
    Steven B. HEIM, as Assignee of Robert O. Detweiler, D.O. and Detweiler Family Medicine and Associates, P.C., Appellees v. MEDICAL CARE AVAILABILITY AND REDUCTION OF ERROR FUND, Appellant.
    Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.
    Argued Dec. 1, 2010.
    Decided April 28, 2011.
    Zella Smith Anderson, Paul Dorman, Elit R. Felix, Philadelphia, Tawny Kay Mummah, MCare Fund, for Medical Care Availability and Reduction of Error Fund.
    Stephen Edward Raynes, Raynes McCarty, Anthony P. Tabasso, Klehr, Harrison, Harvey, Branzburg & Ellers, L.L.P., Joseph Z. Traub, Raynes McCarty, Philadelphia, for S. Heim, as assignee of Robert O. Detweiler, DO & Detweiler Family Medicine Assoc. PC.
    Richard S. Watt, Kerns, Pearlstine, Ono-rato & Hladik, L.L.P., Lansdale, for Robert O. Detweiler.
    BEFORE: CASTILLE, C.J., SAYLOR, EAKIN, BAER, TODD, McCAFFERY, ORIE MELVIN, JJ.
   OPINION

Justice SAYLOR.

The outcome of this direct appeal turns on the interplay among the statutory schemes providing healthcare providers with protection from excess liability and insurer insolvency and the doctrine of joint and several liability.

In 1998, Stephen B. Heim commenced a professional liability action against physician Robert O. Detweiler, D.O.; his family medical practice of Detweiler Family Medicine and Associates, P.C.; and employee-physician Stephen J. Carver, D.O. Proceeding individually and as an estate administrator, Mr. Heim alleged that the doctors’ negligent services, from 1992 through 1996, caused the death of his wife.

In August 2000, upon trial, Mr. Heim secured a verdict of over $1 million. The jury attributed a substantial percentage of fault to Mrs. Heim and apportioned the remaining liability among the defendant physicians.

With delay damages, a molded verdict of approximately $707,000 was entered against all defendants, for which they bore liability jointly and severally. See Maloney v. Valley Med. Facilities, Inc., 603 Pa. 399, 416, 984 A.2d 478, 489 (2009) (“Joint tortfeasors generally are jointly-and-severally liable for the entire amount of a verdict, albeit that a jury may assign only a portion of fault to each”). Subsequently, the judgment on this verdict was affirmed on the defendants’ appeal. See Heim v. Carver, 850 A.2d 19 (Pa.Super.) (table), appeal denied, 581 Pa. 700, 864 A.2d 1205 (2004).

At the time of the events underlying the litigation, Drs. Detweiler and Carver each maintained primary professional liability coverage in the amount of $200,000 per occurrence under a policy issued by a private insurer, as required under the Health Care Services Malpractice Act. See 40 P.S. § 1303.701(a)(1) (superseded). On account of this primary insurer’s subsequent insolvency, however, claims under the policy were assumed by the Pennsylvania Property and Casualty Association (“PPCIGA”), subject, inter alia, to a $300,000 per-claimant limitation. See id. § 991.1803(b). By virtue of a monetary payment — which, coupled with a statutory setoff which is not presently in dispute, amounted to $300,000 — it has been agreed for purposes of this litigation that PPCIGA satisfied its own responsibility in this regard. Significantly, however, the primary insurer’s obligation related to the Heim case exceeded this statutory cap by $100,000, which was attributed to Dr. Carver’s share of the verdict.

Also when the cause of action accrued, under the HCSMA, excess liability protection was provided to health care providers through a government-run contingency fund known as the Medical Professional Liability Catastrophe Loss Fund (the “CAT Fund”). See 40 P.S. § 1303.701(d) (superseded) (delineating the CAT Fund’s general responsibility to pay judgments against qualifying health care providers in excess of the provider’s primary coverage, subject to a $1,000,000 per occurrence cap). Under the specific terms of the governing statute, the CAT Fund was responsible to pay the judgment against each of Drs. Detweiler and Carver to the extent the judgment “exceeds its [or his] basic coverage insurance in effect at the time of the occurrence[.]” Id. (emphasis added). In 2002, the CAT Fund’s statutory liabilities were transferred to the Medical Care Availability and Reduction of Error Fund (the “MCARE Fund” or the “Fund”), per the Medical Care Availability and Reduction of Error Act.

