Commercial Courier Express, Inc. (“CCE”) and Michigan Mutual Insurance Company (collectively “defendants”) appeal from an opinion and award of the Full Commission of the North Carolina Industrial Commission (“the Commission”) filed 13 February 2003 awarding death benefits to Bessie Hutchins Apple (“plaintiff”) as widow of Worth Apple (“Apple”). Plaintiff also appeals. Because Apple’s death occurred within two years of the final determination of disability, plaintiff was eligible to receive death benefits, and we therefore affirm that portion of the opinion and award of the Commission. We, however, remand this case to the Commission for a determination of whether plaintiff is entitled to attorneys’ fees under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-88.
*516 The undisputed facts of this case establish that on 4 August 1994, Apple, who was 77 years old, was working as a courier for CCE. Apple was brutally attacked and robbed while making a delivery. During the attack, he was struck in the head with a hammer and, as a result, suffered severe head injuries leaving him in a persistent vegetative state.
On 6 September 1994, defendants filed a Form 19 Employer’s Report of Injury to Employee. This report noted that the probable length of Apple’s disability was “unknown.” On 20 October 1994, the Commission approved a Form 21 Agreement for Compensation for Disability. This Form 21 Agreement stated that disability compensation would be paid continuing for “[njecessary weeks” and the parts of the form regarding Apple’s return to work were left blank.
Apple reached the point of maximum medical improvement between 10 March 1995 and 13 March 1995, but remained permanently and totally disabled. On 15 March 2000, defendants filed a Form 33 Request for Hearing in Apple’s separate disability benefits claim alleging that plaintiff had refused to enter into a Form 26 agreement regarding the date of the onset of Apple’s disability. 1 Apple died from complications stemming from his injuries on 14 January 2001. Plaintiff filed the present claim for death benefits on 22 March 2001.
Defendants requested that the Commission deny the claim for death benefits because Apple’s death had occurred more than six years after his injuries and more than two years from the entry of the Form 21 agreement. Although the parties stipulated before the Commission that Apple was totally disabled on 4 August 1994, the date of the attack, the Commission concluded that no final disability determination under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-38 had been made in the case until 19 April 2001, when as a result of defendant’s Form 33 request for a hearing in the disability benefits claim regarding plaintiff’s reluctance to enter into a Form 26, the deputy commissioner determined that Apple was totally and permanently disabled on 13 March 1995, following his maximum medical improvement. The Full Commission agreed with the deputy commissioner that total and permanent disability occurred on 13 March 1995. 2
*517 Because the Commission in the present case concluded that no final disability determination had been made until 19 April 2001, the Commission determined that Apple’s death on 14 January 2001 occurred within two years of the final determination of disability. The Commission further concluded that plaintiff’s claim was proper and awarded her benefits. The Commission also ruled that plaintiff was not entitled to attorneys’ fees under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-88.1, but made no ruling as to plaintiff’s motion for attorneys’ fees under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-88.
The two issues on appeal are whether (I) the Form 21 agreement entered into by the parties in this case constituted a “final determination of disability,” such that plaintiff was time-barred from filing a death benefits claim under the Workers’ Compensation Act; and (II) the Commission erred by failing to rule on plaintiff’s motion for attorneys’ fees under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-88.
I.
Defendants contend that plaintiff’s claim for death benefits is time barred under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-38. Specifically, defendants argue that the 20 October 1994 Form 21 agreement entered into by the parties constituted a final determination of disability, and thus plaintiff’s claim for death benefits filed 22 March 2001 was filed more than two years after the final disability determination. We disagree.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-38 provides that:
If death results proximately from a compensable injury or occupational disease and within six years thereafter, or within two years of the final determination of disability, whichever is later, the employer shall pay or cause to be paid [death benefits].
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-38 (2003). In this case, it is undisputed that Apple died more than six years following his injury, therefore we must determine whether his death occurred within two years of the final determination of disability. Defendants contend that a Form 21 agreement is a final determination of disability.
It is true that a Form 21 is “[o]ne method for establishing disability ... ; written agreements between employers and employees using Form 21 and approved by the Commission qualify as awards of the Commission and entitle employees to a presumption of disability.”
Sims v. Charmes/Arby’s Roast Beef,
In
Pratt,
the North Carolina Supreme Court held that the Form 21 agreement in that case was not a final determination of the compensation to be awarded and was instead “a preliminary and interlocutory award.”
Pratt,
In
Beard,
the Form 21 agreement, as in this case, stated payment would “ ‘continu[e] for necessary weeks.’ ”
Beard,
In this case, in addition to the Form 21, which stated the length of payments would be for “[n]ecessary weeks,” the uncertainty of Apple’s condition was evidenced by the employer’s report stating the probable length of disability was “unknown.” Furthermore, Apple did not reach maximum medical improvement until March 1995, and there was no determination that he was “permanently and totally” disabled until the Commission’s resolution of the issue in the separate *519 disability compensation claim, on 19 April 2001, following the filing of a Form 33 request for hearing on the issue by defendants. Perhaps the most telling indication that the parties did not consider the Form 21 to be a final determination of disability is the fact defendants later attempted to enter into a Form 26 agreement to finally establish the date of disability and subsequently sought out the Commission to determine the issue.
Therefore, under the facts of this case, we conclude the Form 21 agreement entered into by the parties in the case sub judice was not a final determination of disability but rather a preliminary agreement for disability payments as in Pratt and Beard. We note that our holding in no way abrogates the general rule that a Form 21 creates a presumption of disability and is to be given the same effect as an order of the Commission. Thus, the final determination of disability was made by the deputy commissioner in the separate disability benefits claim on 19 April 2001, finding total and permanent disability occurred in March 1995, from which neither party appealed. Since Apple’s death occurred on 14 January 2001, it occurred within two years of the final determination of disability in this case. Accordingly, plaintiff’s claim for death benefits was not time barred under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-38. Thus, we affirm that portion of the Commission’s opinion and award.
II.
Plaintiff assigns error to the Commission’s failure to rule on her motion for attorneys’ fees under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-88. Where the issue has been raised before the Commission, it is error for the Commission to fail to rule on whether attorneys’ fees should be awarded.
See Whitfield v. Laboratory Corp. of Am.,
Affirmed in part and remanded in part.
Notes
. The appeal from this related but separate disability benefits claim arising out of the same attack upon Apple is contained at
Apple v. Commercial Courier Express,
. We note that neither party appealed the deputy commissioner’s 19 April 2001 determination that plaintiff was totally and permanently disabled as of 13 March 1995.
