Sims v. Charmes/Arby's Roast Beef

542 S.E.2d 277, 142 N.C. App. 154, 2001 N.C. App. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 6, 2001
DocketCOA99-1402
StatusPublished
Cited by157 cases

This text of 542 S.E.2d 277 (Sims v. Charmes/Arby's Roast Beef) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sims v. Charmes/Arby's Roast Beef, 542 S.E.2d 277, 142 N.C. App. 154, 2001 N.C. App. LEXIS 46 (N.C. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

Benny Sims (“plaintiff’) injured his back lifting a case of beef while working for Charmes/Arby’s Roast Beef (along with North Carolina Self-Insurers Fund, “defendants”) on 25 October 1994. Defendants immediately filed Industrial Commission Form 19 and *156 began making temporary disability payments effective the day of plaintiff’s injury; thereafter, defendants filed a Form 60 admitting liability and plaintiffs right to compensation. Dr. Richard O’Keeffe, Jr., diagnosed plaintiff with multiple bulging discs. On 15 June 1995, plaintiff was given a ten percent permanent disability rating to his back.

Meanwhile, defendants obtained evidence that plaintiff was working on a self-employed basis and promptly filed a Form 24 Application to Terminate Payment of Compensation. On 25 July 1995, a deputy commissioner approved defendants’ Form 24 and terminated plaintiff’s benefits effective 20 March 1995, finding that plaintiff was self-employed and earning income. Plaintiff requested a hearing. At the hearing, held on 10 September 1996, plaintiff testified that he owned a number of business enterprises, including a photography studio and tax preparation service, and that he owned and operated these businesses before, during, and after his employment with defendant. The evidence also showed that plaintiff began working at a K-Mart store on 29 July 1996.

The deputy commissioner awarded plaintiff compensation for temporary total disability from 1 November 1995 through 1 December 1995 because of a re-injury to plaintiff’s back which occurred 31 October 1995, as well as 30 weeks of permanent partial disability; defendants were awarded a credit for 38 weeks of compensation payments made between 25 October 1994 and 25 July 1995. The credit awarded to defendants offset the award to plaintiff, who received no further compensation.

Plaintiff appealed to the Full Commission. On 18 December 1997, the Commission entered an opinion and award in which it concluded plaintiff was not entitled to a presumption of continuing temporary total disability because the parties had never entered into a Form 21 agreement; further, the Commission upheld the award of the deputy commissioner, finding that plaintiff failed to meet his burden of proving temporary total disability, in part because he earned income during the period in which he collected disability payments from defendants.

Plaintiff’s Motion for Reconsideration, in which he contended defendants’ execution of the Form 60 entitled him to a presumption of continuing temporary total disability, was denied. Plaintiff then moved for an en banc hearing before the entire Industrial Commission. Plaintiff’s motion was granted and the Full Commission, *157 sitting en banc, heard oral arguments on 7 January 1999. On 22 June 1999, the Commission filed an order in which it declined to rule en banc, and provided that the time for filing an appeal from its opinion and award of 8 May 1997 “shall lie from the date of the filing of this Order.” Plaintiff and defendants appeal.

Plaintiff assigns error to the Full Commission’s opinion and award filed 18 December 1997, and its subsequent order filed 7 October 1998, which concluded that plaintiff was not entitled to a presumption of continuing temporary total disability based on defendants’ filing of the Industrial Commission Form 60. Further, plaintiff contends the Commission erred when it determined plaintiff had failed to prove his temporary total disability because he had earned income from self-employment businesses during the time period in which he collected payments from defendants. Finally, plaintiff assigns as error the Commission’s method for calculating plaintiff’s average weekly wage based on G.S. § 97-2(5).

In their separate appeal from the 22 June 1999 order, defendants assert the Industrial Commission erred when it granted plaintiff’s request to reconsider the matter sitting en banc, and assign error to the provisions of the en banc order purporting to extend the deadline for filing an appeal from the Commission’s earlier orders.

We begin by addressing defendants’ assignment of error regarding the Industrial Commission’s authority to sit en banc. The Industrial Commission is an administrative agency of the State and has only the limited power and jurisdiction either expressly or impliedly granted by the legislature to enable it to administer the Workers’ Compensation Act. Hogan v. Cone Mills Corp., 315 N.C. 127, 337 S.E.2d 477 (1985). The procedure for the Full Commission to hear cases is established by G.S. § 97-85. The statute provides:

If application is made to the Commission within 15 days from the date when notice of the award shall have been given, the full Commission shall review the award, and, if good ground be shown therefor, reconsider the evidence, receive further evidence, rehear the parties or their representatives, and, if proper, amend the award: Provided, however, when application is made for review of an award, and such an award has been heard and determined by a commissioner of the North Carolina Industrial Commission, the commissioner who heard and determined the dispute in the first instance, as specified by G.S. 97-84, shall be *158 disqualified from sitting with the full Commission on the review of such award, and the chairman of the Industrial Commission shall designate a deputy commissioner to take such commissioner’s place in the review of the particular award. The deputy commissioner so designated, along with the two other commissioners, shall compose the full Commission upon review. Provided further, the chairman of the Industrial Commission shall have the authority to designate a deputy commissioner to take the place of a commissioner on the review of any case, in which event the deputy commissioner so designated shall have the same authority and duty as does the commissioner whose place he occupies on such review.

The statute does not provide the Commission with the express authority to sit en banc to hear cases nor does it evince any intent by the legislature that the Commission do so. Indeed, the statute is explicit in setting forth that, for the purposes of reviewing awards, the Full Commission shall be composed of three member panels, appeals from which are taken to the Court of Appeals.

Because the Commission is without authority to sit en banc, it follows that its 22 June 1999 order, including the provisions extending the time for filing an appeal from the earlier orders, is a nullity and must be vacated. Nevertheless, in the exercise of the discretion granted us by N.C.R. App. P. 2, we treat plaintiff’s purported appeal as a petition for writ of certiorari, allow the petition, and proceed to consider plaintiff’s appeal on the merits.

Plaintiff argues the Commission erred when it concluded that plaintiff was not entitled to a presumption of continuing temporary total disability based on defendants’ filing of the Industrial Commission Form 60, entitled “Employer’s Admission of Employee’s Right To Compensation Pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat.

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Bluebook (online)
542 S.E.2d 277, 142 N.C. App. 154, 2001 N.C. App. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sims-v-charmesarbys-roast-beef-ncctapp-2001.