This case involves a constitutional challenge to the composition of the Workers’ Compensation Commission as established in Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-201 (Repl. 1996). The Commission ruled that section 11-9-201 was constitutional and that the composition of the Commission does not deny claimants their rights to due process of the law. Appellant Frank Quinn (Deceased) appealed the Commission’s ruling to the Arkansas Court of Appeals, and that court affirmed the Commission’s ruling. See Quinn v. Webb Wheel Prods.,
Appellant sustained a compensable back injury on November 23, 1991, and was awarded permanent partial disability benefits by the administrative law judge (ALJ) in an order dated January 7, 1993. That order was affirmed by the Commission on June 22, 1993. Pursuant to Appellant’s request that the remaining portion of the benefits be paid in a lump sum, a hearing was held on January 3, 1994. In an opinion dated January 13, 1994, the ALJ found that it was in Appellant’s best interest to receive a lump sum. After reviewing the medical evidence relating to Appellant’s diagnosis of terminal cancer, unrelated to the compensable injury, the ALJ determined that Appellant was unlikely to survive more than sixty weeks. Accordingly, the ALJ made a lump-sum award of sixty weeks of benefits discounted at ten percent compounded annually. Less than one month later, on February 1, 1994, Appellant died. Appellee then appealed the award of a lump-sum payment to the Commission. The Commission remanded the case to the ALJ and instructed him to conduct a hearing to consider new evidence, the fact that Appellant had died, in assessing the amount and propriety of the lump-sum payment. On remand, the ALJ found that Appellant’s right to permanent disability benefits previously awarded terminated with his death on February 1, 1994. He also found that Appellant was not entitled to a lump-sum payment because he had been paid weekly and the payments were current at the time of his death. The Commission affirmed and adopted the ALJ’s opinion.
Appellant appealed the Commission’s decision to the court of appeals, arguing two points: (1) the Commission erred in remanding the case to the ALJ for consideration of Appellant’s death as new evidence, and (2) the composition of the Commission violated his rights to due process of law. The court of appeals affirmed on the first point, but refused to address the second point on the ground that the record did not show that Appellant had ever obtained a ruling on the constitutionality of the statute. See Quinn v. Webb Wheel,
On remand, the Commission ruled that its statutory composition provided for in section 11-9-201 does not deny claimants due process of law. The court of appeals affirmed the Commission’s ruling in Quinn II,
Appellant argues that section 11-9-201, the statute creating the Workers’ Compensation Commission, is unconstitutional because it requires two of the three commissioners to have specific experience in workers’ compensation matters: one commissioner must have experience representing employees and the other must have experience representing employers. Appellant argues that commissioners perform quasi-judicial functions, and that it is therefore a violation of principles of due process that they are required to be classed as a representative of an identifiable group. Appellant asks this court to abolish the Commission on the basis that two of the three members are not impartial, fair, and independent, because they are classed as representatives of employees and employers. Appellant concedes, however, that there is no evidence of actual bias on the part of the individual commissioners. He also concedes that there is no evidence that he was actually prejudiced by the composition of the Commission who heard his claim. Rather, he contends only that the commissioners’ bias is both perceived and inherent in the selection procedure established by section 11-9-201.
Appellee contends that the decision by the court of appeals in Quinn I,
A case becomes moot when any judgment rendered would have no practical legal effect upon a then existing legal controversy. Stilley v. McBride,
Affirmed.
Notes
Although that case actually dealt with the related issue of a litigant’s standing, we think the reasoning is also applicable to the facts of the present case.
