Lead Opinion
This case involves a claim under the Workers’ Compensation Act for disability and medical payments due to a workplace accident.
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff began working for defendant W.A. Brown & Sons (“Brown & Sons”) in June 1999. As of October 2001 plaintiff had been experiencing pain in her lower back for approximately six months and was taking over-the-counter medication for her pain. During the week of 11 October 2001, plaintiff sustained an injury to her lower back while lifting a heavy container at work. Although plaintiff testified before a representative of the Industrial Commission (“the Commission”) that the incident occurred on- the morning of 11 October 2001, Brown & Sons’ time records showed that plaintiff was not at work that morning. Presumably because the precise timing of plaintiff’s injury is therefore uncertain, the Commission simply found plaintiff suffered an injury “on an unknown date” during the week of 11 October 2001.
Plaintiff alleged that, immediately after the incident, she reported her injury to Rick Dunaway, her team leader. Dunaway in turn reported the incident to Barry Christy, plaintiff’s supervisor, who gave plaintiff a back support belt. Plaintiff worked the remainder of the week. On Sunday 14 October 2001, plaintiff saw a doctor about her back pain. She told the doctor she had been having pain for about six months and described the incident at work. However, because Brown & Sons had not authorized the medical visit, the doctor’s office “would not treat [plaintiff] as a possible workers’ compensation patient and made no record of her report of injury.”
The following Tuesday, plaintiff reported for work but was so visibly impaired by pain that Christy referred her to Pam Cordts in human resources. Plaintiff told Cordts about her pain and inability to work, but she did not then claim that her injury was work related. According to the opinion and award of the Full Commission, Cordts “gave plaintiff paperwork on Family Medical Leave and short-term disability, but did not discuss the possibility of workers’ compensation” because she “believed that [plaintiff’s injury] was something that had occurred outside of work.” Cordts told plaintiff to see a doctor and that “for her own safety she would not be allowed to return to work without a note from the doctor.”
During the ensuing year, plaintiff saw an orthopedic surgeon, a neurosurgeon, and a chiropractor and underwent a variety of examinations to determine the nature and cause of her pain. Throughout this process, the doctors’ examinations were limited because plaintiff would complain of severe pain during the tests. As a result, the Full Commission found “it was initially difficult for the treating physicians to sort out diagnoses for [plaintiff’s] physical problems and to determine the relationship between her symptoms and the injury at work.” Based on expert testimony that plaintiff “likely had a pre-existing [sic] back condition at the time of her work-related injury,” the Full Commission found that plaintiff “sustained an injury to her back that aggravated her preexisting degenerative condition.”
Plaintiff failed to give Brown & Sons written notice of her accident as directed by N.C.G.S. §§ 97-22 and 97-23 until she filed a Form 18, entitled “Notice of Accident to Employer (G.S. 97-22) and Claim of Employee or His Personal Representative or Dependents (G.S. 97-24).” Plaintiff completed her Form 18 on 1 February 2002, and it was filed with the Commission on 5 February 2002, nearly four months after the claimed accident.
13. Defendants denied this claim since there was no record of an injury at work in plaintiffs medical records and since she had denied that her back condition was related to a work-related injury to Ms. Cordts, to the adjuster, Brian Gray, who spoke with her on November 9, 2001 regarding her short term disability claim, and on the claims forms for the disability benefits.
15.....Defendants were prejudiced by the delay in receiving written notice since they otherwise might well have accepted the claim as compensable, but rather allowed plaintiff to pursue disability benefits, for which they would not receive a credit since the benefits were not totally employer funded, since defendants were not able to designate the medical treatment plaintiff would receive and since the treatment which plaintiff obtained was unusually protracted. The fact that the claim was denied was due to plaintiffs own statements to representatives of defendants which gave defendants very good grounds to believe that the back condition was not due to a compensable injury at work.
