ATLANTA FAMILY RESTAURANTS, INC. et al. v. PERRY
A93A0491
Court of Appeals of Georgia
DECIDED JULY 16, 1993
209 Ga. App. 581 | 434 SE2d 140
COOPER, Judge.
Judgments affirmed. McMurray, P. J., and Beasley, P. J., concur.
DECIDED JULY 16, 1993.
Andrew, Threlkeld & Thompson, Reid A. Threlkeld, Richard S. Thompson, for Carver.
Preston & Preston, Robert H. Preston, for Snow.
Miles, Baker & Morris, Keith M. Morris, Fred R. Kopp, for Kinnett.
COOPER, Judge.
In this workers’ compensation case, an administrative law judge (ALJ) issued an award terminating appellants’ obligation to pay disability benefits to appellee but directing appellants to pay appellee‘s chiropractic costs. Appellee timely appealed the award to the full
An appeal to the Board “opens the entire case as a de novo proceeding” in which either party can raise any issue involved in the case; the adverse party need not cross-appeal. Ga. Dept. of Revenue v. Hughes, 99 Ga. App. 127, 128 (1) (108 SE2d 184) (1959). As a result, we have held that the party filing the appeal cannot withdraw it without the consent of the adverse party. Rose City Foods v. Usry, 86 Ga. App. 307 (1) (71 SE2d 649) (1952). The Board therefore erred in dismissing the appeal over appellants’ objection, and the dismissal should not have been affirmed by the superior court.
Judgment reversed. McMurray, P. J., concurs. Beasley, P. J., concurs specially.
BEASLEY, Presiding Judge, concurring specially.
I agree that the Board erred in dismissing the appeal.
1. The majority‘s statement that “[a]ppellants did not cross-appeal or file a separate appeal” may be misleading. The simple procedure provided for in
2. It is inaccurate for us to conclude that the dismissal by the Board should not have been “affirmed” by the superior court and to reverse its judgment. The superior court rendered no judgment. In reality, we are reversing the judgment of the Board. We cannot hold that the lower court erred by affirming the Board. Former
The administrative law judge sits as a trier of fact in a workers’ compensation case, and the Board sits also as a trier of fact de novo in the event of an appeal to it. The superior court, however, sits as an appellate court in such cases. It is asked to review the action of the Board for legal errors and is confined to the five grounds listed in subsection (c). It does so on the record, to which additional evidence may not be added. If additional evidence is for some reason necessary, the case must be remanded to the Board. See Hartford Accident &c. Co. v. Cox, 191 Ga. 143 (11 SE2d 661) (1940). “The facts upon which the superior court is authorized to exercise jurisdiction in an appeal from the State Board of [Workers‘] Compensation are those, and only those, contained in the record transmitted to it by the board, [cits.]....” Turner v. American Mut. &c. Ins. Co., 109 Ga. App. 721, 722 (137 SE2d 385) (1964).
This court has construed the affirmance by operation of law of a workers’ compensation award, as provided in subsection (d), to simply mean that the appellant can then turn to this court for the appellate review. Lanier v. Jim Brown Dev. Corp., 199 Ga. App. 255 (2) (404 SE2d 626) (1991). We, instead of the superior court, are then reviewing and ruling on the validity of the Board‘s award and following the statute‘s direction to the superior court which is given in subsection (c). This allows the appellant who is not diligent in the superior court to simply bypass it, deliberately or by default, despite the burden being on the appellant to insure timeliness. See AT&T Technologies, supra at 676. Yet the Supreme Court has recognized that under
The solicitous public policy for the disposition of workers’ compensation cases, as expressed in the legislated time constraints of
If the direct appeal of right to the superior court which the parties in a workers’ compensation case have is not diligently pursued and that court‘s jurisdiction is not invoked, the application to this court should be dismissed for the litigant‘s failure to follow the procedure established. If, on the other hand, the appeal cannot be accommodated by the superior court in the time required, then the answer is for the legislature to provide more judges or for the court to request judicial assistance from other courts. See
It is not sound administration of justice, especially when courts are increasingly overburdened, to involve yet another appellate tribunal when the first appeal, which is of right, is not pursued to decision.
In this case, the record shows no request by appellants for a hearing before the superior court.
The executive director of the Board reminded the parties, by copy of the transmittal of the record to the superior court, that “[a]ny party, upon ten days written notice to the others, may request a hearing on the record subject to assignment by [the] court.” The record does not show that the court refused to assign a hearing date. The record merely shows that, upon notice from the superior court clerk that the appeal had been docketed, appellant paid the filing fee.
DECIDED JULY 16, 1993.
Sligh, Presmanes & Jackson, Gregory T. Presmanes, for appellants.
Davis & Sissel, Kenneth M. Sissel, for appellee.
