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Dennie v. Montgomery County - Workers' Compensation Offset Law

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Filed March 2nd, 2026
Detected March 3rd, 2026
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Summary

The Maryland Court of Special Appeals ruled that the workers' compensation law in effect at the time of an employee's disablement, not a later amendment, applies to benefit offset calculations. The court reversed a lower court's decision, remanding the case for further proceedings.

What changed

The Court of Special Appeals of Maryland addressed the application of Maryland Code, Labor and Employment Article § 9-610, concerning offsets for government employer payments of benefits similar to workers' compensation. The court held that the statute in effect at the time of the employee's disablement (the 1999 Offset Law) applies, not a subsequently amended version. Furthermore, the court determined that decisional law interpreting the statute, such as the Supreme Court's ruling in Spevak v. Montgomery County (2022), applies retroactively to cases pending interpretation, even if decided after the disablement date.

This decision has significant implications for employers in Maryland seeking to offset workers' compensation benefits with other payments made to disabled employees. Compliance officers should review existing offset policies and past decisions to ensure they align with the retroactive application of judicial interpretations. The case was remanded, indicating potential for further litigation or adjustments to benefit calculations based on the controlling statutory and case law at the time of disablement.

What to do next

  1. Review existing workers' compensation offset policies for compliance with the 1999 Offset Law and retroactive application of judicial interpretations.
  2. Assess past benefit offset decisions for potential recalculation based on the Spevak ruling and the principle that the law at the time of disablement controls.
  3. Consult legal counsel regarding specific cases involving benefit offsets and the application of LE § 9-610.

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March 2, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

Dennie v. Montgomery Cnty.

Court of Special Appeals of Maryland

Combined Opinion

                        by [Deborah Eyler](https://www.courtlistener.com/person/7476/deborah-eyler/)

Joseph Dennie v. Montgomery County, Maryland, No. 993, Sept. Term, 2024, Opinion by
Eyler, J. Filed March 2, 2026.

WORKERS’ COMPENSATION — LABOR & EMPLOYMENT (“LE”) ART. § 9-
610 — OFFSET FOR GOVERNMENT EMPLOYER PAYING BENEFITS THAT
ARE SIMILAR TO WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BENEFITS AWARDED
EMPLOYEE — STATUTE IN EFFECT AT TIME OF DISABLEMENT, NOT
SUBSEQUENTLY AMENDED STATUTE, APPLIES — DECISIONAL LAW
INTERPRETING STATUTE APPLIES RETROACTIVELY TO
INTERPRETATION BASED ON NEW FACTUAL SCENARIO — SPEVAK V.
MONTGOMERY COUNTY, 480 MD. 562 (2022), AND REGER V. WASHINGTON
COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION, 455 MD. 68 (2017) — PRINCIPLES SET OUT
IN SPEVAK CONTROL BUT PRODUCE DIFFERENT RESULT FOR PARTIAL
DISABILITY PENSION THAN FOR TOTAL DISABILITY PENSION.

A county employee was granted a service-connected partial disability retirement
benefit for specified injuries and diseases. Soon after retirement, he applied for workers’
compensation benefits for the occupational disease of hearing loss, which was not one of
those specified diseases and had not manifested itself until a later time. The Workers’
Compensation Commission (“the Commission”) determined that the hearing loss was an
occupational disease and granted him permanent partial disability benefits. Under Md.
Code, Labor and Employment Article (“LE”) § 9-610, the employer sought an offset for its
payment of service-connected partial disability retirement benefits against the workers’
compensation benefits on the ground that the two benefits were “similar” within the
meaning of that word in the statute. The employee argued that either the 2023 amendment
to LE § 9-610 (“2023 Offset Law”) requiring “similar benefits” to be for injury to the same
body part, applied, or the legislature’s own 2023 interpretation of the prior 1999 version of
LE § 9-610 (“1999 Offset Law”) applied, and that the benefits were not “similar.” He also
argued that the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the 1999 Offset Law in Spevak did not
apply because it was decided after his date of disablement. The employer argued that the
1999 Offset Law applied, as did Spevak, and it was entitled to the offset. The Commission
denied the offset, and, in an action for judicial review, the circuit court reversed, ruling that
the offset applied.

Held: Judgment reversed and case remanded with instructions. Under LE § 9-601,
the law in effect at the time of the employee’s disablement controls, so the 1999 Offset
Law, not the 2023 Offset Law, applied. A Maryland appellate decision applying an existing
interpretation of a statute to a new factual scenario applies retroactively to cases pending
when the decision is made. In this case, therefore, the Supreme Court’s 2022 interpretation
of the 1999 Offset Law in Spevak applied retroactively. Despite commentary in uncodified
sections of the 2023 Offset Law, the legal principles set forth in Reger, in 2017, and in
Spevak, in 2022, are not different. Both recognize that the offset applies when the benefit
the government employer is paying is traceable to the same injury as the workers’
compensation award.

In Spevak, the employee was granted a service-connected total disability benefit,
which, pursuant to the Montgomery County Code, covers any and all injuries and
occupational diseases the employee sustained as a result of his employment. Even though
the occupational disease in Spevak (also hearing loss) did not manifest itself until after the
employee retired, he had sustained it in the course of his employment. Thus, the total
disability retirement benefit covered it, and the workers’ compensation award covered it,
resulting in “similar” benefits, which meant the offset applied. In this case, the employee
was granted a service-connected partial disability benefit, which does not cover any and
all injuries and occupational diseases the employee sustained as a result of his employment.
Because the partial disability benefit did not cover the hearing loss and the workers’
compensation benefit did, the benefits were not “similar,” and the offset did not apply.
Circuit Court for Montgomery County
Case No.: C-15-CV-23-004121

REPORTED

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF MARYLAND

No. 993

September Term, 2024


JOSEPH DENNIE

v.

MONTGOMERY COUNTY, MARYLAND


Graeff,
Ripken,
Eyler, Deborah S.
(Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ.


Opinion by Eyler, Deborah S., J.