Based upon these findings of fact, the deputy concluded as a matter of law that “plaintiff sustained an injury by accident arising out of and in the course of her employment with defendant.” However, the deputy further concluded that
plaintiffs claim is barred due to her failure to give her employer written notice' of the injury within thirty days since she did not have reasonable excuse for the delay and since defendants were prejudiced by it. Defendants did not have actual knowledge of the injury despite the initial verbal report since plaintiff repeatedly thereafter denied that she was injured at work. G.S. § 97-22.
Plaintiff appealed the deputy’s opinion and award to the Full Commission, and defendants cross-appealed. The Full Commission reviewed the case and reversed the deputy’s opinion and award, entering its opinion and award on 18 January 2005. The Full Commission determined that Brown & Sons did have actual notice of plaintiff’s work-related injury and concluded that plaintiff had a reasonable excuse for failing to give Brown & Sons timely written notice of her accident in accordance with N.C.G.S. § 97-22. The Full Commission made the following conclusions of law:
1. On an unknown date during the week of October 11, 2001, plaintiff sustained an injury by accident arising out of and in the course of her employment with defendant in that she sustained a back injury as the result of a specific traumatic incident of the work assigned.
2. The aggravation or exacerbation of plaintiffs pre-existing back condition as a result of a specific traumatic incident, which has resulted in loss of wage earning capacity, is compensable under the Workers’ Compensation Act.
3. Defendants had actual notice of plaintiff’s work-related injury, and resulting workers’ compensation claim, (1) when plaintiff immediately reported her injury to her team leader, (2) when plaintiff’s supervisor gave her a back support braceso that she could continue working; and (3) when her supervisor sent her to human resources to discuss her injury. Because defendants had actual knowledge of plaintiff’s work-related injury, plaintiff’s failure to give written notice of her claim did not bar her claim for compensation.
4. Even if defendants had not had actual notice, given the nature of plaintiff’s injury and her pre-existing back condition, plaintiff’s failure to give written notice within 30 days is reasonably excused because plaintiff did not reasonably know of the nature, seriousness, or probable compensable character of her injury until after extensive treatment with Dr. Roy, her treating physician.
(Citations omitted.)
The Full Commission also found that Cordts “failed to ask specific questions regarding the cause of plaintiff’s injury,” “did not take proper action to assess whether or not plaintiff’s injury was, in fact, work related,” and that “there is no evidence that Ms. Cordts spoke, as she should have, with either [plaintiff’s team leader] or [plaintiff’s supervisor] to determine if plaintiff’s supervisors had actual knowledge of a work-related injury or incident involving plaintiff.” Regarding plaintiff’s visit to an orthopedic surgeon following her meeting with Cordts, the Full Commission found that plaintiff did, in fact, tell the surgeon that she had been injured on the job. The Full Commission made no findings that plaintiff failed to describe, the workplace accident during her neurosurgical evaluation or that she repeatedly denied to defendants that her back condition was due to a: work-related injury.
Most importantly, the Full Commission reversed the deputy’s conclusion that “[defendants were prejudiced by the delay in receiving written notice” of the accident. However, the Full Commission made no findings of fact or conclusions of law with respect to the issue of prejudice to defendants. Regarding plaintiffs failure to comply with the notice requirement of N.C.G.S. § 97-22, the Full Commission simply concluded: “Because defendants had actual knowledge of plaintiffs work-related injury, plaintiff’s failure to give written notice of her claim did not bar her claim for compensation.”
The Full Commission remanded the matter for assignment to a deputy commissioner “for the taking of additional evidence or further hearing, if necessary, and the entry of an Opinion and Award with findings on the issues of (1) the extent of plaintiff’s disability; (2) the amount of indemnity benefits due plaintiff; and (3) the extent of medical compensation due plaintiff.” Defendants sought immediate review, but the Court of Appeals dismissed their interlocutory appeal. After remand, a deputy commissioner entered an opinion and award in the case on 4 May 2006. Defendants appealed, and on 11 May 2007, the Full Commission entered an opinion and award in which it stated: “The Full Commission’s Opinion and Award of January 18, 2005 is incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein.” The Full Commission concluded that “[p]laintiff was totally disabled from her compensable specific traumatic incident from October 16, 2001, and continuing to May 31, 2005,” and ordered defendants to pay plaintiff temporary total disability compensation for that time period. The Full Commission reserved for future determination the issue of “the extent of plaintiffs disability, if any, after May 31, 2005.”
