[
Footnote 2]
Section 8132 further provides that no person shall make
distribution to an employee pursuant to a damages judgment or
settlement without first satisfying the United States'
reimbursement interest. The federal right of reimbursement under
§ 8132 is subject to one significant limitation: regardless of
the extent of his FECA receipts, an employee is entitled to retain
one-fifth of the net amount of the recovery after the expenses of
the suit have been deducted. The same protection is available under
§ 8131(c) when the Secretary of Labor prosecutes an assigned
right of action on behalf of the United States.
[
Footnote 3]
Respondent argues that § 8132 is inherently ambiguous
because the term "damages" bears several readings. In particular,
respondent suggests that "damages" could be read literally to
encompass not only liability for death or personal injury, but
liability for property damages as well. Respondent argues that the
provision cannot have been meant to create a right of reimbursement
out of an employee's recovery for property damages, and hence that
the literal language of § 8132 leads to unintended results
unless it is informed with the congressional policies on which the
Court of Appeals relied.
We agree that § 8132 does not include a right of
reimbursement out of third-party compensation for property damages,
but we disagree that the statutory reference to "damages" contains
any ambiguity that must be dispelled to reach that conclusion. The
term "damages" clearly refers back to the "injury or death" that
gives rise to the third party's legal liability, thereby excluding
reimbursement out of any property damages recovery. Section 8132's
predecessor provision was even clearer in this regard, for it
stated that the United States' right of reimbursement arose
"if an injury or death for which compensation is payable . . .
is caused under circumstances creating a legal liability in some
person other than the United States to pay damages
therefor. . . ."
Act of Sept. 7, 1916, ch. 458, § 27, 39 Stat. 747-748
(emphasis added), repealed by Pub.L. 89-554, § 8(a), 80 Stat.
632, 643. The use of the term "therefor" demonstrates Congress'
intent that "damages" refer back to the phrase "injury or death."
"Therefor" was omitted when the original provision was replaced by
§ 8132 in 1966, but the omission was not meant to be a
substantive change.
See Pub.L. 89-554, § 7(a), 80
Stat. 631.
[
Footnote 4]
Respondent does argue that § 8131 provides nothing more
than an alternative means for the United States to enforce an
interest in an employee's claim for medical expenses and lost
wages. The language of § 8131, however, is no more subject to
this strained interpretation than is the language of §
8132.
[
Footnote 5]
Section 27 provided:
"[I]f an injury or death for which compensation is payable under
this Act is caused under circumstances creating a legal liability
in some person other than the United States to pay damages
therefor, and a beneficiary entitled to compensation from the
United States for such injury or death receives as a result of a
suit brought by him or on his behalf, or as a result of a
settlement made by him or on his behalf, any money or other
property in satisfaction of the liability of such other person,
such beneficiary shall, after deducting the costs of suit and a
reasonable attorney's fee, apply the money or other property so
received [as a refund to the United States for FECA payments
already made and as a credit for unmatured FECA obligations arising
from the same injury]."