Filed: March 2, 2026

Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
*Tang, Rosalyn, and Albright, Anne JJ. did not
Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State participate in the Court’s decision to designate
Government Article) this document is authentic.
this opinion for publication pursuant to Md. Rule
2026.03.02 8-605.1.
15:22:11 -05'00'
Gregory Hilton, Clerk
Montgomery County (“the County”), the appellee, pays service-connected partial

disability retirement benefits to Joseph Dennie, the appellant. After he retired, Mr. Dennie

was awarded workers’ compensation benefits for the occupational disease of hearing loss,

which was not one of the conditions on which his service-connected partial disability

retirement was based. The primary issue in this appeal is whether, under Maryland Code §

9-610 of the Labor and Employment Article (“LE”), the County is entitled to offset the

retirement benefits it pays Mr. Dennie against the workers’ compensation benefits it was

ordered to pay him. Underlying that issue are two questions: what version of LE § 9-610

applies, and does the Maryland Supreme Court’s decision in Spevak v. Montgomery

County, 480 Md. 562 (2022), control?

We conclude that, even though the workers’ compensation award to Mr. Dennie was

made after the effective date of an amendment to LE § 9-610, the pre-amendment statute

applies, as does the interpretation of the pre-amendment statute in Spevak. We further

conclude that, because Mr. Dennie’s service-connected disability retirement benefit is for

partial disability, under the reasoning in Spevak, which involved a service-connected total

disability retirement benefit, the statutory offset does not apply. Accordingly, we shall

reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County and remand with

instructions.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

For twenty-eight years, Mr. Dennie was employed by the County as a firefighter. In

June 2018, he was granted a service-connected partial disability retirement due to a number
of specified conditions. 1 Mr. Dennie’s date of disability for purposes of his retirement
0F

benefit was March 9, 2016.

On April 6, 2018, Mr. Dennie filed a claim with the Workers’ Compensation

Commission (“the Commission”), alleging that he had sustained the occupational disease

of hearing loss due to his work as a firefighter. 2 After the County opposed the claim, a
1F

hearing was held on October 30, 2018. On November 5, 2018, the Commission issued an

order finding that Mr. Dennie had sustained the occupational disease of hearing loss and

that his date of disablement was April 5, 2018. The Commission ordered the County to pay

1
A letter of June 25, 2018 from the Disability Manager of the Montgomery County
Employee Retirement Plans documents that Mr. Dennie was granted a service-connected
disability retirement “because of the following”:

  1. Right cervical radiculopathy, C6-7
  2. Lumbar radiculopathy
  3. Right ankle sprain, tibiofibular ligament, subsequent osteochondritis dissecans of the right ankle
  4. Right knee pain, degenerative joint disease and patellar chondromalacia
  5. Left ankle pain, not defined
  6. Right shoulder pain with degenerative changes of subacromial bursa and impingement syndrome of supraspinatus tendon on right
  7. Left shoulder pain with impingement syndrome of supraspinatus tendon on left
  8. Hypertension
  9. Hypercholesterolemia
  10. Non-specific changes on EKG
  11. Obstructive sleep apnea
  12. Gastroesophageal reflux disorder
  13. Atypical episodic chest pain may or may not be related to 12
  14. Benign prostatic hypertrophy with obstruction
  15. Isolated syncopal episode 2 Mr. Dennie also submitted a claim for the occupational disease of tinnitus. That claim was settled with the County. 2 Mr. Dennie “causally related medical expenses” and determined that the case would be

held for consideration of whether he had sustained permanent partial disability, to be set at

his request.

On June 30, 2023, Mr. Dennie returned to the Commission seeking a monetary

permanency award for his hearing loss. A hearing was held before the Commission on

October 10, 2023. At that time, the County requested an offset of its liability for workers’

compensation benefits to Mr. Dennie under LE § 9-610. Counsel for Mr. Dennie argued

that the offset request was made too late and both counsel presented arguments as to

whether the offset statute applied and, if so, its effect.

On October 19, 2023, the Commission issued an order granting permanent partial

disability benefits for an “occupational disease sustained on April 5, 2018” “[r]esulting in

10.5% loss of use of the left ear hearing loss; at the rate of $365.00, payable weekly,

beginning April 6, 2018, for a period of 13.125 weeks.” That amount came to $4,790.62.

On October 25, 2023, the October 19 order was withdrawn and replaced with an order that

was identical except it added that the County’s offset request was denied.

In an action for judicial review brought by the County, the circuit court overruled

the Commission’s decision with respect to the offset request. It determined that the County

was entitled to the offset based on its payment of the service-connected partial disability

retirement benefits to Mr. Dennie. Because Mr. Dennie’s retirement benefits exceeded his

workers’ compensation award, the offset reduced the County’s liability for the workers’

compensation benefits to zero. This appeal followed.

3
Mr. Dennie poses three questions that can be reduced to whether the County

properly raised the offset issue below and, if so, whether the circuit court erred in ruling

that the County was entitled to the offset. 3
2F

DISCUSSION

Standard of Review

In an action for judicial review, we review the Commission’s decision, not the

decision of the circuit court. Montgomery Cnty. v. Cochran, 471 Md. 186, 208 (2020). A

reviewing court “has the authority to consider only the issues that were raised and decided

3
Mr. Dennie’s questions presented are:

I. Did the circuit court err in finding that an offset applies to benefits from
different injuries and conditions to completely different parts of the body,
contrary to LE § 9-610’s meaning, given that the General Assembly explicitly
stated in 2023 that it had always meant that where two sets of benefits arise
from two distinct and unrelated injuries to different body parts (orthopedic
for pension and hearing loss for workers’ compensation) those benefits are
not “similar” and LE § 9-610’s offset does not apply?

II. Did the Circuit Court err in by holding Spevak v. Montgomery County
was controlling case law and thereby reversing the Commission’s decision to
grant workers’ compensation benefits to Firefighter Dennie for his hearing
loss, which was unrelated to his disability retirement benefits, in light of the
legal principle that the law in effect on the date of disablement governs –
particularly given the General Assembly’s explicit abrogation of Spevak
(2022) and confirmation that LE § 9-610 should be interpreted consistent
with Reger (2017), which controlled at the time of Firefighter Dennie’s
disablement (2018)?

