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Workers' Compensation_constitutional claim from Industrial Commission_not certified by
Commission_no petition for cert_dismissed
The Court of Appeals did not have jurisdiction and dismissed an appeal from the denial
of workers' compensation benefits for an inmate where plaintiff presented a constitutional
question but there was no indication that the Industrial Commission certified the question or that
a petition for certiorari was filed.
Scudder & Hedrick, by Alice Tejada, for plaintiff-appellant.
Hedrick, Eatman, Garnder & Kincheloe, L.L.P., by Thomas M.
Morrow and Susan J. Vanderweert, for defendant-appellees.
Per Curiam
James Myles (plaintiff) appeals the order of the North
Carolina Industrial Commission (Commission), which denied
plaintiff's request for workers' compensation benefits while he was
incarcerated but before he was convicted. Because we do not have
jurisdiction to hear this case, we dismiss plaintiff's appeal.
Plaintiff presented one issue for our review: Whether the
equal protection clauses of the United States and North Carolina
Constitutions allow the Commission to deny disability benefits
during an employee's pre-conviction incarceration. Where
a party
appeals a constitutional issue from the Commission and fails to
file a petition for certiorari
or fails to have the questioncertified by the Commission, this Court is without jurisdiction.
Carolinas Medical Center v. Employers And Carriers Listed in
Exhibit A, 172 N.C. App. 549, 553, 616 S.E.2d 588, 591 (2005)
. In
the instant case, there is no evidence in the record that the
Commission has certified the question nor is there any evidence
that a petition for certiorari was filed. Accordingly, we are
without jurisdiction to hear this case.
For the foregoing reasons,
plaintiff's appeal is dismissed.
Dismissed.
Panel consisting of: Judges Hunter, Tyson, and Jackson
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