Defendants appealed the Full Commission’s opinion and award. A divided panel of the Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that the Full Commission’s conclusion that Brown & Sons had actual knowledge of plaintiff’s injury was supported by findings of fact, which were in turn supported by competent evidence. Gregory v. W.A. Brown &. Sons,
II. ANALYSIS
We begin by observing a significant incongruity between the findings of fact made by the deputy and the findings of fact made by the Full Commission. We have long held that the-Full Commission is the ultimate fact finder in a workers’ compensation case and that its determinations of credibility are conclusive. Adams v. AVX Corp.,
Section 97-22 of the General Statutes deals with notice by an injured employee to the employer, while section 97-23 deals with the contents of written notice. Section 97-22 provides:
Every injured employee or his representative shall immediately on the occurrence of an accident, or as soon thereafter as practicable, give or cause to be given to the employer a written notice of the accident, and the employee shall not be entitled to physician’s fees nor to any compensation which may have accrued under the terms of this Article prior to the giving of such notice, unless it can be shown that the employer, his agent or representative, had knowledge of the accident, or that the party required to give such notice had been prevented from doing so by reason of physical or mental incapacity, or the fraud or deceit of some third person; but no compensation shall be payable unless such written notice is given within 30 days after the occurrence of the accident or death, unless reasonable excuse is made to the satisfaction of the Industrial Commission for not giving such notice and the Commission is satisfied that the employer has not been prejudiced thereby.
N.C.G.S. § 97-22 (2007) (emphases added).
Section 97-23 provides:
The notice provided in the foregoing section [G.S. 97-22] shall state in ordinary language the name and address of the employee, the time, place, nature, and cause of the accident, and of the resulting injury or death; and shall be signed by the employee or by a person on his behalf, or, in the event of his death, by any one or more of his dependents, or by a person in their behalf.
No defect or inaccuracy in the notice shall be a bar to compensation unless the employer shall prove that his interest was prejudiced thereby, and then only to such extent as the prejudice.
Said notice shall be given personally to the employer or any of his agents upon whom a summons in civil action may be served under the laws of the State, or may be sent by registered letter or certified mail addressed to the employer at his last known residence or place of business.
Id. § 97-23 (2007) (brackets in original).
It is clear from these sections that, in enacting the Workers’ Compensation Act, the' General Assembly was concerned to avoid prejudice to employers resulting from insufficient notice of their employees’ accidents. It is equally clear that the legislature wished to prevent unnecessary disputes, such as occurred in the instant case, regarding whether notice of an accident was given and what that notice might have contained. The General Assembly sought to resolve these concerns by requiring employees to put notice of their accidents in writing, to include certain vital information therein, and to submit such notice in a timely fashion to an appropriate
The legislature also recognized, however, that employees would not always give written notice in perfect compliance with the statutes. The General Assembly therefore provided that an employee who fails to give the employer written notice of an accident within thirty days can still receive compensation based on that accident if “[(1)] reasonable excuse is made to the satisfaction of the Industrial Commission for not giving such notice and [(2)] the Commission is satisfied that the employer has not been prejudiced thereby.” Id. § 97-22. This two-pronged test eschews a preference for form over function while simultaneously ensuring that workers’ compensation benefits will only be payable when there is at least substantial compliance with the purposes of the written notice requirement.
This Court has previously read section 97-22 to mean that the plaintiff in a case under the Workers’ Compensation Act
is not entitled to recover unless he can show that he has complied with the provisions of the statute in respect to the giving of a notice, or has shown reasonable excuse to the satisfaction of the Industrial Commission for not giving such notice and the Commission is satisfied that the employer has not been prejudiced thereby.