III. Did the circuit court err in considering Montgomery County’s argument,
presented for the first time on appeal, given that our appellate courts have
continually stated that Maryland law limits judicial review to only issues
raised and encompassed in the Commission’s decision?

4
before the Commission.” Temp. Staffing, Inc. v. J.J. Haines & Co., Inc., 362 Md. 388, 404-

05 (2001). A reviewing court “considers and passes only on matters covered by the issues

raised and decided below or on relevant matters to which there was evidence before the

Commission.” Pressman v. State Accident Fund, 246 Md. 406, 415 (1967).

The standard of review in cases such as this one, where there is an on-the-record

appeal from the Commission, is as follows:

When reviewing workers’ compensation awards in cases where the
claimant sought review on the record (rather than a de novo review involving
a new evidentiary hearing), we look through the decision of the circuit court
and evaluate the Commission’s decision directly. W.R. Grace & Co. v. Swedo,
439 Md. 441, 452-53 (2014). Our task is “to determine whether the
Commission: (1) justly considered all of the facts about the occupational
disease; (2) exceeded the powers granted to it under [the Workers’
Compensation Act]; or (3) misconstrued the law and facts applicable in the
case decided.” LE § 9-745(c). “The court must confirm the decision unless it
determines that the Commission exceeded its authority or misconstrued the
law or facts.” Richard Beavers Constr., Inc. v. Wagstaff, 236 Md. App. 1, 13
(2018) (citing Uninsured Empl’rs’ Fund v. Pennel, 133 Md. App. 279, 288-
89 (2000)).

Montgomery Cnty. v. Rios, 244 Md. App. 629, 633 (2020) (cleaned up) (quoting

Montgomery Cnty. v. Cochran, 243 Md. App. 102, 112 (2019), aff’d in part and rev’d in

part on other grounds, 471 Md. 186 (2020)).

In an appeal from a workers’ compensation ruling where the issue presented is one

of law, “‘we review the decision de novo, without deference to the decisions of either the

Commission or the circuit court.’” Zakwieia v. Baltimore Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 231 Md. App.

644, 648 (2017) (quoting Long v. Injured Workers’ Ins. Fund, 225 Md. App. 48, 57 (2015)).

However, the Commission’s interpretation of the Act is entitled to “‘some deference . . .

5
unless its conclusions are based upon an erroneous conclusion of law.’” Cochran, 471 Md.

at 208 (quoting Elec. Gen. Corp. v. LaBonte, 454 Md. 113, 131 (2017)).

The Law Pertaining to the Offset

In Reger v. Washington County Board of Education, 455 Md. 68 (2017), the

Supreme Court gave a detailed history of the offset provision we are concerned with in this

case. Since the inception of the Maryland Workers’ Compensation Act (“the Act”) in 1914,

it has included a provision that, in some circumstances, allows a government employer to

offset benefits it is paying an employee (or retired employee) against its liability for

workers’ compensation benefits. Originally, the Act only applied to government employers

when their employees were engaged in extra hazardous work. An offset provision stated

that, in that situation, when a State or local law provided a benefit that was equal to or

better than that provided by the Act, the employee would not be entitled to benefits under

the Act. Id. at 102.

In 1971, the General Assembly did away with the extra hazardous work qualification

for public workers but enacted a provision that offset their workers’ compensation benefits

“dollar-for-dollar” “against the benefits otherwise furnished by a public employer[.]” Id. at

105 (cleaned up). That offset statute has been in existence ever since with some changes

along the way. The two most recent versions of the statute are relevant here.

In 1999, the General Assembly passed Senate Bill 314 codified at LE § 9-610(a)(1)

(“the 1999 Offset Law”), which states:

Except for benefits subject to an offset under § 29-118 of the State Personnel
and Pensions Article, if a statute, charter, ordinance, resolution, regulation or
policy, regardless of whether part of a pension system, provides a benefit to

6
a covered employee of a governmental unit or a quasi-public corporation that
is subject to this title under § 9-201(2) of this title or, in case of death, to the
dependents of the covered employee, payment of the benefit by the employer
satisfies, to the extent of the payment, the liability of the employer and the
subsequent injury fund for payment of similar benefits under this title.[ 4] 3F

Stripped of language that does not apply to this case, and put in common parlance, the 1999

Offset Law means that, by paying retirement benefits to Mr. Dennie, the County’s liability

to pay him “similar benefits” for workers’ compensation is satisfied. “Similar benefits” is

the operative and central language.

The 1999 Offset Law remained in effect until October 1, 2023. Before examining

the 2023 change to that law, we shall discuss two Maryland Supreme Court cases

interpreting the 1999 Offset Law and, in particular, what is meant by “similar benefits” in

the context of a former employee receiving retirement benefits from a governmental

employer.

In Reger, decided in 2017, Mr. Reger was employed as a school custodian by the

Washington County Board of Education (“the Board”). While on the job, a cafeteria table

fell on him as he was moving it, causing him to sustain “significant injuries, primarily to

his back and neck, and [rendering him] unable to perform his custodial work.” Reger, 455

Md. at 77. Because of his injuries, he sought an accidental disability retirement but was

awarded an ordinary disability retirement. He also filed a claim for temporary total

disability benefits with the Commission, based on the same injuries. The Board asked the

Commission to offset Mr. Reger’s ordinary disability retirement benefits against his

4
The “similar benefits” language first was included in the 1971 statute. Reger, 455
Md. at 105
.
7
temporary total disability benefits, pursuant to the 1999 Offset Law. The Commission

agreed that the offset applied. Dissatisfied, Mr. Reger petitioned for judicial review in the

Circuit Court for Washington County. The parties filed cross-motions for summary

judgment, and, after a hearing, the court ruled “that ‘[a]s a matter of law in this case, the

benefits are indeed within the statute similar and therefore the statutory offset applies.’” Id.

at 78.

On appeal, we affirmed the judgment of the circuit court in an unreported opinion.

The Supreme Court granted a writ of certiorari to consider whether the Commission

correctly applied the 1999 Offset Law.

The Court began by ascertaining the legislature’s intent in enacting the statutory

offset provision, “in particular the intent behind the ‘similar benefits’ language.” Id. at 101.

