Filed in the Circuit Court of Hinds County, Mississippi, and thence removed to the United States District Court, the suit was an original proceeding brought for the compensation due plaintiff under the Georgia Workmen’s Compensation Act. Moving to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, the defendants urged: that the remedy afforded by the Georgia Workmen’s Compensation Act was by an original proceeding before the Georgia State Board of Workmen’s Compensation; that it was exclusive; and that neither the United States Court nor the Circuit Court of Hinds County, Mississippi, nor any other tribunal than the Georgia State Board had jurisdiction of it.
The district judge, of the opinion that the motion was well taken, entered his order dismissing the cause for want of jurisdiction. The plaintiff is here insisting that the ruling was error.
We do not think so. The Georgia decisions
1
settle it that the remedy for enforcement of the rights conferred by the Georgia Workmen’s Compensation Act, Code 1933, is an exclusive one which can be afforded only by the State Board of Workmen’s Compensation in a proceeding brought before it as the statute provides (Sec. 114-103). This being so, it is quite clear that the case is ruled by the principle that where the provision for the liability claimed is coupled with a provision for a special remedy to be afforded not by a court but by a commission, that remedy and that alone must be employed and resort to court action may not be had for relief.
2
Appellant’s reliance on Floyd v. Vicksburg
*360
Cooperage Co.,
The judgment of dismissal was right. It is affirmed.
Notes
Grice v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.,
Restatement of the Law, Conflict of Laws, Sec. 618, Comment (a); Elliott v. DeSoto Crude Oil Purchasing Corp., D.C.,