Singleton v. Durham Laundry Co.,
The principles set forth in section 97-22 and elucidated in Singleton were recently reiterated in Watts v. Borg Warner Automotive, Inc.,
A careful reading of section 97-22 confirms that these prior decisions represent proper applications of that statute. Section 97-22 begins by establishing a presumptive requirement of written notice of accidents as a prerequisite to compensation. The statute goes on to provide that an employee who fails to give such written notice may still be entitled to physician’s fees and compensation “which may have accrued . . . prior to the giving of [written] notice" if the employer had actual knowledge of the accident. N.C.G.S. § 97-22 (emphasis added). The remaining portion of the statute is then set off by a semicolon. The language following the semicolon initially provides that “no compensation shall be payable unless such written notice is given within 30 days after the occurrence of the accident or death.” Id. (emphasis added). In other words, the language after the semicolon applies to all workers’ compensation benefits, regardless of whether they accrue before or after the giving of
Requiring findings of fact and conclusions of law on the issue of prejudice is consistent with section 97-22, with Singleton and Watts, and with this Court’s recent decision in Richardson v. Maxim Healthcare/Allegis Group,
We indicated in Richardson that the plaintiff was not required to give her employer written notice of her accident under the circumstances of the actual notice in that case. Id. at 658,
The foregoing distinctions accentuate the most important factual difference between Richardson and the instant case, which concerns whether the parties disputed the issue of actual notice. In Richardson, “[t]he defendants acknowledge [d] the plaintiff’s same-day notification of the accident,” id. at 660,
In the case sub judice, it is undisputed that plaintiff failed to provide written notice until she filed her workers’ compensation claim nearly four months after her accident. Thus, under section 97-22, plaintiff can receive no workers’ compensation benefits unless the Commission concludes as a matter of law that the delay in written notice was reasonably excused and that Brown & Sons was not prejudiced. Because the Full Commission’s opinion contains no conclusion that Brown & Sons was not prejudiced, that opinion is an insufficient basis upon which to award compensation to plaintiff.
A mere conclusion that Brown & Sons was not prejudiced, however, would not render the Full Commission’s opinion and award adequate. To enable the appellate courts to perform their duty of determining whether the Commission’s legal conclusions are justified, the Commission must support its conclusions with sufficient findings of fact. Pardue v. Blackburn Bros. Oil & Tire Co.,
The Commission is not required to make a finding as to each detail of the evidence or as to every inference or shade of meaning to be drawn therefrom. But specific findings of fact by the Commission are required. These must cover the crucial questions of fact upon which plaintiff’s right of compensation depends. If the findings of fact of the Commission are insufficient to enable the Court to determine the rights of the parties upon the matters in controversy, the proceeding must be remanded to the end that the Commission make proper findings.
Id. at 416,
This Court has previously provided similar direction as to the “crucial questions of fact” that underlie legal conclusions regarding reasonable excuse and lack of prejudice. In Booker v. Duke Medical Center, we held that an employer had waived its right to appeal the issue of notice by failing to raise that issue before the Commission.
As observed previously, it is undisputed in this case that plaintiff failed to provide written notice until she filed her workers’ compensation claim nearly four months after her accident. Therefore, the Full Commission erred in awarding benefits to plaintiff without concluding that defendants were not prejudiced by the delay and supporting such a conclusion with appropriate findings of fact.
In addition, we note that N.C.G.S. §§ 97-22 and 97-23 place the burden of notice on the employee, not the employer. In its opinion and award, the Full Commission found that Pam Cordts in human resources “failed to ask specific questions regarding the cause of plaintiff’s injury” and “did not take proper action to assess whether or not plaintiff’s injury was, in fact, work related,” and that “there is no evidence that Ms. Cordts spoke, as she should have, with either [plaintiff’s team leader] or [plaintiff’s supervisor] to determine if plaintiff’s supervisors had actual knowledge of a work-related injury or incident involving plaintiff.” (Emphasis added.) Thus, assuming without deciding that plaintiff stated to Cordts that the injury was not work related, the Full Commission’s analysis incorrectly placed upon defendant the burden to disprove plaintiff’s denial that her injury was work related. The Commission may not shift the burden of notice from the employee to the employer and then use the resulting findings as the factual basis for a conclusion that defendants were not prejudiced by plaintiff’s failure to give timely written notice of her accident.