It commented in reviewing the legislative history of the Act that:

[F]rom the time of the adoption of the Act, it has been “the policy of the
General Assembly, as expressed in its legislative enactments, that an
employee of the government shall not receive workmen’s compensation
benefits in addition to other benefits furnished by the employer accruing by
reason of an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of
employment.”

Id. at 102 (quoting Nooe v. City of Baltimore, 28 Md. App. 348, 349 (1975), cert. denied,

276 Md. 748 (1976)). After discussing cases that had examined that history and the “similar

benefits” language, the Court explained:

We distill the following three principles from the above-described
legislative history of LE § 9-610, and the cases that have applied and clarified
the statutory offset provision. First, the overall legislative intent behind the
offset provision now contained in LE § 9-610 was “that the General
Assembly wished to provide only a single recovery for a single injury for
government employees covered by both a pension plan and [workers’]

8
compensation,” and to thereby prevent employees from receiving a double
recovery for the same injury. Fikar [v. Montgomery Cnty.], 333 Md. [430,]
435 [(1994)] (quoting Frank [v. Baltimore Cnty.], 284 Md. [655,] 659
[(1979)].

Second, as clarified in Newman [v. Subsequent Inj. Fund, 311 Md. 721
(1988)], the specific language in the statute that “payment of the benefit by
the employer satisfies, to the extent of the payment, the liability of the
employer . . . for payment of similar benefits under this title” reflects a
legislative intent that the offset apply only to “comparable” benefits, which
are “benefits accruing by reason of the same injury.” 311 Md. at 727
(emphasis added). See also Fikar, 333 Md. at 439 (holding that the statutory
offset applied because cash payments the petitioner was paid as part of her
vocational rehabilitation benefits were awarded “because of the same injuries
sustained in the same accident which occurred in the course of her
employment” that was also the basis for her disability pension benefits);
Polomski [v. Mayor & City Council of Baltimore], 344 Md. [70,] 81 (1996); Blevins [v. Baltimore
Cnty.], 352 Md. [620,] 642 (1999). When benefits are not traceable to the same
injury, they are dissimilar, and the statutory offset does not apply. Newman,
311 Md. at 728.

Third, although early cases discussing the statutory offset provision
suggested it should apply to offset workers’ compensation benefits against
any other benefit that compensates the employee for wage loss, this Court
explicitly rejected that rationale in Newman, emphasizing that “our statute
focuses only on dual recoveries for a single on-the-job injury” and “does not
encompass setoffs for every type of wage-loss benefit available.” Id. at 727.

Id. at 116-17 (emphasis in original).

The Court applied the principles it had distilled to evaluate Mr. Reger’s contention

that, as a matter of law, workers’ compensation benefits awarded against a governmental

employer never can be offset by ordinary disability retirement benefits because the latter

9
are not work-related. To address that issue, “the only relevant inquiry is whether ordinary

disability benefits can, as a matter of law, be ‘similar’ to workers’ compensation benefits –

meaning that the two sets of benefits were awarded as a recovery for the same injury or, in

other words, stemmed from the same cause.” Id. at 118. The Court acknowledged its well-

established holdings that

the plain meaning of LE § 9-610 was to prevent a double recovery for the
same injury by applying an offset to any benefit that is “similar” to [a]
workers’ compensation benefit also received by the employee, i.e., when both
sets of benefits were awarded to compensate the employee for the same
injury.

Id. at 119 (emphasis in original). The Court examined the eligibility criteria for ordinary

disability retirement benefits and for temporary total disability benefits and determined

that, in fact, an ordinary disability retirement benefit may be received for a work-related

injury:

As ordinary disability benefits may be awarded for any mental or
physical injury that renders the employee unable to perform the normal duties
of his position, those benefits certainly could be awarded on the basis of the
same workplace accidental injury or occupational disease that would support
an award of workers’ compensation benefits. Therefore, we hold that if the
record reflects that the cause of the incapacity for which ordinary disability
retirement benefits were awarded was the same workplace accidental injury
or occupational disease that was the basis for a workers’ compensation
award, the two sets of benefits are “similar” and the offset in LE § 9-610
applies.

Our holding is consistent with the statutory purpose of the offset
provision to prevent a double recovery for the same injury.

Id. at 121. Thus, Mr. Reger “was paid both ordinary disability benefits and temporary total

disability benefits as compensation for the same back and neck injuries.” Id. at 132. Both

benefits having been awarded for the same injuries, the ordinary disability retirement

10
benefits were “similar benefits” to the temporary total disability benefits, and the statutory

offset applied.

In 2022, the Maryland Supreme Court once again addressed the 1999 Offset Law in

Spevak, 480 Md. 562, a case arising in a context different than Reger but with several

factual similarities to the one at bar. In 2007, Mr. Spevak injured his back in the course of

performing his job as a Montgomery County firefighter. In 2010, he retired on a service-

connected total disability retirement benefit. Several years later, he began experiencing

occupational hearing loss that was caused by his employment as a firefighter and filed a

claim with the Commission. The Commission granted him permanent partial disability

benefits upon a finding that he had sustained a “21% loss of use of the left ear/hearing

loss[.]” Id. at 566 (quotation marks omitted). His benefits were payable at a weekly rate of

$322.00 for 26.25 weeks. The Commission determined that, under the 1999 Offset Law,

the County’s liability for that award was offset by its payment of the service-connected

total disability retirement benefits. In an action for judicial review, the Circuit Court for

Montgomery County affirmed. This Court affirmed as well. Spevak v. Montgomery Cnty.,

251 Md. App. 674, 707 (2021).

The Supreme Court of Maryland took the case to decide whether Mr. Spevak’s

service-connected total disability retirement benefits were “similar” to his permanent

partial disability workers’ compensation benefits under the 1999 Offset Law. Mr. Spevak

argued that, whether the benefits were “similar” was to be determined by the “same injury”

test, and because his injuries were not to the same body part, the benefits were not similar.

The County argued that, because Mr. Spevak’s service-connected total disability retirement

11
benefits compensated him for all disabilities sustained during his employment, there would

be a double recovery for the same loss if the offset were not applied.

