Delaware Code § 19-2347

Review by Board of agreements or awards; grounds; modification of award
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(a) On the application of any party in interest on the ground that the incapacity of the injured employee has subsequently terminated,
increased, diminished, or recurred, or that the status of the dependent has changed, the Board may at any time, but not oftener than once
in 26 weeks, review any agreement or award. Each 26-week period is to be calculated so that no 2 hearings to review an agreement or
award may be held within 26 weeks of each other. This subsection does not restrict when a party in interest can file a petition to review
but rather when the Board can convene to hear the petition to review.
(b) On the review under subsection (a) of this section, the Board may make an award ending, diminishing, increasing, or renewing
the compensation previously agreed on or awarded, and designating the persons entitled to the award, subject to this chapter, and shall
state its conclusions of facts and rulings of law. The Department shall immediately send to the parties a copy of the award by personal
delivery, by secure e-mail with electronic receipt, or by certified mail.
(c) This section does not apply to a commutation of payments under § 2358 of this title.
(d) Compensation payable to an employee, under this chapter, does not terminate until and unless the Board enters an award ending
the payment of compensation after a hearing on review of an agreement or award. However, a petition to review, hearing, or an order by
the Board is not necessary to terminate compensation if the parties to an award or an agreement consent to the termination.
(e) The Department shall accept a petition to review when it is accompanied by proof of service of the petition as required under
subsection (h) of this section and the petitioner has provided all of the following information on the petition's face:
(1) The name of the petitioner and respondent.
(2) The Board file number assigned to the agreement under review.
(3) The date of the industrial accident.
(4) Whether the petitioner is the employee, dependent, employer, or insurer.
(5) The insurance carrier's name and file number, if applicable.
(6) The Social Security number of the employee, if applicable.

(7) On filing of a petition to review based on "failure to sign an agreement or receipt," supporting documents, including the unsigned
agreement or receipt at issue, and proof of service of the petition as required under subsection (h) of this section.
(8) Whether the petitioner seeks to review the agreement or award on the ground that employee's disability has terminated, increased,
diminished, or recurred; that a dependent's status has changed; or other relief, except for additional medical benefits under § 2322(c)
of this title or utilization review appeals under § 2322F(j) of this title for which the Board shall require petitions to determine additional
compensation.
(9) For the following petitions under this section, a copy of the medical report must be attached if it is the basis for the petition and
in existence at the time of filing:
a. Petitions seeking to terminate or diminish compensation benefits for disability that is total under § 2324 of this title or partial
under § 2325 of this title on the ground that the employee is physically able to work, when the basis of the petition is a medical
report in existence at the time of the filing of the petition.
b. Petitions seeking to determine whether an employee is entitled to compensation allowable for permanent injury under § 2326
of this title.
(f) Within 5 business days of the date a petition to review has been received, the Department shall notify the petitioner's attorney or, if
the petitioner is pro se, the petitioner directly, of whether the petition has been accepted or rejected. If the petition is rejected, the notice
must state each reason for the rejection with specificity. The Department shall issue the notice electronically if the petitioner is represented
by an attorney. The Department shall serve notice on a pro se petitioner by certified mail, unless the petitioner has elected to receive
electronic notice from the Department, in which case the Department shall issue the notice electronically.
(g) The Board may review an issue regarding the scheduling of a hearing under § 2348(c) of this title. The Board may dismiss a petition
for insufficient documentation on motion by the opposing party.
(h) A petition to review may be served by any of the following means:
(1) On the other party to the agreement or award by 1 of the following:
a. Certified mail or other private mailing services with evidence of proof of receipt. Proof of receipt is satisfied by signature,
rejection, or lack of claim of certified mail or private mail requiring signature by the recipient. Proof of the actual signature, rejection,
or lack of claim is not required, only a statement from the mail carrier that the mail was delivered, rejected, or unclaimed, including
proof of delivery with printout from the United States Postal Service's or equivalent private mail carrier's website.
b. Anyone authorized to serve a subpoena under § 2320(2)b. of this title. Proof of receipt is satisfied by an affidavit of service by
anyone authorized to serve a subpoena under § 2320(2)b. of this title who served the petition.
(2) On the other party's attorney by electronic delivery with acknowledgment from the attorney on the face of the petition that the
petition has been accepted.
(i) When both parties are represented by counsel, the Department shall schedule, within 5 days after acceptance of a petition to review,
a pretrial conference with notice to each party to schedule the time, date, and place for the hearing on the petition to review.
(j) Whenever a respondent is pro se at the time of the filing of a petition to review, the Department shall schedule, within 5 days after
acceptance of the petition, a pretrial conference with notice to each party to schedule the time, date, and place for the hearing on the
petition to review. If the pro se respondent does not appear at the pretrial conference, the petition to review must be scheduled for a
default hearing on the petition. The Department shall serve notice of the default hearing on all parties. If the pro se respondent does not
appear at the default hearing, the Board may grant the petition to review. If the pro se respondent appears at the default hearing, the Board
shall decide whether to grant the default judgement or schedule a merit hearing. If the Board determines a merit hearing is necessary, the
Department shall schedule the hearing and provide notice of the hearing to all parties.
(k) On an employer's petition to review an agreement for total or partial disability benefit entitlement on the ground that the employee is
physically able to return to work, compensation shall be paid from the Workers' Compensation Fund by the Department to the employee
on acceptance of the employer's petition to review as follows:
(1) The Department shall initiate compensation retroactive to the date the petition to review was accepted by the Department. The
Department shall issue compensation on receipt of a properly completed eligibility certification form, which has been signed and dated
by the employee.
(2) If there is an agreement approved by the Board on file, the Workers' Compensation Fund shall pay this compensation to the
employee at the compensation rate documented on the face of the agreement approved by the Board that is under review. If an agreement
is not on file, the Workers' Compensation Fund shall pay the compensation at the rate the employer had been paying as of the date
of the petition until the Board makes a determination that reformation of the rate is appropriate or the Fund is notified by counsel for
the employee or the employee of a reduction in the amount owed due to the employee's return to work. If the compensation rate that
employer had been paying the employee as of the date of the filing of the petition does not comply with § 2302(b)(3) of this title, the
Workers' Compensation Fund shall pay employee wage compensation that complies with § 2302(b)(3) of this title. On notification to
the Fund by counsel for the employee or the employee of the employee's return to work, the Fund may cease payment of total disability
benefits as of the date of the employee's return. The Fund shall issue any payment for partial disability when the Fund receives pay
stubs or other evidence of wage payments from the employee. The employee must continue to submit pay stubs or other evidence