Relative to the Heim case, the Fund determined that it had no responsibility to redress the $100,000 shortfall in primary insurance benefits occasioned by the primary insurer’s insolvency and the manner in which the PPCIGA cap was administered. Thus, consistent with the law of joint and several liability, Mr. Heim elected to commence execution proceedings against assets of Dr. Detweiler and his practice group to recover the unpaid portion of his judgment, including the $100,000 attributed to Dr. ■ Carver, as well as attendant delay damages and post-judgment interest.

Dr. Detweiler and the medical group, for their parts, commenced a declaratory judgment action against the Fund and Mr. Heim in the Commonwealth Court, challenging the Fund’s position relative to the $100,000 shortfall. During the course of the declaratory judgment proceedings, Mr. Heim reached a settlement with Dr. Det-weiler and the practice and, via an associated assignment of the latter’s claims, Mr. Heim assumed the role of the petitioner. Furthermore, he took the position that the Fund’s liability to him (by virtue of the assignment) was $125,000, or the amount of the settlement payment.

Upon the parties’ submission of a stipulation of facts and cross-motions for summary judgment, the Commonwealth Court entered judgment in Mr. Heim’s favor. In a single-judge memorandum opinion, the intermediate court pronounced that the outcome was controlled by the doctrine of joint and several liability. Initially, it referenced Carrozza v. Greenbaum, 591 Pa. 196, 916 A.2d 553 (2007), for the proposition that PPCIGA is treated the same as the insurer it replaces for purposes of such doctrine. Then, the court concluded, somewhat cryptically, that “the applicability of joint and several liability equally applies to the MCARE Fund for the same reasons given by our Supreme Court in that case.” Heim v. MCARE Fund, No. 358 M.D.2004, slip op. at 9 (Pa.Cmwlth. Jan.21, 2010) (Pellegrini, J.).

The Fund lodged the present direct appeal in this Court. It maintains that, as a straightforward matter of statutory construction, it is simply not authorized to compensate for shortfalls arising on account of primary insurer insolvencies. The Fund reasons that, by definition, it provides (and its predecessor provided) protection against liability in “excess” of “basic coverage insurance” (under the statutory framework delineating CAT Fund obligations, 40 P.S. § 1303.701(d) (superseded)), or “basic insurance coverage” (under the MCARE Act, id. § 1303.712(a)). The Fund highlights that the intermediate appellate courts have confirmed its position in the above regards in several decisions, applying the following logic:

It is clear that the CAT Fund provides only excess coverage. In other words, it is liable to pay claims only when the health care provider’s liability exceeds its basic coverage.... To require the CAT Fund to cover the amount of PPCIGA’s setoff would, in effect, require the CAT Fund to pay for claims below the limits of the health care provider’s basic insurance coverage. This would violate the express terms of the Health Care Services Malpractice Act, 40 Pa.C.S.A. § 1301.701(d).

Storms v. O’Malley, 779 A.2d 548, 567 (Pa.Super.2001); accord Gabroy v. CAT Fund, 886 A.2d 716, 720 (Pa.Cmwlth.2005), aff'd per curiam, 590 Pa. 277, 912 A.2d 768 (2006); Elliott-Reese v. CAT Fund, 805 A.2d 1253, 1257-58 (Pa.Cmwlth.2002), aff'd per curiam, 574 Pa. 705, 833 A.2d 138 (2003). In all relevant regards, the Fund discerns no differences in the governing statutory framework pre-and post-2002, when the MCARE Act was effectuated.

The Fund further notes the absence of any discussion of Storms and Gabroy within the Commonwealth Court’s truncated legal analysis, although both decisions were put prominently before the court. To the extent the intermediate court referred to Elliottr-Reese, in passing, in a footnote, the Fund argues that the court both misconstrued the holding and misunderstood the facts of the Heim case.

As to the doctrine of joint and several liability and Carrozza, once again, the Fund contends that the plain language of the MCARE Act controls. See Brief for the Fund at 16-17 (“Heim’s strained reliance on [Carrozza] fails altogether when ... he treats this Court’s handling of an ambiguity in the Guaranty Association’s statute as somehow analogous, in ways he never explains, to how this Honorable Court should now handle the plain and unambiguous terms of the Meare Act that prescribe the Fund’s non-responsibility for the primary insurance company’s basic insurance limits.”). Finally, the Fund asserts that public policy militates in its favor, given the importance of conserving its assets to the effective performance of its public role. Cf. Hershey Med. Ctr. v. CAT Fund, 573 Pa. 74, 82-83, 821 A.2d 1205, 1210-11 (2003) (discussing the occasion and necessity for the HCSMA).

