PA Superior Court Opinion on Statutory Employer Doctrine Appeal
Summary
The Pennsylvania Superior Court issued an opinion regarding an appeal concerning the statutory employer doctrine. The court quashed the appeal filed by Commonwealth Environmental Systems, L.P. (CES) and Golden Eagle Staffing, which sought to stay a personal injury action pending a workers' compensation appeal board decision on employer status.
What changed
The Pennsylvania Superior Court, in an opinion authored by Judge Bowes, quashed the interlocutory appeal filed by Commonwealth Environmental Systems, L.P. (CES) and Golden Eagle Staffing. The appeal sought to stay a personal injury action brought by Justo Acala Geronimo, a temporary laborer, pending a determination by the Workers' Compensation Appeal Board regarding CES's status as a statutory employer under Section 302(b) of Pennsylvania's Workers' Compensation Act.
This decision means the personal injury lawsuit will proceed in civil court without a stay. The court's quashing of the appeal indicates that the procedural mechanism used by CES and Golden Eagle Staffing was not appropriate for delaying the civil proceedings. Regulated entities facing similar situations, where employer status is contested between civil liability and workers' compensation claims, should note that appeals related to statutory employer determinations may not automatically stay underlying civil actions.
What to do next
- Review case law on statutory employer doctrine and its impact on civil proceedings.
- Assess current contractual arrangements with staffing agencies for clarity on employer responsibilities.
- Consult legal counsel regarding potential stays of civil actions pending workers' compensation appeals.
Source document (simplified)
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by Bowes](https://www.courtlistener.com/opinion/10813650/geronimo-j-v-commonwealth-environmental-systems/#o1)
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March 23, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
Geronimo, J. v. Commonwealth Environmental Systems
Superior Court of Pennsylvania
- Citations: 2026 Pa. Super. 56
- Docket Number: 31 EDA 2025
Judges: Bowes
Lead Opinion
by [Mary Janes Bowes](https://www.courtlistener.com/person/8225/mary-janes-bowes/)
J-A25024-25 2026 PA Super 56
JUSTO ALCALA GERONIMO : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
COMMONWEALTH ENVIRONMENTAL :
SYSTEMS, L.P., AND GOLDEN EAGLE :
STAFFING : No. 31 EDA 2025
:
:
APPEAL OF: COMMONWEALTH :
ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS, L.P. :
Appeal from the Order Entered December 16, 2024
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Civil Division at
No(s): 240800427
BEFORE: LAZARUS, P.J., BOWES, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.*
OPINION BY BOWES, J.: FILED MARCH 23, 2026
Commonwealth Environmental Systems, L.P. (“CES”) appeals from the
interlocutory order denying a self-styled “Joint Motion to Stay Proceedings”
filed by CES and co-defendant Golden Eagle Staffing.1 This joint motion
sought to stay a personal injury action filed by Justo Acala Geronimo, a
temporary laborer, in civil court, pending an appeal to the workers’
compensation appeal board (“the Board”) as to whether CES, as the owner of
the premises, or Golden Eagle Staffing is the statutory employer pursuant to
- Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
1 Golden Eagle Staffing did not participate in this appeal.
J-A25024-25
Section 302(b) of Pennsylvania’s Workers’ Compensation Act (the “Act”).2 For
the following reasons, we quash the appeal.
Mr. Geronimo’s civil action alleges that he was injured on February 3,
2023, while working at CES’s landfill as a temporary laborer employed by
Golden Eagle Staffing, which contracted with CES to staff the landfill. See
Complaint, 8/2/24, at ¶¶ 9-12. While Mr. Geronimo was tending to waste
material at the landfill, a large fence fell on him, causing severe injuries that
led to the amputation of his left leg below the knee. Id. at ¶¶ 13, 18.