In enacting N.C.G.S. § 97-22, the General Assembly expressed its intention that an employee who has an accident and does not timely notify the employer in writing should not receive compensation based on that accident unless the Industrial Commission is satisfied that the lack of timely written notice was reasonably excused and that the employer was not prejudiced. Thus, we hold that, when the employee does not give timely written notice as required by section 97-22, regardless of whether the employer had actual notice of the accident, the Industrial Commission cannot award compensation unless it (1) concludes as a matter of law that the lack of timely written notice was reasonably excused and that the employer was not prejudiced and (2) supports those conclusions with appropriate findings of fact.
III. DISPOSITION
The Full Commission in this case erred in awarding benefits to plaintiff without concluding that defendants were not prejudiced by plaintiffs failure to give written notice within thirty days after her accident and without supporting such a conclusion with appropriate findings of fact. Therefore, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals as to the issue raised by the dissenting opinion in that court. The remaining issues addressed by the Court of Appeals are not
REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED.
Notes
. We are cognizant that certain sections of the Workers’ Compensation Act place burdens on employers rather than employees. Sections 97-18 and 97-92, however, apply to employers that have knowledge of employees’ “injuries,” not employers with knowledge of employees’ “accidents.” N.C.G.S. §§ 97-18, -92 (2007). Unlike “accident,” “injury” is a defined term under the Workers’ Compensation Act, meaning “only injury by accident arising out of and in the course of the employment.” Id. § 97-2(6) (2007). An employer’s notice of an employee’s “accident,” standing alone, does not necessarily trigger any statutory duties for the employer.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
We squarely decided the question presented here in our recent, unanimous decision in Richardson v. Maxim Healthcare/Allegis Group,
The sole issue presented to this Court on appeal is whether a defendant-employer’s actual knowledge of a plaintiff-employee’s work-related injury satisfies the notice-of-injury requirement under N.C.G.S. § 97-22, obviating the need for findings of fact as to any alleged prejudice. In our decision in Richardson we unanimously held that, under N.C.G.S. § 97-22, “[w]hen an employer has actual notice of the accident, the employee need not give written notice, and therefore, the Commission need not make any findings about prejudice.” Id. at 663,
The majority here maintains that we somehow limited the holding of Richardson to “the unique circumstances of the actual notice in that case.” Even a cursory reading of that opinion clearly illustrates that we attached no such conditions to our statement of the law. If the majority has decided to overrule Richardson, by now “[Requiring findings of fact and conclusions of law on the issue of prejudice,” regardless of whether the employer has actual knowledge or notice of the injury, the Court should do so directly and avoid creating unnecessary confusion in the law for employers, employees, and the Industrial Commission regarding which types of actual knowledge are sufficient and which are not. Providing such certainty is fundamental to our judicial role:
It is, then, an established rule to abide by former precedents, stare decisis, where the same points come up again in litigation, as well to keep the scale of justice even and steady, and not liable to waver with every new judge’s opinion, as also because, the law in that case being solemnly declared and determined what before was uncertain, and perhaps indifferent, is now become a permanent rule, which it is not in the breast of any subsequent judge to alter or swerve from according to his private sentiments; he being sworn to determine, not according to his private judgment, but according to the known laws and customs of the land — not delegated to pronounce a new law, but to maintain and expound the old one — jus dicere et non jus dare.
McGill v. Town of Lumberton,
Indeed, the
Notwithstanding decades of case law on both stare decisis and our proper standard of review concerning findings of fact and conclusions of law that are binding on appeal, the majority here indulges defendant-employer’s improper efforts to relitigate once again the question of actual notice.