Mr. Heim, on the other hand, highlights that neither the now-supplanted provisions of the HCSMA nor the MCARE Act provides a method for calculating the Fund’s obligations when liability is apportioned among multiple tortfeasors. According to Mr. Heim, therefore, Carrozza dictates the appropriate outcome, namely, that the doctrine of joint and several liability should prevail over the Fund’s construction of the MCARE Act.

As the Fund indicates, our present task is to interpret the governing statutory framework, as to which our review is plenary. See, e.g., In re Erie Golf Course, 605 Pa. 484, 502, 992 A.2d 75, 85 (2010).

At the outset, the Fund presents a strong argument that the HCSMA did not, and does not, authorize it to compensate for a shortfall arising from an insurer insolvency undermining a health care provider’s own line of primary coverage. This was, in fact, the subject of the Storms opinion. See Storms, 779 A.2d at 567 (“To require the CAT Fund to cover the amount of PPCIGA’s setoff would, in ef-feet, require the CAT Fund to pay for claims below the limits of the health care provider’s basic insurance coverage.” (emphasis added)). The decision in Elliottr-Reese also operated on the same principle. See Elliott-Reese, 805 A.2d at 1257-58 (“It is clear that the CAT Fund provides only excess coverage.” In other words, the CAT Fund was liable to pay claims only “when the health care provider’s liability exceeds its basic coverage.” (emphasis modified)).

We regard it as a separate matter, nonetheless, when the deficiency is in the primary coverage of another health care provider, chargeable to the physician-claimant only on account of joint and several liability.

Preliminarily, there is a potentially significant difference in the statutory language of the HCSMA pre-and post-implementation of the MCARE Act. The previous statute expressly directed that the excess protection provided by the CAT Fund was to be measured from the baseline of the provider-in-issue’s own primary coverage. See 40 P.S. § 1301.701(d) (superseded) (rendering the CAT Fund responsible to satisfy provider liability to the extent it “exceeds its [or his] basic coverage insurance in effect at the time of the occurrence” (emphasis added)); see also supra note 4. The analogue provision of the MCARE Act, however, does not (at least explicitly) indicate that the primary insurance coverage establishing the excess coverage baseline is that of the provider-in-issue. See id. § 1303.712(a) (establishing MCARE liability for losses or damages awarded “in excess of the basic insurance coverage” (emphasis added)).

Application of the MCARE Act, then, may require a deeper inquiry. Nevertheless, in the present matter, the underlying liabilities were incurred, and a judgment was issued, under the regime of the CAT Fund, and the liabilities were later merely assumed by the MCARE Fund. See 40 P.S. § 1303.712(b). Thus, the earlier enactment establishes the limits of those liabilities, and we find no ambiguity in the statute’s establishment of a provider’s own primary coverage as the boundary between what is primary and what is excess relative to that provider. See id. § 1301.701(d) (superseded).

We realize (as the Fund stresses) that in Gabroy, the Commonwealth Court extended Storms to a scenario very similar to the present one, see Gabroy, 886 A.2d at 720, thus supporting the Fund’s position that the floor of its excess coverage obligation is determined by the aggregate primary coverage associated with a judgment against joint tortfeasors. We also appreciate that this Court affirmed that decision via per curiam order. See Gabroy, 590 Pa. 277, 912 A.2d 768 (2006).

Nevertheless, a per curiam order does not serve as binding precedent. See Commonwealth v. Thompson, 604 Pa. 198, 213, 985 A.2d 928, 937 (2009) (“This Court has made it clear that per curiam orders have no stare decisis effect.”). Thus, regardless of the reasons for the majority decision of this Court in Gabroy, we are free to evaluate this case on the substantive merits.

We also recognize the policy concerns raised by the Fund, but those considerations are mixed, since the HCSMA plainly creates a remedial scheme designed to supply financial protection for health care providers. Accordingly, as in any other instance in which the Legislature has struck a balance between competing social policies, its chosen methods are best determined by the language of the enactment.