of wage payments for the Fund to continue to issue partial disability payments. Unless the employee has returned to work under this
section, the Workers' Compensation Fund shall continue to pay the compensation by the terms of the agreement or award under review
until the parties to an award or agreement consent to the termination, the petitioner withdraws the petition, or the Board enters an order
on an employer's petition to review.
(3) After the parties to an award or agreement consent to the reinstatement of compensation or the employer withdraws its petition,
the employer shall repay to the Workers' Compensation Fund the amount paid out by the Department on written request for payment
issued by the Workers' Compensation Fund. If the Board orders the employer's petition dismissed, the employer shall reimburse the
Workers' Compensation Fund at the rate and during the period ordered by the Board within 30 days of the later of when the award
becomes final and conclusive between the parties under § 2349 of this title or on written request for payment issued by the Workers'
Compensation Fund. Every petition to review must be withdrawn whenever the parties to an agreement settle the issues of the petition
to review without a hearing before the Board or whenever an employee consents to a termination after a petition to review has been
filed with the Board.
(4) If, during the pendency of a petition to review for which the employee is receiving compensation from the Workers' Compensation
Fund, the parties agree that a new totally or partially incapacitating event, whether surgical or otherwise, is compensable, the employer
shall, within 10 days, notify the Department of the date of the event, the date disability from the event resumed, whether that disability
is total or partial in character, and, if applicable, the date disability subsequently terminated. The employer shall provide this notice
in 1 of the following ways:
a. By filing 1 or more employer's supplemental report(s) of injury under § 2313(a) of this title to which all protections afforded
by § 2313(d) of this title continue to apply.
b. In any other written manner that provides the Department with substantial notice of the date of the event, the date disability from
the event resumed, whether that disability is total or partial in character, and, if applicable, the date disability subsequently terminated.
(5) On receipt of a notice under paragraph (k)(4) of this section, the Workers' Compensation Fund is entitled to reimbursement from
the employer only for that period during which the notice states that the employer would have provided weekly compensation as a direct
result of the incapacitating event without the employer being required to withdraw the petition or waiving any other rights, claims, or
defenses of any sort should the parties proceed to hearing on the merits of the remainder of the petition. If, during the pendency of
the petition, the notice or a subsequent notice states that the disability from the new incapacitating event terminated before the hearing
date scheduled for the Board's review, the Workers' Compensation Fund's responsibility to pay weekly compensation resumes from
the date the notice states that the disability terminated until the date that the Board's award, following its review, has become final and
conclusive, after which reimbursement to the Workers' Compensation Fund, if any, be ordered by the Board following the hearing,
is to be made under paragraph (k)(3) of this section.
(l) The provisions of subsection (k) of this section pertaining to payments by the Workers' Compensation Fund only applies to employers
insured by insurance carriers and do not apply to self-insured employers. Self-insured employers are responsible for payment of their
own claims under this section.
(m) (1) On an order imposed by the Insurance Commissioner under § 2411(e) of Title 18 requiring payment of restitution following
a finding of insurance fraud, and after all rights of appeal from the order have been waived or exhausted, the Board shall, on motion of
the party to whom restitution was ordered and after hearing and opportunity to be heard, allow a credit against benefits payable under §
2324, § 2325, or § 2326 of this title, for any restitution ordered by the Insurance Commissioner remaining unpaid.
(2) The Board shall review orders establishing a credit under paragraph (m)(1) of this section on motion based on any change in
circumstances that may warrant modification or rescission of a prior order.
(Code 1915, § 3193q; 29 Del. Laws, c. 233; Code 1935, § 6086; 19 Del. C. 1953, § 2347; 50 Del. Laws, c. 66, § 1; 58 Del. Laws,
c. 529, § 1; 59 Del. Laws, c. 454, § 6; 71 Del. Laws, c. 84, §§ 9, 15; 71 Del. Laws, c. 422, § 2; 76 Del. Laws, c. 1, § 17; 81 Del.
Laws, c. 333; 83 Del. Laws, c. 442, § 1.)

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