However, before initiating a civil suit, Mr. Geronimo first filed with the
Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry a claim for worker’s
compensation. On July 12, 2024, a workers’ compensation judge (“WCJ”)
determined that CES was the statutory employer, and therefore financially
responsible to Mr. Geronimo under the Act. One day prior to the
commencement of the tort action against both CES and Golden Eagle Staffing,
CES, through its workers’ compensation insurer, appealed the WCJ decision.
That appeal remains pending before the Board. Subject to the Board’s
decision, CES is currently determined to be the legal employer under the Act.
2 Codified at 77 P.S. §§ 461-62, the statutory employer doctrine provides that,
based on the determination of five enumerated factors, a contractor who
subcontracts part of the work may be liable for workers’ compensation
benefits paid to the subcontractor’s injured employees in exchange for tort
immunity. See Feldman v. CP Acquisitions 25, L.P., 325 A.3d 691, 703
(Pa.Super. 2024) (“If either section . . . is applicable, a statutory employer “is
immune from suit by an injured worker for common law negligence[.]”).
-2-
J-A25024-25
Meanwhile, back in the trial court, on November 4, 2024, CES filed the
pertinent joint motion requesting the trial court to stay the tort action at the
discovery stage until the Board decides whether CES or Golden Staffing was
the statutory employer. The motion asserted that because the Act limits an
employer’s financial liability to an injured employee to statutory remedies, the
Board’s decision is “crucial to determining which parties are responsible for
compensating [Mr. Geronimo] for his injuries pursuant to the . . . Act, and
which may remain potentially exposed to . . . the present litigation.” Joint
Motion to Stay, 11/4/24, at ¶ 16. The defendants below argued that
proceeding with the tort action would prejudice whichever party was
ultimately determined to be the statutory employer, as it would be immune to
Mr. Geronimo’s tort claims.3 They reasoned, “litigation here against both
[d]efendants simultaneously would expend unnecessary resources by all the
parties, as one [d]efendant will inevitably be found to be [Mr. Geronimo’s]
employer, preventing [him] from pursuing claims against the same in the
instant matter.” Id. at ¶ 18.
3 The Act exempts employers from tort liability thusly:
The liability of an employer under this act shall be exclusive and
in place of any and all other liability to such employes, his legal
representative, husband or wife, parents, dependents, next of kin
or anyone otherwise entitled to damages in any action at law or
otherwise on account of any injury or death[.]
77 P.S. § 481(a) (footnotes omitted).
-3-
J-A25024-25
The trial court denied the motion. CES filed a timely appeal and
complied with the trial court’s order to file a concise statement of errors
complained of pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b). It presents five issues for our
review:
Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law and/or abused
its discretion because it has allowed [Mr. Geronimo] to illegally
pursue a tort claim against its employer in direct violation of the
Workers’ Compensation Act, 77 P.S. § 481(a)?Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law and/or
otherwise abused its discretion by denying Appellant’s Motion to
Stay Proceedings until the resolution of the appeal before the
Workers’ Compensation Board of Appeals, which will confirm
Appellee’s rightful employer, and thereby which entity’s financial
liability for Plaintiff’s injuries will be exclusive and in place of any
and all other liability?Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law and/or abused
its discretion by refusing to genuinely take into account
Appellant’s arguments in support of its Motion to Stay
Proceedings?Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law and/or abused
its discretion by taking into account improper/impermissible
arguments by [Mr. Geronimo] within [his] untimely opposition to
the Motion to Stay Proceedings?Whether the trial court further erred as a matter of law and/or
abused its discretion by continuing to adjudicate motions filed by
[Mr. Geronimo] after the case had been appealed to the Superior
Court, thereby exacerbating the potential for confusion, delay,
and contradictory rulings?
Appellant’s brief at 3.
As the December 16, 2024 order denying CES’s motion to stay the tort
litigation is interlocutory, we begin our analysis by assessing whether it is an
appealable, collateral order pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate
-4-
J-A25024-25
Procedure 313.4 The appealability of an order pursuant to the collateral order
doctrine is a question of law, over which our standard of review is de novo
and our scope of review is plenary. See Lobos Management v. Powell, 330
A.3d 438, 441 (Pa.Super. 2025).