The majority’s analysis can only be characterized as precisely the type of reweighing of evidence that our statutes and case law explicitly disallow:
On appeals from the Industrial Commission, the Commission’s findings of fact must be sustained if there is competent evidence in the record to support them. Lawrence v. Hatch Mill,265 N.C. 329 ,144 S.E.2d 3 (1965). This is so even if there is evidence which would support a contrary finding, because “courts are not at liberty to reweigh the evidence and to set aside the findings of the Commission, simply because other inferences could have been drawn and different conclusions might have been reached.” Rewis v. Insurance Co.,226 N.C. 325 , 330,38 S.E.2d 97 , 100 (1946).
Hill v. Hanes Corp.,
Indeed, the bulk of the majority opinion concentrates on whether plaintiff’s actual notice of her injury to defendant-employer was somehow sufficient to trigger defendant-employer’s duties under N.C.G.S. § 97-92 to keep a record of the injury and file a report with the Industrial Commission. This distraction from the actual question at hand is a classic straw man, as that issue has already been definitively decided and is not before us for review. Moreover, the majority’s emphasis and reliance for its holding on the extent to which the issue of actual notice was disputed at trial impermissibly allow defendants yet another bite at the apple — their third, at least — -regarding this issue, which has been conclusively decided in plaintiff’s favor.
This case presents us with the Commission’s finding and conclusion that defendant-employer had actual notice of plaintiff’s work-related injury when she immediately reported it to her team leader, received a back brace from her supervisor, and was sent by her supervisor to human resources. The Commission further concluded that “plaintiff’s failure to give written notice within 30 days is reasonably excused because plaintiff did not reasonably know of the nature, seriousness, or probable compensable character of her injury until after extensive treatment.” Given these binding findings and conclusions, the sole question before us is whether, as a matter of law, the Full Commission is required under N.C.G.S. § 97-22 to make findings regarding prejudice when a defendant-employer has actual knowledge of a plaintiff-employee’s injury. In pertinent part, the statute provides:
Every injured employee or his representative shall immediately on the occurrence of an accident, or as soon thereafter as practicable, give or cause to be given to the employer a written notice of the accident, . . . unless it can be shown that the employer, his agent or representative, had knowledge of the accident, . . . but no compensation shall be payable unless such written notice is given within 30 days after the occurrence of the accident or death, unless reasonable excuse is made to the satisfaction of the Industrial Commission for not giving such notice and the Commission is satisfied that the employer has not been prejudiced thereby.
N.C.G.S. § 97-22 (2007) (emphasis added). Notably, in Richardson we analyzed N.C.G.S. § 97-22 and observed that “in enacting N.C.G.S. § 97-22, the General Assembly did not intend to require an injured worker to give written notice when the employer has actual notice of her on-the-job injury, as the employer had here.”
In Richardson we explicitly discussed both the requirements under N.C.G.S. § 97-22 and the potentially prejudicial effect of a lack of notice:
The plain language of section 97-22 requires an injured employee to give written notice of an accident “unless it can be shown that the employer, his agent or representative, had knowledge of the accident.” When an employer has actual notice of the accident, the employee need not give written notice, and therefore, the Commission need not make any findings about prejudice. The second clause of N.C.G.S. § 97-22, following the semicolon,applies to those cases in which written notice is required because the employer has no actual notice of the accident. It explains that an employee may be excused from even that requirement by providing a reasonable excuse for failing to give notice and by showing that the employer has not been prejudiced. Here, the employer’s immediate actual notice of plaintiff’s injury by accident satisfied the puiposes of section 97-22 .... Moreover, although we now hold it was not required to do so, the Commission specifically concluded that the employer here suffered no prejudice ....