In summary, under the statutory scheme governing CAT Fund liabilities, the CAT Fund’s excess coverage responsibility to a health care provider was measured from the baseline of such provider’s own primary coverage. In the present case, the floor was Dr. Detweiler’s $200,000 “basic coverage insurance” (as it was denominated by the HCSMA, 40 P.S. § 1301.701(d) (superseded)). Therefore, such liability as Dr. Detweiler bore for the shortfall in Dr. Carver’s primary coverage, as well as associated delay damages and pre-judgment interest, fell within the CAT Fund’s excess coverage obligation relative to Dr. Detweiler. See supra note 7. The responsibility for this now falls to the MCARE Fund, see 40 P.S. § 1303.712(b), with the benefits inuring to Dr. Detweiler, and, derivatively, to Mr. Heim.

Finally, we acknowledge that Mr. Heim has not advanced a specific argument predicated on the distinct language of the statutory scheme governing the CAT Fund. Nevertheless, as the appellant challenging a presumptively valid judgment, the Fund has rested its argument on the plain terms of the governing statutory framework, which is the basis for our decision. Moreover, Mr. Heim, as the appel-lee, did not bear the burden of issue preservation. See Commonwealth v. Moore, 594 Pa. 619, 638, 937 A.2d 1062, 1073 (2007) (explaining that “an appellate court may affirm a valid judgment based on any reason appearing as of record, regardless of whether it is raised by the appellee”).

The order of the Commonwealth Court is affirmed.

Chief Justice CASTILLE, Justices EAKIN, BAER, TODD, McCAFFERY and ORIE MELVIN join the opinion. 
      
      . Act of Oct. 15, 1975, P.L. 390, No. Ill (as amended 40 P.S. §§ 1301.101-1301.1006) (superseded) (the "HCSMA”).
     
      
      . Since the PPCIGA cap is administered on a per-claimant basis, it is unclear from the submissions here why Drs. Detweiler and Carver were not each entitled to up to $300,000 of protection under PPCIGA’s enabling statute. See generally Bell v. Slezak, 571 Pa. 333, 343-45, 812 A.2d 566, 571-73 (2002) (discussing the concept of a "covered claim” under the PPCIGA scheme).
     
      
      . According to the parties, PPCIGA allocated $200,000 of the $300,000 payment/setoff figure on behalf of Dr. Detweiler and $100,000 on account of Dr. Carver, albeit the rationale supporting the division is not provided.
     
      
      . The associated definition of “health care providér" subsumed individuals such as physicians. See 40 P.S. § 1303.103 (superseded). Thus, the statute’s reference to "its” basic coverage insurance should naturally be read as "his” or "her” primary insurance when applied to such individuals.
     
      
      . Act of March 20, 2002, P.L. 154, No. 13 (as amended 40 P.S. §§ 1303.101-1303.1115) (the "MCARE Act”). The Court recently reviewed the statutory framework for the CAT Fund and the MCARE Fund in Fletcher v. PPCIGA, 603 Pa. 452, 467-75, 985 A.2d 678, 688-92 (2009).
     
      
      . In all events, the Fund’s liability turns on its statutory obligations relative to the underlying judgment in the malpractice action, which is the subject of the parties’ arguments and our discussion below.
     
      
      
        , The Fund does acknowledge that its obligations would have been impacted by the doctrine of joint and several liability had the unpaid portion of the verdict allocated to Dr. Carver fallen within the excess coverage provided by the MCARE Fund, and to the degree Dr. Detweiler’s excess limits were unexhaust-ed. See Brief for the Fund at 18-19 ("[I]n appropriate circumstances involving excess coverage, the Meare Fund does pay joint and several liability, but it does not 'drop down’ to pay unpaid primary limits.”).
     
      
      . Parenthetically, the MCARE’s present position that the salient provisions of the pre-and post-amendment HCSMA are materially the same may bear on the appropriate construction of Section 1303.712(a), although further assessment in this regard is beyond the scope of the present opinion.
     
      
      . It is also noteworthy that several Justices dissented to the per curiam affirmance in Ga-broy, in favor of oral argument, while tending toward the health care provider’s position. See Gabroy, 590 Pa. at 278-81, 912 A.2d at 768-70 (Baer, J., joined by Saylor, J.).
     