In affirming, the Supreme Court reiterated that the “same injury” test is the correct

one to apply in assessing whether benefits are “similar” under the 1999 Offset Law and

that the General Assembly intended that the offset would “preclude duplicative recovery

for the same injury” so as to minimize the burden to taxpayers and the government. Spevak,

480 Md. at 576. The Court read the pertinent provisions of the Montgomery County Code

to mean that a service-connected total disability retirement benefit compensates the retiree

“for all injuries related to his [or her] service as a firefighter.” Id. at 579 (emphasis added).

Even though Mr. Spevak’s hearing loss did not manifest itself until after he retired, the

hearing loss was an occupational disease arising out of and in the course of his employment.

(Otherwise, the Act would not apply at all.) Accordingly, the hearing loss was a service-

related disease for which the service-connected total disability retirement benefit

compensated him. As Mr. Spevak’s retirement pension covered his disease of hearing loss

and the workers’ compensation award compensated him for the same disease, the benefits

were similar and the offset applied.

In the next legislative session, the General Assembly passed Senate Bill 377, which

amended LE § 9-610(a)(1), effective October 1, 2023 (“the 2023 Offset Law”). The bill

added to the existing language of the 1999 Offset Law as follows:

Except for benefits subject to an offset under § 29-118 of the State Personnel
and Pensions Article, if a statute, charter, ordinance, resolution, regulation,
or policy, regardless of whether part of a pension system, provides a benefit
to a covered employee of a governmental unit or a quasi-public corporation
that is subject to this title under § 9-201(2) of this title or, in case of death, to

12
the dependents of the covered employee, payment of the benefit by the
employer satisfies to the extent of the payment, the liability of the employer
and the Subsequent Injury Fund for payment of similar benefits under this
title only if the payment of the benefit by the employer and the payment
for benefits under this title are based, in whole or in part, on the same
body part.

(New language in bold.) The bill included several uncodified sections, among them:

SECTION 2. AND BE IT FURTHER ENACTED, That it is the intent of the
General Assembly that this Act abrogate the holding by the Supreme Court
of Maryland in Spevak v. Montgomery County, 480 Md. 562 (2022).

and

SECTION 3. AND BE IT FURTHER ENACTED, That this Act shall be
applied in a manner that is consistent with the holding by the Supreme Court
of Maryland in Reger v. Washington County Board of Education, 455 Md.
68
(2017).

The Fiscal and Policy Note for SB 377 repeats the language of those two uncodified

sections and, after quoting from Spevak and Reger, states: “The [Supreme Court’s] decision

in the Spevak case overturned the decision in the Reger case by applying a broader

interpretation of ‘similar’ benefits.” SB 377, Fiscal and Policy Note, at 3. The note

describes the Spevak holding as “interpret[ing] ‘similar’ to apply to all service-related

injuries, regardless of whether the benefits were awarded for the same or different injuries.”

Id. (emphasis in original).

The Offset Issue Is Properly Before This Court

On October 10, 2023, at the Commission hearing on the nature and extent of Mr.

Dennie’s disability from his hearing loss, the County first raised the offset issue, asking

that the offset be applied to his award. It did not file a form raising that issue before the

hearing. Mr. Dennie’s lawyer objected because “[n]o issues had been filed[,]” and he had

13
“no idea of this, and this is completely new.” 5 The Commissioner responded, “[l]et’s hear
4F

what [counsel for the County] has to say.” The Commissioner did not make any express

ruling on the objection. Both sides made arguments to the Commissioner about whether

the 1999 Offset Law applied. The Commissioner did not give an oral ruling or statement

of opinion.

In its October 19, 2023 order, the Commission found that Mr. Dennie was entitled

to permanent partial disability “[r]esulting in 10.5% loss of use of the left ear hearing loss;

at the rate of $365.00, payable weekly, beginning April 6, 2018, for a period of 13.125

weeks.” Shortly thereafter, the Commission rescinded that order and issued a revised order

with the same determination and an additional paragraph that reads: “3. LE 9-610 OFFSET:

Denied.”

In its petition for judicial review in the circuit court, the County did not raise the

offset issue. It filed an amended petition, however, in which it argued that it was entitled to

an offset under the 1999 Offset Law. Mr. Dennie responded to that issue in his filing, and

the hearing before the circuit court was devoted entirely to the offset issue. As noted, the

court agreed with the County that it was entitled to the offset.

On appeal, Mr. Dennie contends the County failed to preserve the offset issue for

review in the circuit court because it did not timely raise it before the Commission, and

because the offset issue was not included in its original petition for judicial review. The

5
See COMAR 14.09.03.02B (“After the claim has commenced, any party may raise
an issue by filing an issues form, available on the Commission website.”).

14
County responds that the issue was adequately raised and actually decided below, and,

therefore, is preserved for review.

The Commission implicitly denied Mr. Dennie’s objection to the offset issue being

raised before the Commission by hearing argument on the issue and ruling on it in its final

order. The circuit court considered and decided the issue as well. The issue was subject to

comprehensive arguments of counsel before the Commission and before the circuit court.

Rule 8-131(a) provides that

[o]rdinarily, an appellate court will not decide any [non-jurisdictional] issue
unless it plainly appears by the record to have been raised in or decided by
the trial court, but the Court may decide such an issue if necessary or
desirable to guide the trial court or to avoid the expense and delay of another
appeal.

The record reveals that the offset issue was raised before the Commission and decided by

it, and then was raised before the circuit court and decided by it. The issue is preserved for

review on appeal.

Contentions on the Merits of the Offset Issue

The parties agree that the 2023 Offset Law does not apply retroactively. Somewhat

contradictorily, Mr. Dennie maintains that Spevak does not apply to the 1999 Offset Law

because the General Assembly expressly abrogated it in the uncodified sections of the 2023

Offset Law, which shows that the General Assembly never intended the 1999 Offset Law

to mean what the Spevak Court said it means. He also argues that Spevak does not apply

because, under LE § 9-601, discussed below, the law in effect on his date of disablement,

April 5, 2018, controls and Spevak was not decided until 2022. He maintains that Reger,

decided in 2017 and approved by the legislature in the uncodified sections of the 2023

15
Offset Law, controls, and under that case, the offset does not apply because the injuries for

which he was receiving service-connected disability retirement benefits were different

from the hearing loss for which he was awarded workers’ compensation benefits.

