The Director of Labor has filed two substantially similar petitions for certiorari, asking this court to review two decisions of the Court of Appeals. Both decisions reversed the Employment Security Board of Review on the ground that its findngs of fact were not supported by substantial evidence. Both decisions were by a divided court. Both petitions for review cite Harris v. Daniels,
In considering whether to review decisions of the Court of Appeals, we shall steadfastly adhere to the position we unanimously adopted in Moose v. Gregory,
No doubt the substantial evidence rule is a legal principle of major importance, but the present petitioners are mistaken in their insistence that the Court of Appeals abrogated that rule. It did not. Quite the opposite, the majority opinion in each case stated that the only question was whether the Board of Review’s decision was supported by substantial evidence. Had the Court of Appeals announced that it was abolishing the substantial evidence rule, an issue of major importance would have been presented for review. That did not happen. The Court of Appeals simply found that the Board’s decision was not supported by substantial evidence. If we reviewed either case we might agree or disagree with the majority decision of the Court of Appeals, but in either event the substantial evidence rule would not be altered by one particle. What the petitioners seek is simply a second appellate review, which is contrary to our position as expressed in Moose v. Gregory.
We realize, of course, that the Court of Appeals could not have certified these cases to us without first deciding them, because the Constitution does not permit us to review directly a decision of an administrative body such as the Board of Review or the Workers’ Compensation Commission. Ward School Bus Mfg. Co. v. Fowler,
Petitions denied.
