Following this Court’s grant of an application for discretionary appeal,1 the Georgia Institute of Technology and Key Risk Management Services, Inc. appeal from the Superior Court of Fulton County’s order affirming the State Board of Workers’ Compensation’s award to Linda Hunnicutt. The appellants contend that the superior court erred when it adopted the Board’s conclusion that Hunnicutt’s request for income benefits was not barred by the applicable statute of limitation. For the following reasons, we affirm. The parties stipulated to the following relevant facts. On appeal, this Court reviews de novo the State Board of Workers’ Compensation’s application of the law to these undisputed facts. Kroger Co. v. Wilson , 301 Ga. App. 345, 346 687 SE2d 586 2009. Hunnicutt suffered a compensable job injury on May 6, 1996. The appellants voluntarily paid temporary total disability “TTD” weekly income benefits until February 2, 2004. Because Hunnicutt’s injury had not been designated as “catastrophic”2 at that point, Hunnicutt received TTD income benefits for the maximum period available to her under OCGA § 34-9-261. That statute provides, in relevant part, as follows: While the disability to work resulting from an injury is temporarily total, the employer shall pay or cause to be paid to the employee a weekly benefit. . . . The weekly benefit under this Code section shall be payable for a maximum period of 400 weeks from the date of injury; provided, however, that in the event of a catastrophic injury as defined in subsection g of Code Section 34-9-200.1, the weekly benefit under this Code section shall be paid until such time as the employee undergoes a change in condition for the better as provided in paragraph 1 of subsection a of Code Section 34-9-104. On July 27, 2005, Hunnicutt timely filed a Request for Catastrophic Designation, Form WC-R1CATEE, asking that the nature of her prior injury be classified as catastrophic. The request did not specifically ask for TTD income benefits beyond those Hunnicutt had already received. The appellants objected to Hunnicutt’s request, and requested a hearing on the issue. Following a hearing, the Managed Care and Rehabilitation Division of the Board issued a decision on May 23, 2006, designating Hunnicutt’s injury as catastrophic. The decision did not address the issue of TTD income benefits. The appellants filed an appeal from the decision, and the appeal was scheduled for a hearing before an administrative law judge “ALJ”. The parties postponed the hearing several times, however, in order to conduct discovery. The appellants subsequently voluntarily dismissed the appeal with prejudice. They also agreed to provide Hunnicutt with rehabilitation benefits pursuant to the catastrophic injury designation.
On December 17, 2007, Hunnicutt filed a Form WC-14 with the Board, requesting a hearing on her claim for TTD income benefits resulting from the designation of her injury as catastrophic; she also claimed that the appellants had failed to pay her medical expenses and requested that the appellants be penalized for late payment. The appellants objected to Hunnicutt’s claim for TTD income benefits, asserting that the claim was barred by the two-year statute of limitation contained in OCGA § 34-9-104 b. Hunnicutt argued, however, that the filing of her request for catastrophic designation, Form WC-R1CATEE on July 27, 2005, within the two-year statute of limitation, either implicitly incorporated a request for TTD income benefits or, alternatively, tolled the statute of limitation with respect to seeking such benefits. In response, the appellants contended that the Form WC-R1CATEE submitted by Hunnicutt did not expressly request TTD income benefits and, thus, neither constituted a timely request for benefits nor tolled the statute of limitation for requesting such benefits. Following a hearing, the ALJ rejected the appellants’ argument and granted Hunnicutt’s request for TTD income benefits, ordering the appellants to recommence the payment of those benefits from the date those payments had ceased, February 1, 2004, and to continue the payments until the order was terminated or modified. The appellants appealed the ALJ’s order to the appellate division of the Board, which adopted the ALJ’s findings of fact and conclusions of law and affirmed the award. The appellants then appealed to the Superior Court of Fulton County, which affirmed the award. This appeal followed.