Therefore, the benefits were not “similar.”

The County maintains that no portion of the 2023 Offset Law, codified or

uncodified, applies retroactively, and the General Assembly did not “abrogate” Spevak.

Rather, it added new language to LE § 9-610 that applies going forward. The County agrees

that, under LE § 9-601, the law in effect at the time of disablement applies. It maintains

that that means the 1999 Offset Law governs and that, under Polakoff v. Turner, 385 Md.

467 (2005), affirming, 155 Md. App. 60 (2004), Spevak applies. Moreover, Spevak

specifically addresses the circumstances in which Montgomery County service-connected

disability retirement benefits are similar to workers’ compensation benefits, which is the

situation here. Reger, on the other hand, addressed whether ordinary disability benefits are

similar to workers’ compensation benefits, which is a different issue. The County asserts

that, under Spevak, the offset applies.

The 2023 Offset Law, Including its Uncodified Sections,
Does Not Apply To This Case

LE § 9-601, entitled “Construction of subtitle,” states:

A provision of this subtitle may not be construed to change:

(1) a law relating to an accidental personal injury or an occupational disease,
that occurred before the effective date of the provision and for which a
claim is made under this title; or

(2) the payment basis in effect when an accidental personal injury or an
occupational disease, for which a claim is made under this title, occurred.

16
In Baltimore County v. Fleming, 113 Md. App. 254, 258 (1996), we held that, by enacting

LE § 9-601, “the General Assembly has fixed the compensation rate as of the time of the

accidental injury or occupational disease, and it is the statute in effect at the time of injury

or disease that governs.” (Emphasis added.) We noted that “the effect of § 9-601 is

essentially to freeze the entitlement to benefits as of the date of injury.” Id.

Fleming involved a firefighter employed by Baltimore County who suffered an

accidental injury to his right shoulder in 1984. He began receiving workers’ compensation

benefits in 1986. In 1991 and again in 1995, when his shoulder worsened, he was awarded

permanent partial disability benefits. In the meantime, two things happened. First, in 1991,

the General Assembly changed the language of the offset law then in effect to remove the

word “similar” from the phrase “similar benefits.” 6 Second, in 1995, the claimant took a
5F

length-of-service retirement, for which he received benefits from Baltimore County. When,

later in 1995, the claimant sought additional workers’ compensation benefits based on

worsening of his shoulder condition, Baltimore County sought an offset under the version

of LE § 9-610 that went into effect in 1991. The County took the position that, without the

word “similar” in the offset statute, it was entitled to offset the retirement benefits it was

paying against the workers’ compensation benefits the claimant was receiving.

6
The word “similar” was added back into the statutory language in 1999. The
Supreme Court had held in Blevins v. Baltimore Cnty., 352 Md. 620 (1999), that, even
without the word “similar,” the offset only applied if the workers’ compensation and
government benefits were similar.
17
Before this Court, the parties focused their arguments on whether the 1991

amendment to LE § 9-610 applied retroactively to the workers’ compensation benefits the

claimant was receiving based on his 1984 date of injury. We held that there was no reason

to address the issue of retroactivity because, under LE § 9-601, the controlling law for

purposes of determining the claimant’s benefits, including whether any offset applied, was

the law in effect in 1984, his date of injury.

When a worker experiences an occupational disease, there is no particular date of

injury. The operative date, which is considered the equivalent of the date of injury, is the

date of disablement. Waters v. Pleasant Manor Nursing Home, 361 Md. 82, 98 (2000). The

reasoning in Fleming applies to the case at bar. Mr. Dennie’s April 5, 2018 date of

disablement for his hearing loss is the operative event, and under LE § 9-601, the law in

effect on that date determines his entitlement to benefits. Accordingly, the 1999 Offset Law,

not the 2023 Offset Law (both the codified and uncodified sections) controls. 7 6F

7
A statutory retroactivity analysis would not favor Mr. Dennie’s position in any
event. In Johnson v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, 430 Md. 368 (2013), brought
by the widow of a Baltimore City firefighter, the Supreme Court held that an amendment
adding dependents to the scope of LE § 9-503(e), a different offset provision of the Act,
did not apply retroactively. It summarized as follows the relevant factors for deciding
whether an enactment applies retroactively:

(1) Statutes are presumed to operate prospectively unless a contrary intent
appears; (2) a statute governing procedure or remedy will be applied to cases
pending in court when the statute becomes effective; (3) a statute will be
given retroactive effect if that is the legislative intent; but (4) even if intended
to apply retroactively, a statute will not be given that effect if it would impair
vested rights, deny due process, or violate the prohibition against ex post
facto laws.

(continued…)
18
The Supreme Court’s Interpretation of the 1999 Offset Law In Spevak Is
Controlling Decisional Law

Mr. Dennie asserts that, because he filed his workers’ compensation claim in 2018

and Spevak was not decided until 2022, the Supreme Court’s interpretation of LE § 9-610

in Spevak does not apply to his case. Rather, Reger, which was decided the year before he

filed his claim, applies. In other words, the Spevak decision has no retroactive effect. This

argument assumes that the outcome of this appeal hinges on whether Reger applies and

Spevak does not, which we do not agree with, as we shall explain infra; but we will address

his argument as if which case applies would make a difference.

Whether a statute applies retroactively is not the same question as whether a decision

of a Maryland appellate court interpreting a statute applies retroactively. Polakoff, 385 Md.

467, a lead paint case, addressed this issue. In 1994, the Supreme Court held in Richwind

Joint Venture 4 v. Brunson, 335 Md. 661, 673-74 (1994), that, to make out a cause of action

for negligence against a landlord based on exposure to lead paint, a plaintiff had to offer

proof that the landlord knew or had reason to know of the presence of loose, flaking, or

peeling paint at the leased premises. In 2003, in Brooks v. Lewin Realty III, Inc., 378 Md.

70 (2003), the Court overruled several of its prior decisions, including Richwind, and held

Id. at 381-82 (cleaned up).

