This action arises out of a workmen’s compensation lump sum settlement which was approved by the State Board of Workmen’s Compensation in 1962. This suit was brought in 1969 by Patsy Diane Cline, as next friend of Hal Cline (claimant), against Lever Brothers Company (employer), Aetna Casualty & Surety Company (insurer) and a third defendant who had served as the claimant’s attorney in the handling of his workmen’s compensation proceeding.
The complaint alleged that the three defendants conspired to defraud claimant by withholding medical evidence of claimant’s condition from the workmen’s compensation board at the time of the approval of the lump sum settlement. Claimant sought recovery of $7,126 as special damages for loss of workmen’s compensation benefits from all three defendants. Additionally, claimant prayed for exemplary damages in the sum of one million dollars "to deter the defendants from again perpetrating such fraud.” Following discovery and an appeal to this court, 1 the complaint was amended to allege (1) that the employer and insurer defrauded claimant by withholding medical evidence of his physical condition; and (2) that the claimant’s attorney failed "to exercise reasonable skill and diligence in the performance of obtaining workmen’s compensation benefits for Hal Cline [claimant].” The amended complaint sought the same amount of special damages from the defendants as did the original complaint — $7,126 for loss of workmen’s compensation benefits; however, exemplary damages were sought only against the employer and insurer.
*77 Following the amendment to the complaint, a consent judgment was entered in favor of claimant’s workmen’s compensation attorney. This consent judgment represented the culmination of negotiations between claimant and his former attorney wherein the latter agreed to pay claimant $7,000 to dismiss the case against him. The record reflects that this negotiated sum was paid to claimant shortly after the consent judgment was rendered.
Thereafter, the two remaining defendants, employer and insurer, filed a motion for summary judgment. The motion was granted and this appeal followed.
1. At the outset, we must determine whether the claimant’s remedy lies within the exclusive domain of the workmen’s compensation board. Defendants argue that the claimant’s sole remedy is found in Code § 114-710 which provides that an order of the board procured by fraud shall be set aside by the court on review. We disagree. Claimant is not seeking to set aside an order procured by fraud; claimant is seeking damages against the procurers of the fraud. Compare
Lavender v. Zurich Ins. Co.,
2. "If the separate and independent acts of negligence of two or more persons or corporations combine naturally and directly to produce a single indivisible injury other than a nuisance, and if a rational basis does not exist for an apportionment of the resulting damages among the various causes, then the actors are joint tortfeasors, jointly and severally liable for the full amount of plaintiffs damages, notwithstanding the absence of
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voluntary intentional concert of action among them.”
Gilson v. Mitchell,
3. "Where the negligent acts of two persons combine, although not done simultaneously, to cause an injury to a third person they are joint tortfeasors, and the release of the first tortfeasor will release the other.”
City of Buford v. Hosch,
4. The trial court did not err in granting defendants’ summary judgment motion.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
In the previous appeal,
Cline v. Lever Bros. Co.,
