Lead Opinion
Petitioner seeks certiorari relief and argues the JCC’s order appointing an expert
For a non-final workers’ compensation order to be reviewable by certiorari, a petitioner is required to demonstrate that the order constitutes a departure from essential requirements of law, and would cause material harm that cannot be adequately remedied by appeal. See, e.g., Diestel v. Winfrey Plumbing, Inc.,
Here, Petitioner fails to demonstrate that the JCC’s order requiring him to attend an examination with an expert medical advisor (EMA) will cause a harm which is not remediable on appeal. See Vazquez v. Wendy’s,
To the extent that Petitioner believes the JCC failed to pose the correct question to the EMA, Petitioner has not established that he has been denied the opportunity to depose the EMA, or is otherwise foreclosed from eliciting the opinions he believes relevant to the disposition of his case. To the contrary, the statute and the rules of procedure allow Claimant to take the EMA’s deposition in the same manner and for the same purposes as provided in the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure. See Fla. Admin. Code. R. 60Q-6.114(1) & (2); see also § 440.30, Fla. Stat. (2005).
For the foregoing reasons, the petition is DENIED.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I agree that we should not exercise our extraordinary writs jurisdiction in the present case. Nevertheless, I do not wish to join in any suggestion or implication that a wrongful order for an expert medical adviser will never be reviewable by certiorari.
