It hаs long been the law in this state that interventions in common law suits are generally not allowable unless the applicant for intervention has a lien or other interest in the subject matter of the suit which needs protection.
Rust v. Woolbright,
The sole basis for allowing an intervention in the present case, therefore, is the provision in the present statute that the insurance carrier or employer shall have a lien against the net recovery of any judgment or settlement recovered by the injured employee. See Ga. L. 1963, pp. 141, 145 (Code Ann. § 114-403).
It is urged that the lien here compares to the lien given to an attorney under Code § 9-613 (2). The lien in the present case is against the recovery, if аny; the attorney’s lien is not only against the recovery but is a lien against the suit itself. Furthermore, the attorney is given the express statutory right to prosecute the suit in the event of settlement between the plaintiff and the defendant.
There is no allegatiоn whatsoever in the application for intervention, or in the intervention itself, which shows that the intervenor’s lien needs protection or that there is any likelihoоd that a recovery will be dissipated without payment to the intervenor. There is nо allegation that the employee is insolvent or that the employee uрon recovery may fail or refuse to pay the intervenor the amount to which it is entitled or that any fraud or collusion is being practiced. To permit interventiоn here would be to give the right of intervention in a common law suit when the-intervenor wоuld have no right to intervene in, or be entitled to relief in, a court of equity under the allegations made.
It is true that the employer and insurance carrier may be аffected by the judgment in that a recovery would be to their benefit and a failure to recover would be to their detriment, but this economic effect of the judgment is not the effect referred to in the decisions cited above. See
Arnold v. West Lmbr. Co.,
In
Rust v. Woolbright,
The trial court did not err in sustaining the plaintiff’s oral motion to dismiss the application to intervene.
Judgment affirmed.