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court codified the collateral order doctrine
in Rule 313, which provides as follows:
(a) General Rule. An appeal may be taken as of right from
a collateral order of a trial court or other government unit.
(b) Definition. A collateral order is an order separable from
and collateral to the main cause of action where the right involved
is too important to be denied review and the question presented
is such that if review is postponed until final judgment in the case,
the claim will be irreparably lost.
Pa.R.A.P. 313.
Our High Court recently outlined the relevant principles as follows:
The definition of a collateral order contains three prongs. To
qualify as a collateral order: “(1) the order must be separable
from, and collateral to, the main cause of action; (2) the right
involved must be too important to be denied review; and (3) the
question presented must be such that if review is postponed until
after final judgment, the claim will be irreparably lost.”
4 The order is not appealable as of right pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 311, and CES
did not request permission to appeal the interlocutory order as authorized by
Pa.R.A.P 312. Rather, it invoked Rule 313, relating to collateral orders, as the
basis for this court’s jurisdiction. See Appellant’s brief at vi. Prior to the
appeal being assigned to this panel, Mr. Geronimo filed with this Court an
“Application to Quash” the appeal as interlocutory. On March 3, 2024, this
Court denied the request for relief without prejudice to Mr. Geronimo’s ability
to file a new application after the appeal was assigned to the merits panel.
Mr. Geronimo revived the quashal request in his appellee brief, and CES filed
a reply brief arguing in favor of finding that the appealed-from order satisfies
Rule 313’s definition of a collateral order.
-5-
J-A25024-25
Commonwealth v. Harris, 32 A.3d 243, 248 (2011) (citing
Pa.R.A.P. 313(b)). The collateral order doctrine is to be narrowly
construed, and each of the three prongs of the standard must be
clearly present. J.C.D. [v. A.L.R.], 303 A.3d[ 425,] 430 ([Pa].
2023).
Chilutti v. Uber Techs., Inc., 349 A.3d 826, at 831-32 (Pa. 2026) (citation
altered).
As noted, the three essential elements of a collateral order are
“separability, importance, and irreparable loss.” Commonwealth v.
Pownall, 278 A.3d 885, 902 (Pa. 2022). Instantly, CES appeals the trial court
order denying the joint motion to stay the trial court proceedings. Orders
concerning the stay of a civil proceeding are generally considered separable.
See, e.g., Keesee v. Dougherty, 230 A.3d 1128 (Pa.Super. 2020) (“[I]ssue
concerning the denial of their motion to stay the civil proceedings . . . can be
decided without reaching the merits of [the] underlying causes of action.
Therefore, the first prong of the collateral order doctrine has been satisfied.”)
As to the second and third prongs of the collateral order doctrine, CES
contends that the right it asserts concerning the Act’s application is too
important to be denied review because it implicates the “ongoing litigation of
a claim against a statutory employer . . . [that] is in direct violation of [the
Act”]. Appellant’s reply brief at 2. Asserting that “it is inarguable that the
violation of an existing statute implicates public policy,” CES continues that it
would suffer irreparable harm if it was forced to incur significant litigation
expenses in defending ongoing tort litigation that might prove unnecessary.
-6-
J-A25024-25
Id. at 2-3; see also Appellant brief at 5, 7, 8-9 (outlining costs and sanctions
associated with ongoing discovery).
Mr. Geronimo counters that (1) the harm CES alleges is purely
speculative; and (2) CES failed to demonstrate that the claim will be
irreparably lost absent immediate appellate review. See Appellee brief at 13-
14, 16-17.5 For the following reasons, we agree that CES failed to establish
either of the “importance” or the “irreparable loss” prongs of the collateral
order doctrine.