Id. at 663-64,
Thus, as established in Richardson, if a defendant-employer has actual knowledge of a plaintiff-employee’s work-related injury, N.C.G.S. § 97-22 does not require the employee to provide written notice or the Full Commission to make explicit findings about prejudice, or the lack thereof, to the defendant-employer. Certainly, it is logical that, if a defendant-employer has actual knowledge of an injury, the Full Commission has no need to be “satisfied that the employer has not been prejudiced” by the employee’s “not giving such notice,” N.C.G.S. § 97-22, as there can be no prejudice due to lack of knowledge when there is, in fact, no lack of knowledge.
This analysis likewise conforms with the standard practice in the majority of jurisdictions throughout the country concerning the possible prejudicial effects of failure to comply with the notice-of-injury requirement. See Larson’s Workers’ Compensation Law § 126.04[4], at 126-16 (“The requirement [of notice] is no mere technicality. It serves a specific function in protecting the legitimate rights of the employer .... Accordingly, there is no lack of cases in which compensation claims have foundered on the rock of prejudice to the employer due to noncompliance with the notice provision.” (emphasis added)); see also Booker v. Duke Med. Ctr.,
North Carolina courts have also followed this practice: as the dissenting opinion in the Court of Appeals noted, that court has held
Moreover, the case relied on by the majority, Singleton v. Durham Laundry Co.,
Similarly, contrary to the majority’s assertion that “[t]he principles set forth in section 97-22 and elucidated in Singleton were recently reiterated in Watts v. Borg Warner Automotive, Inc.,
If a defendant-employer has actual knowledge of an injury, as it did here, yet itself fails to take action either to “minimiz [e] the seriousness of the injury” or to “investigat[e] . . . the circumstances surrounding the injury,” Booker,
Finally, this interpretation of N.C.G.S. § 97-22 is also in keeping with our long-standing
This liberal construction prevents the sort of denial of benefits engaged in by the majority here, namely, “upon technical, narrow and strict interpretation” of the Act, in contravention of its purpose. Graham v. Wall, 220 N.C. 84, 90,
Here, the Full Commission both found as fact and concluded as a matter of law that defendant-employer had immediate actual knowledge of plaintiff’s work-related injury, on the day that it occurred. Even though plaintiff’s supervisor provided plaintiff a back brace, referred her to human resources, and knew that plaintiff was unable to return to her job for a substantial period thereafter, defendants failed to investigate the claim, as required by statute, or to take any action to mitigate the effects of the injury. As such, the notice-of-injury requirement under N.C.G.S. § 97-22 was satisfied, and under our holding in Richardson, the Full Commission was not required to make any additional findings about prejudice, or the lack thereof, to defendants.
The majority opinion attempts to have it both ways: claim that it is consistent with Richardson by improperly limiting that holding to its facts, while simultaneously turning that holding on its head by requiring the Commission to make findings and conclusions on prejudice “regardless of whether the employer had actual notice of the accident.” Even worse, the majority’s discussion of what kind of actual notice is “sufficient” and their so-called “test” for the same create uncertainty and confusion in the law regarding the degree to which actual knowledge must be disputed, or when such knowledge might obviate the need for written notice.
I would abide by stare decisis and apply our recent, unanimous decision in Richardson and the proper standard of review to the Full Commission’s findings of fact. Thus, I would affirm the Court of Appeals decision upholding the Full Commission’s opinion and award.
. The General Assembly could, if it so desired, quickly eliminate any confusion by clarifying the language of N.C.G.S. § 97-22, which has not been amended since it originally passed in 1929.
. In fact, we specifically denied defendant-employer’s petition for discretionary review on that issue.
. Following this logic, I note the absurdity of the majority’s disposition here, to once again remand this case to the Full Commission “with instructions to enter findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding the issue of prejudice,” concerning an injury that occurred more than eight years ago.
The Commission has already found and concluded that defendant-employer had actual notice of the injury. Now, the majority would require the Commission to enter yet another opinion and award — its third in this case, not including that of the deputy commissioner — to enter a finding that would essentially amount to “defendant-employer was not prejudiced by a lack of notice because defendant-employer did have notice.” A remand is an unnecessary waste of time and resources.
