This action arises out of the denial of “line of duty” disability benefits to Annie Starnes, an employee of the Fulton County School System. Following the denial of her petition for disability benefits by the Fulton County School Employees Pension Board (“the board”), Starnes brought this action in superior court against the Fulton County School District, the board, and individual board members for breach of contract, denial of due process, and money had and received.
Contending that she was totally and permanently disabled as a result of depression and anxiety caused by teaching in a Fulton County classroom, Starnes applied for a “line of duty” disability pension. To qualify for this pension under the local law governing the Fulton County School Employees Pension Fund, Starnes was required to show that she was totally and permanently disabled and that her disability resulted “immediately and exclusively from emergency exposure in line of duty . . . without the intervention of natural causes.” Ga. L. 1994, pp. 4733-4734.
Starnes then filed this action in superior court a year after the hearing and the denial of her request for a disability pension. The trial court granted summary judgment to defendants, and Starnes appeals. We do not reach the merits of Starnes’s appeal, however, because we conclude that Starnes failed to properly seek review of the adverse decision by the pension board, and the trial court should have dismissed her complaint.
Bringing a new, separate action challenging the pension board’s decision was not authorized. Starnes instead was required to seek review via writ of certiorari to superior court. OCGA § 5-4-1 (a) states in pertinent part: “The writ of certiorari shall lie for the correction of errors committed by any inferior judicatory or any person exercising judicial powers.” In South View Cemetery Assn. v. Hailey,
The Supreme Court also noted that “the basic distinction between an administrative and a judicial act by officers other than judges is that a quasi-judicial action, contrary to an administrative function, is one in which all parties are as a matter of right entitled to notice and to a hearing, with the opportunity afforded to present evidence under judicial forms of procedure; and that no one deprived of such rights is bound by the action taken. [Cits.]” South View, supra at 481 (4). “[T]he test is whether the parties at interest had a right under the law to demand a trial in accordance with judicial procedure.” Id. at 481 (4) (a). See also Mack II, Inc. v. City of Atlanta,
The local law governing disability pensions for Fulton County employees, Ga. L. 1994, p. 4706, provides a method by which individuals
A particular administrative body may at times exercise judicial or quasi-judicial functions and at other times exercise administrative, ministerial, or legislative functions. See generally Tamiami Trail Tours v. Ga. Public Svc. Comm.,
Starnes was afforded the right to a hearing “in accordance with judicial procedure.” South View, supra at 481 (4). Under the local law and pension board bylaws she was permitted to submit, at a public hearing, a wide range of evidence including medical evidence, testimony, affidavits, depositions, and “documentary evidence of all sorts.” The board then was required to examine this evidence to determine whether Starnes’s disability met the criteria set out in the local law concerning receipt of a line of duty disability. And this examination was not merely a ministerial act; it required the board to assess Starnes’s contention that she was totally and permanently disabled immediately and exclusively as a result of emergency exposure as an employee, in light of the testimony and medical evidence presented at the hearing. In sum, the board was required to resolve adverse claims. This decision-making process, in turn, required the board to weigh evidence, assess witness credibility, and apply the fact-intensive law governing line of duty pensions to the particular facts surrounding Starnes’s application. Such a process was “ ‘akin to a judicial act.’ ” Mack II, supra at 310 (l).
It is true that the local law governing disability pensions does not provide that review of the board’s denial of disability pensions may be reviewed by writ of certiorari and states that the pension board’s decision that an applicant is not totally and permanently disabled is final. Ga. L. 1994, p. 4726. Similarly, the bylaws of the Fulton County Pension Board provide that “[ajctions of the
Once the decision on Starnes’s application for pension became final, Georgia law provided her with an orderly means of seeking review. As discussed above, she was required to seek review through writ of certiorari, and the law provided her with specific guidelines for so appealing. See, e.g., OCGA § 5-4-3. In particular, she was required to file her petition “within 30 days after the final determination of the case in which the error is alleged to have been committed. Applications made after 30 days are not timely and shall be dismissed by the court.” OCGA § 5-4-6 (a). Rather than appeal through the orderly, specific vehicle of certiorari as required by OCGA §§ 5-4-1, 5-4-3, and 5-4-6, however, Starnes waited an entire year after the pension board reached an adverse decision to file a completely new action. This means of review simply was not authorized under the law.
Because Starnes was not authorized to bring a separate action challenging the denial of line of duty disability benefits, and because she failed to petition the trial court for certiorari within 30 days after the board reached its decision, her action must be dismissed. We therefore remand this case to the trial court with direction that the court vacate its judgment and dismiss Starnes’s action.
Case remanded with direction.
Notes
The statute addressing the pension fund provides for two other types of “line of duty” pensions, which do not apply in this case. One is for accidents suffered in the line of duty, and one addresses occupational diseases caused by certain poisons or irritants, “which are recognized as a peculiar hazard” of the employee’s job and “which other persons not engaged in such employment do not contract.” Ga. L. 1994, pp. 4733-4734.
Compare City of Macon v. Herrington,