Historically, neither speculative claims nor a party’s interest in limiting
the costs of litigation has been deemed a sufficient cause for a collateral
appeal. See Gunn v. Auto. Ins. Co. of Hartford, Connecticut, 971 A.2d
505, 511 (Pa.Super. 2009) (“Appellant's interest in conserving the resources
of the parties and avoiding potentially unnecessary litigation preparation does
not constitute a sufficiently compelling interest so important and deeply rooted
in public policy as to qualify for immediate appellate review.”). As we
explained in Gunn, generally, “speculative concerns do not rise to the level of
a right too important to be denied immediate appellate review.” Id. at 512.
Further, beyond the speculative litigation expenses, CES’s right to invoke
statutory immunity under the Act will not be irrevocably lost because CES can
5 Upon the application of Mr. Geronimo’s counsel, Harris Pogust, Esquire, we
admitted Brenna Legaard, Esquire, pro hac vice for purposes of this appeal in
association with Attorney Pogust, who remained attorney of record.
-7-
J-A25024-25
always invoke immunity once the Board determines that it is the statutory
employer.
As to the potentially unnecessary costs of litigation if CES were not
permitted to immediately appeal the interlocutory order denying the stay, our
Supreme Court recently addressed a similar issue in Chilutti. There, it held
that the trial court order staying civil litigation pending the result of arbitration
was not a collateral order pursuant to Rule 313(b). In so doing, the High
Court distinguished the facts of that case from the facts involved in Pridgen
v. Parker Hannifin Corp., 905 A.2d 422, 427 (Pa. 2006), adhered to on
reargument, 916 A.2d 619 (Pa. 2007), which we discuss infra, and expressly
rejected the proposition that the potential expenditure of substantial litigation
expenses is sufficient to meet the third prong of the collateral order doctrine.
Id. at *6. It explained,
[t]his Court has focused on the cost of litigation in assessing the
third prong of the collateral order doctrine on at least one
occasion, [Pridgen,] but that ruling was premised upon federal
law supporting a clear policy of cost containment in aviation
litigation. If expenditure of resources when such expenditure
could be avoided through an interlocutory appeal sufficed for
Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 313 purposes, then
every interlocutory order presumably would satisfy the irreparable
loss prong of the collateral order rule. The exception would devour
the rule.
Chilutti, 349 A.3d at 834 (quoting J.C.D. , 303 A.3d at 442-43 (Pa. 2023)
(Wecht, J. concurring)) (cleaned up). As the arbitration dispute involved
neither a legislative policy to contain litigation costs or a claim of immunity,
-8-
J-A25024-25
the Supreme Court concluded that “Pridgen simply is inapplicable to this
matter.” Id.
Surprisingly, although Chilutti had not been decided when the parties
briefed their respective positions, neither party nor the trial court discussed
the Supreme Court’s holding in Pridgen, which arguably supports the notion
that, in certain situations similar to the case at bar, the expenditure of
substantial litigation expenses may satisfy the third prong of the collateral
order rule. Considering our de novo review of an order’s appealability
pursuant to the collateral order doctrine, and Pridgen’s potential applicability
here, further review of that case is warranted.
Pridgen involved the denial of a motion for summary judgment that
was based upon the eighteen-year statute of repose outlined in the General
Aviation Revitalization Act of 1994 (“GARA”). The purpose of GARA was, at
least in part, to “limit excessive product liability costs, while at the same time
affording fair treatment to persons injured in general aviation aircraft
accidents.” H.R.Rep. No. 103–525(I). Phrased differently, the statute of
repose was enacted in order to combat “the tremendous increase in the
[aviation] industry's liability insurance costs.” Id. The central idea was,
“freed from excessive liability costs, manufacturers will be able to sell aircraft
at lower prices[,] . . . spend more on research and development[, and] . . .
compete with foreign companies.” Id. As our High Court explained in its
opinion on reargument, “the legislative history makes clear that Congress
-9-
J-A25024-25
enacted GARA to ameliorate the impact of long-tail liability on a declining
American aviation industry in furtherance of the national interest.” Pridgen
v. Parker Hannifin, Corp., 916 A.2d 619, 622 (Pa. 2007) (Pridgen II).
