Lead Opinion
Appellant appeals the reversal by the superior court of a workers’ compensation award granted by the administrative law judge (“ALJ”).
Appellant had lived with the employee for approximately eleven years prior to the employee’s accidental death on the job, although the two had never married, nor had they established a common law marriage. Appellant’s previous marriage ended in divorce; the employee’s previous wife predeceased him. The employee’s paycheck was used by appellant for their mutual support, and consequently the ALJ found that appellant’s partial dependence entitled her to an award under OCGA § 34-9-13 (c) and (d), which allow for an award in cases of actual dependency notwithstanding relation to the employee. The superior court reversed, holding that the ALJ was incorrect in
1. In response to appellant’s first enumeration, we find that the superior court did not err in ruling that the ALJ incorrectly applied the law. Although Jewel, supra, involved an adulterous situation, that was not the crux of the holding, which was that when the dependency itself grew out of a meretricious relationship, such as adultery, benefits should be denied. Jewel, supra at 600. See also Rush v. Holtzclaw,
2. Appellant’s second enumeration, that the superior court erred in not following the language of OCGA § 34-9-13 (d), is likewise without merit. Although the text of the statute provides for a factual determination of dependency in situations other than those specified elsewhere, the statute is subject to the judicial limitations established in Jewel and Bloodworth. The legislature has not indicated otherwise.
3. In light of the uncontested facts of this case, we reject the third enumeration that the claimed dependency did not arise from a meretricious relationship.
Judgment affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring specially.
While concurring fully with the majority opinion, it is acknowledged that in the instant case only possible potential criminal fornica
In Jewel, at 604 and 605, Judge Hall pertinently pointed out a pithy dissent, “An actual dependent is a dependent in the same way a rose is a rose.” He further states, “Neither the board nor the courts are empowered under the Act to go on a puritanical witch hunt with the avowed purpose of scouring the claimant’s so-called unclean hands,” and concludes by stating that “a reversal grounded upon the claimant’s so-called morals casts this court into the role of Keystone Cops.”
Nevertheless, we are bound by the majority opinion in Jewel and cannot ignore what was said by Judge Eberhardt in his special concurrence at 603, particularly as to the “legal or moral obligation of the employee, as toward the one claiming dependencyPossible potential criminal fornication and criminal adultery, which have to do with legal and moral acts, may be considered in the best-interests-of-the-child findings in custody and parental termination cases. Gibson v. Pierce,