The 2023 Offset Law states that it has an effective date of October 1, 2023, which
ordinarily is the operative date from which the statute applies; it is not procedural or
remedial in nature; there is no legislative history showing an intent for the amendment to
apply retroactively; and the amendment appears to have narrowed the application of the
offset, which could the expand the class of beneficiaries and impair vested rights. All of
these factors militate strongly against the 2023 Offset Law having retroactive effect.
19
that, in a lead paint poisoning suit arising in Baltimore City based on negligence for

violating the Baltimore City Housing Code, a plaintiff could make out a prima facie case

without proof of notice on the part of the landlord. The Brooks decision turned on the

Court’s interpretation of the operative provisions of the Baltimore City Housing Code.

The plaintiff in Polakoff, a mother on behalf of her minor child, filed suit in 1995

against, among others, the landlord of the Baltimore City apartment in which the child had

lived from birth to age four. She alleged that the child had been poisoned by lead paint in

that apartment. Due to various procedural twists and turns, the case did not go to trial until

October of 2002. The jury returned a plaintiff’s verdict and awarded substantial damages.

The defendants noted an appeal.

While the appeal was pending in this Court, the Supreme Court issued its decision in

Brooks. One of the issues on appeal became whether Richwind or Brooks controlled.

Specifically, the issue was whether Brooks applied retroactively to cases pending when it

was decided, which would mean the plaintiff made out a prima facie case regardless of

whether she put on evidence of notice, or whether Brooks applied prospectively, in which

case Richwind would dictate that notice had to be proven. This Court explained “that when

a judicial decision applies a rule of law that existed both before and after that decision, but

applies it to a new factual situation in that particular case, the decision applies to the facts

that produced the decision and to all pending cases.” Polakoff v. Turner, 155 Md. App. 60,

66 (2004). The Supreme Court affirmed, agreeing that Brooks applied retroactively to the

case. It explained: “[T]he general rule in Maryland is that a new interpretation of a statute

20
applies to the case before the court and to all cases pending where the issue has been

preserved for appellate review.” Polakoff, 385 Md. at 488.

For decades, the Maryland appellate courts have rendered decisions about whether

benefits are “similar” within the meaning of the 1999 Offset Law and the statutory

provisions that preceded it. The following are some examples. In Newman, 311 Md. 721,

the Supreme Court held that a length-of-service retirement benefit, having no relation to

accidental injury or disability, cannot be the “same benefit” as a workers’ compensation

award, and therefore the offset did not apply. In Mayor and City Council of Baltimore v.

Oros, 301 Md. 460 (1984), two police officers who were injured on the job were awarded

temporary total disability benefits by the Commission, and subsequently were awarded

permanent partial disability benefits. During the period in which they received temporary

total disability benefits, they also were paid in full by the police department under the sick

leave terms of their collective bargaining agreement. The Supreme Court held that the

temporary total benefits and the sick leave benefits were similar, and therefore, the City of

Baltimore was entitled to the offset, but the permanent partial benefits and the sick leave

benefits were not similar, so the City could not apply an excess paid for sick leave as an

offset against the permanent partial benefits. And in Fikar, 333 Md. 430, where a

correctional officer sustained an on-the-job back injury for which she was awarded

vocational rehabilitation benefits by the Commission, the County was entitled to offset the

service-connected disability retirement pension it was paying her against the cash payment

portion of the vocational rehabilitation award, as it was “similar” to the pension, but could

21
not offset the pension against the professional services part of the award, which was not

“similar.”

As these cases illustrate, there are a myriad of factual variables in the offset cases, to

include the nature and timing of the injury or injuries, the type of governmental benefit

conferred, the meaning of the local law creating the benefit, and the type of workers’

compensation benefit awarded, just as examples. The cases that come up on appeal often

present unique factual scenarios. Spevak teed up, for the first time, the question whether a

service-connected total disability retirement benefit under the Montgomery County Code

was similar to a workers’ compensation benefit for the occupational disease of hearing loss

when the hearing loss was sustained in the course of employment but did not manifest itself

until after retirement. The Court’s analysis of that question was an application of the 1999

Offset Law to a new factual scenario, not a declaration of a new principle of law. Therefore,

the holding in Spevak – that because that particular total disability retirement benefit

compensated the retiree for all injuries and diseases caused by the employment, the

retirement benefit covered the hearing loss that the workers’ compensation award covered

– applies retroactively to cases pending when it was decided, including the case at bar.

The Court’s prior decision in Reger does not change that. The factual scenario there

involved an ordinary disability retirement benefit for the same injury as a workers’

compensation benefit, and the question was whether those two benefits ever could be

similar. That was not the issue decided in Spevak and is not the issue here.

Mr. Dennie urges that, even though the 2023 Offset Law does not apply retroactively,

in determining the legislative intent underlying the 1999 Offset Law, we should take into

22
account the uncodified sections of the 2023 Offset Law because they make clear that the

General Assembly disagrees with Spevak. Generally, the appellate cases in Maryland

“make clear that a subsequent amendment or legislative construction of a statute is not

controlling as to the meaning of the prior law.” Am. Recovery Co., Inc. v. Dep’t of Health

& Mental Hygiene, 306 Md. 12, 18 (1986). “[N]evertheless, subsequent legislation can be

considered helpful to determine [the] legislative intent [of the prior statute].” Chesek v.

Jones, 406 Md. 446, 462 (2008). In analyzing the effect of the holding in Spevak on the

case at bar, if any, we will keep in mind what we believe the 2023 Offset Law reveals about

the legislative intent underlying the 1999 Offset Law. We do so notwithstanding that, as we

shall explain, the thumbnail analyses of Reger and Spevak in the uncodified sections of the

2023 Offset Law and its Fiscal and Policy Note are based on the misconception that Spevak

overruled Reger.

