Summary
Judgment reversed. Birdsong, P. J., and Eldridge, J., concur.
Summary
Judgment reversed. Birdsong, P. J., and Eldridge, J., concur.
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Timothy V. Hanofee, for appellant.
We granted claimant Ronald Webb a discretionary appeal in this workers' compensation case. In September 1994, an administrative law judge ("ALJ") ordered the City of Atlanta to pay temporary total disability benefits to Webb, a city employee injured on the job. The City did not appeal that order, but in May 1995 it unilaterally suspended the payments. City officials reasoned that because Webb had received benefits under a city-sponsored disability plan during the entire time he received workers' compensation benefits, the City was entitled to a credit for the workers' compensation benefits paid out and, as a result, no longer had to pay the benefits the ALJ had awarded in 1994. Both the ALJ and the appellate division of the State Board of Workers' Compensation ("Appellate Division") rejected the City's argument. The ALJ found the City had proven no change in condition. Noting that the City had not raised the credit issue during the hearing which resulted in the September 1994 award, the ALJ found the unappealed September 1994 award res judicata on the issue of any set-offs or "credits" for disability plan payments. The Appellate Division agreed; however, the superior court reversed, finding the doctrine of res judicata inapplicable and the City entitled to a credit for disability payments. It remanded the matter for a determination of the amount of that credit. For reasons which follow, we reverse the superior court's judgment.
1. The ALJ and Board correctly applied this Court's precedents regarding res judicata to this workers' compensation case. "A judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction shall be conclusive between the same parties and their privies as to all matters put in issue or which under the rules of law might have been put in issue in the cause wherein the judgment was rendered until the judgment is reversed or set aside." (Emphasis supplied.) OCGA
If the City of Atlanta had raised the disability plan payments in the hearing which led to the September 1994 award, it could have obtained a credit from those payments. See OCGA
The res judicata effect extends to prospective workers' compensation benefits as well as those the City previously paid pursuant to the September 1994 award. When the ALJ made the 1994 award of temporary total disability payments "from October 1, 1992 through the present and continuing," OCGA
2. The superior court found that the payment of disability benefits could constitute a "change in condition" authorizing the ALJ to modify the September 1994 award. We disagree.
The applicable statute, OCGA
The ALJ found no change in Webb's physical condition or wage-earning capacity since the 1994 award. Although the superior court found that increases in disability plan payments could constitute improvements in economic condition, neither it nor the City has cited any authority showing such payments affect a claimant's wage-earning capacity. Furthermore, these disability payments do not constitute a change in Webb's "status as an employee," as the City's new contentions merely "[show] a status that existed from the inception of this claim." Spiva v. Union County,
Because the ALJ's award was supported by evidence and was based on a proper interpretation of the law, we reverse the superior court's judgment.
Clifford E. Hardwick IV, Bruce P. Johnson, for appellee.
1997
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