We previously summarized Pridgen’s relevant facts as follows:
A thirty-one-year-old Piper PA32–260 airplane crashed on
departure from a local Ohio airport in 1999, killing or seriously
injuring all aboard. Representatives of the victims commenced
civil actions in negligence, strict liability and breach of warranty
against the designer, manufacturer, seller, overhauler, and
repairer of the Lycoming engine that was installed in the aircraft.
Defendants asserted GARA's statute of repose as a bar to the
action.
In re Reglan Litig., 72 A.3d 696, 700 (Pa.Super. 2013). The trial court
denied summary judgment, we quashed the appeal, and our Supreme Court
reversed. In concluding that the order was immediately appealable pursuant
to Rule 313(b), the High Court reasoned,
the substantial cost that [a]ppellants will incur in defending this
complex litigation at a trial on the merits comprises a sufficient
loss to support allowing interlocutory appellate review as of right,
in light of the clear federal policy to contain such costs in the public
interest. Consistent with [a]ppellees’ arguments, we realize that
future litigants may seek to extend our determination here more
broadly to other statutes of repose. Nevertheless, balancing the
potential vindication of the interest in freedom from tort claims
created by Congress through GARA against the state interest in
curtailing piecemeal appellate review, we find that the former
prevails relative to the review of controlling legal issues in the
present cases.
Pridgen, 905 A.2d at 433 (footnote omitted).
Thus, on its face, Pridgen would appear to support the conclusion that
the issue concerning the requested stay of the tort proceedings pending the
- 10 - J-A25024-25
determination of the statutory employer involves an important issue that will
be irreparably lost if review of the stay denial is postponed until final
judgment. Indeed, like Pridgen, the instant case involves potential immunity
under a statutory framework that implicates litigation cost savings. However,
for the reasons that follow, Pridgen’s perceived applicability to this case is
ephemeral.
First, while undoubtedly meaningful to CES, the costs associated with
the instant tort litigation are significantly less substantial than those incurred
in complex litigation, like product liability cases involving the design,
manufacture, and repair of aviation engines. Indeed, as to the specific
discovery-related costs that CES seeks to avoid at the early stage of the tort
litigation, i.e., responding to interrogatories, requests for admissions, and
production of documents, either CES or its insurer will nevertheless incur in
defending the workers’ compensation claim. Hence, the relative resources
sought to be preserved by staying the litigation are markedly different in this
case from those associated with the complex litigation at issue in Pridgen.
More importantly, unlike the statute of repose at issue in Pridgen, tort
immunity is not the Act’s fundamental objective. While immunity is an
important component of the Act, it is merely a pecuniary means to a
benevolent end. Indeed, the Act’s immunity provisions do not inure to the
statutory employer’s independent benefit. In actuality, the Act provides tort
immunity not for the financial benefit of any specific employer, company, or
- 11 - J-A25024-25
industry, but rather as an incentive for employers to compensate injured
employees under the statutory scheme. This humanitarian objective in no
way mirrors GARA’s clear federal policy to contain litigation costs for what was
then viewed as a struggling industry.
Accordingly, insofar as cost containment is not the fundamental
objective of the Act’s immunity provision, this case aligns with the general
rule outlined in Chilutti, rather than the narrow policy-based exception
favoring a specific industry that was at issue in Pridgen. It necessarily follows
that, like the Chilutti Court concluded in that case, Pridgen is inapplicable
here. See Chilutti 349 A.3d at 834 (reasoning, “[i]f expenditure of resources
when such expenditure could be avoided through an interlocutory appeal
sufficed for Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 313 purposes, then
every interlocutory order presumably would satisfy the irreparable loss prong
of the collateral order rule [and t]he exception would devour the rule.”)
For all the foregoing reasons, the trial court's order denying the joint
request for a stay does not qualify as a collateral order.
Appeal quashed.
- 12 - J-A25024-25
Date: 03/23/2026
- 13 -
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