This matter is before the Court on the Motion to Dismiss of defendant American Telephone and Telegraph (AT & T). AT & T seeks dismissal of plaintiff’s petition for writ of review, contending that it was not timely filed under Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-83 (1986). We agree that the petition for review was not timely filed and dismiss the petition.
I.
Plaintiff Debra S. Retherford applied for workers’ compensation benefits claiming she had suffered injuries from a compensa-ble industrial accident. On October 21, 1986, an administrative law judge ordered the claim dismissed, with prejudice.
1
The plaintiff filed a Motion for Review on November 10, 1986.
2
On November 20, 1986,
Defendant AT & T moved for summary disposition of plaintiff's petition for judicial review on grounds the petition was not timely, having been filed approximately sixty days after the Industrial Commission’s Order of November 20, 1986. AT & T contends that the commission, having once disposed of the case on the merits, had no further jurisdiction over the matter. Accordingly, AT & T contends the motion for reconsideration could not operate to extend the time to petition for review by this Court. Plaintiff, on the other hand, argues that the statutory provisions governing the review of orders in workers’ compensation cases, while not specifically authorizing a “motion for reconsideration”, do not preclude such motions. Plaintiff thus contends that her petition for writ of review was timely because it was filed within thirty days after the commission’s denial of the Motion for Reconsideration of Denial of Motion for Review.
II.
The statutory provisions governing claims for workers’ compensation benefits establish a detailed procedure for administrative and judicial review of orders of the Industrial Commission. 3 Hearings on an application for benefits may be held “before the commission sitting as administrative law judges or any administrative law judge of the commission, or any commissioner as chief administrative law judge”, after which the commission or the administrative law judge shall make findings of fact and an order. Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-82.52 (1986). “The order of the administrative law judge shall be the final award of the commission unless a petition for review is filed as provided in 35-1-82.53.” Id.
A party may initiate review of the order of an administrative law judge or the commission under Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-82.53 (1986), which provides:
(1) Any party in interest who is dissatisfied with the order entered by an administrative law judge or the commission may file a motion for review of such order. Upon the filing of a motion to review his order the administrative law judge may (a) reopen the case and enter a supplemental order ... or (b) amend or modify his prior order by a supplemental order; or (c) refer the entire case to the commission. If the administrative law judge makes a supplemental order, as provided above, it shall be final unless a motion to review the same shall be filed with the commission.
The foregoing section allows an administrative law judge the discretion to reopen the case and enter a supplemental order,
Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-82.54 (1986) describes the procedure for administrative review by the commission as follows:
The commission, upon referral of a case to it by an administrative law judge, or upon a motion being filed with it to review its own order, or an administrative law judge’s supplemental order, shall review the entire record made in said case, and, in its discretion, may hold further hearing and receive further evidence, and make findings of fact and enter its award thereon. The award of the commission shall be final unless set aside by the Supreme Court as hereinafter provided. 4
Once the commission has disposed of the case pursuant to section 35-1-82.53, a party may seek judicial review pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-83 (1986), which reads:
Within 30 days after the commission has given notice of its award, provided a motion was previously filed in accordance with this act for review of the order or supplemental order upon which the award was based, any affected party, including the Division of Finance, may file an action in the Court of Appeals for review and determination of the lawfulness of the award.
III.
There is no case law specifically considering whether the provisions of Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-82.51 through § 35-1-82.55 allow a motion for reconsideration (or additional motions for review) once the Industrial Commission has rendered its decision on the merits pursuant to section 35-1-82.-54, and if so, whether filing of such a motion extends the time for filing a petition for review with this Court. Thus, the issues presented by defendant AT & T’s motion are of first impression. Cases decided under the former statutes, however, establish principles regarding judicial review of orders in workers’ compensation cases that are instructive in this case.
In
Ferguson v. Industrial Commission,
The first petition for rehearing having been denied on May 8, 1922, the jurisdiction of the Industrial Commission ceased. It was then incumbent upon the applicant to apply to this court for a writ of review or to abide by the decision.
The Utah Supreme Court reaffirmed the holding of the
Ferguson
case in
Kennecott Cogger Corg. v. Industrial Commission,
The provisions for review of orders of the Industrial Commission in worker’s compensation cases do not authorize motions for reconsideration or rehearing or additional motions to review beyond those motions authorized in Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-82.53 (1986).
6
The statutory review procedure provides adequate opportunity for correction of error by the commission, and establishes the point at which the proceedings before the commission are culminated. In addition, the Utah Supreme Court held in
Pease v. Industrial Commission,
The jurisdiction of the Industrial Commission over workers' compensation cases is fixed by statute, as is this Court’s jurisdiction over judicial review of the Commission’s orders.
See Schockmeyer v. Industrial Commission,
BENCH, BILLINGS and DAVIDSON, JJ., concur.
Notes
. At the time set for evidentiary hearing, defendant AT & T made a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s claim for failure to state a compensable industrial accident. Plaintiff’s theory was that she was subjected to unwanted sexual advances from a co-employee. The administrative law judge concluded that based on the legal argument and evidence in the file, plaintiff had not satisfied her burden of proving that she sustained an industrial accident.
. Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-82.55 (1986) provides, in part, that a motion for review "must be filed within fifteen days of the date of any order of the administrative law judge or the commission unless further time is granted by the administrative law judge or commission within fifteen days, and unless so filed, said order shall become the award of the commission and shall be final.” It thus appears that the motion for review filed on November 10, 1986 was not time
. The present statutory provisions pertaining to appeals from awards of the Industrial Commission under the worker’s compensation statutes were enacted in 1965. Former Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-82 (repealed 1965) provided:
Any party including the commission of finance to a proceeding before the commission may, and before he can seek a review in the supreme court shall, within thirty days after written notice of its decision file an application before the commission for a rehearing of the matter.
The pre-1965 provisions further provided that an appeal to the Supreme Court was to be initiated "within thirty days after the notice that the application for a rehearing is denied, or, if the application is granted within thirty days after notice of the rendition of the decision on the rehearing." Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-83 (amended 1965). The 1965 amendments established the present review provisions of Utah Code Ann. §§ 35-1-82.51 through 35-1-82.56, and amended section 35-1-83 to be consistent with those provisions.
. Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-82.54 (1986) was not amended to reflect the transfer of jurisdiction over petitions for review of Industrial Commission orders to the Utah Court of Appeals as provided in Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-83 (1986).
. The Utah Supreme Court also held in the
Ken-necott Copper Corporation
case that Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-78 (1986) did not grant the Industrial Commission jurisdiction to reverse its original order. That section provides, in relevant part: "The powers and jurisdiction of the commission over each case shall be continuing, and , it may from time to time make such modification or change with respect to former findings, or orders with respect thereto, as in its opinion may be justified_” Case law construing section 35-1-78 has established that the continuing jurisdiction of the commission is applicable where there has been a change in the claimant’s condition (an improvement or deterioration of physical condition) since the time of the commission’s order, or where evidence has been discovered that was not available for consideration when the original order was made.
See Kennecott Copper Corp. v. Industrial Commission,
. As alternative grounds for dismissal, AT & T contends that
Drury v. Lunceford,
. As in the
Ferguson
case, although the proceedings subsequent to November 20, 1986 were without authority, they did not change the result previously reached.
. Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-82.56 (1986) provides: "All parties in interest shall be given due notice of the entry of any administrative law judge’s order or any order or award of the commission. The mailing of the copy of said order or award to the last known address shown in the files of the commission or any party in interest and to the attorneys or agents of record in the case, if any, shall be deemed to be notice of said order." The November 20, 1986 order reflects that it was mailed to plaintiff on the same date.