Applying the Principles Underlying Spevak, Mr. Dennie’s Workers’
Compensation Award is not Offset By His Partial Disability Retirement
Benefit Payments

The Montgomery County Code (“Code”), Part II, Article III creates the “Employee’s

Retirement System” (“ERS”) for County employees and certain officials. Section 33-43

covers disability retirements, of which service-connected disability retirements are a

subset. A member of the ERS may be retired on a service-connected disability pension if,

among other qualifications, the member (1) “is totally or partially incapacitated as the

natural and proximate result of an accident occurring, or an occupational disease incurred

or condition aggravated while in the actual performance of duty”; (2) “the incapacity is not

due to the member’s willful negligence” and “is likely to be permanent”; and (3) the

23
member cannot perform the duties of the classification to which he or she was assigned or

a comparable position in the same department for which he or she is qualified. Code § 33-

43(f)(1)(A)-(D). Pensions for service-connected disability retirements are based on a

member’s final earnings, which usually means the member’s regular earnings as of the last

date of active service. See Code § 33-35.

The Code provides definitions that distinguish “total incapacity” and “partial

incapacity.” Total incapacity means the member is unable “to perform substantial gainful

activity” due to an impairment that “is unlikely to resolve in the next 12 months” and “may

be permanent.” Code § 33-43(b). By contrast, partial incapacity means the member cannot

“perform one or more essential functions of the position the member holds because of

impairment that: (1) is unlikely to resolve in the next 12 months; (2) may be permanent;

and (3) does not prevent the member from performing other substantial gainful activity. Id.

“Substantial gainful activity” means “a level of productive work that requires significant

physical or mental duties, or a combination of both, performed for pay or profit on a full-

time or part-time basis.” Id. 8 Not surprisingly, the annual pension for a totally incapacitated
7F

member is significantly higher than that for a partially incapacitated member. For a service-

connected total disability retirement, the pension must be at a minimum 70% of the

member’s final earnings. Code § 33-43(i)(1)(B). By contrast, the annual pension for a

8
The definition goes on to say that “[a]n individual is able to perform a substantial
level of work if the individual is able to earn more than the U.S. Social Security
Administration’s current monthly earnings limit for a disabled person.” Code § 33-43(b).
Also, “[t]he County must give the term substantial gainful activity the same meaning as
the term is given by the U.S. Social Security Administration.” Id.
24
service-connected partial disability retirement must be at least 52.5% of the member’s final

earnings. Code, § 33-43(i)(4).

The Supreme Court’s decisions in Spevak and Reger implemented the same

principle: that for the LE § 9-610 offset to apply, the workers’ compensation benefits and

the government benefits must be traceable to the same injury or disease, so that, if not for

a set off, the employee would receive a double recovery. They did so in two different factual

situations, however. In Reger, the employee injured two body parts at the same time and

was awarded workers’ compensation benefits for both; and he also retired on an ordinary

disability benefit. On review by the Supreme Court, the question was whether that

retirement benefit, which can be granted for a non-work-related injury or disease, ever can

be “similar” to a workers’ compensation benefit for a work-related injury. The Court

concluded that, notwithstanding that ordinary disability benefits can be granted for non-

work-related conditions, it also can be granted for work-related injuries, which is what had

happened. In that situation, the two benefits were similar, and the offset applied. Without

the offset, Mr. Reger would have been receiving two benefits for the same injuries.

As we see it, the holding in Spevak did not overrule the holding in Reger and indeed

was not contrary to or inconsistent with it. At an identifiable time, Mr. Spevak injured his

back at work and at another unidentifiable time, he developed the occupational disease of

hearing loss that was caused by his work but did not manifest itself until after he had retired.

He received workers’ compensation benefits for both, at two different times. Unlike the

issue in Reger, in Spevak there was no question that the government benefit Mr. Spevak

was receiving – a service-connected total disability retirement – related to injuries suffered

25
and diseases contracted on the job. The question was whether that retirement benefit

covered only his back injury or covered his back injury and his later-manifesting

occupational disease of hearing loss. If it covered both, the workers’ compensation benefits

and the retirement benefits were duplicative, and the offset would apply. If it only covered

the back injury, then the benefits were not to the same body parts and, therefore, were not

duplicative, and the offset would not apply.

The Spevak Court read the Code to mean that a service-connected total disability

benefit covers all the retirees’ work-related injuries and diseases – even those that were not

known prior to retirement but manifested themselves after retirement. Therefore, the total

disability retirement benefit Mr. Spevak was receiving from the County covered the

occupational disease of hearing loss, which was contracted on the job but manifested itself

later. Because the total disability benefit covered all work-related injuries and diseases, it

covered Mr. Spevak’s back injury and his occupational disease of hearing loss. His

workers’ compensation benefits also covered the back injury and the hearing loss. The

benefits were similar, and the offset applied.

Exactly how the new language in the 2023 Offset Law will be interpreted and applied

in a future case based on the same factual scenario as Spevak must await another day. The

case before us is governed by the 1999 Offset Law and differs from Spevak factually in a

way that is material to the outcome. Unlike Mr. Spevak, Mr. Dennie sustained many

injuries and occupational diseases that happened or manifested themselves prior to his

retirement. Like Mr. Spevak, he also contracted the occupational disease of hearing loss

during his employment that did not manifest itself until after his date of disablement and

26
for which he was awarded workers’ compensation benefits. Unlike Mr. Spevak, he did not

retire on a service-connected total disability retirement. He received a service-connected

partial disability retirement benefit, which only can be awarded to an employee who is not

found to be totally incapacitated, see Code § 33-43(i)(4)(B), and was granted based on

specified injuries and diseases, as delineated in the document supplied by the ERS. See

infra, n.1. The occupational disease of hearing loss was not one of them. Therefore, unlike

in Spevak, it cannot be said in this case that the retirement benefit Mr. Dennie was receiving

covered the occupational disease for which workers’ compensation benefits were awarded.

In other words, the workers’ compensation benefits are traceable to the disease of hearing

loss and the retirement benefits are not. As the injuries are not the same, the benefits are

not the same, and the offset does not apply.

For all these reasons, we shall reverse the judgment of the circuit court with

instructions to enter a judgment affirming the October 25, 2023 order of the Commission

and remanding the matter to it for further proceedings.

JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
MONTGOMERY COUNTY REVERSED AND
REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS NOT
INCONSISTENT WITH THIS OPINION. COSTS TO BE
PAID BY THE APPELLEE.

27

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
Federal and State Courts
Filed
March 2nd, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Employers Government agencies
Geographic scope
State (Maryland)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Employment & Labor
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Labor Law Government Benefits

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