IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
PEPSI BOTTLING VENTURES, LLC, §
§ No. 16, 2019
Employer Below, §
Appellant, § Court Below—Superior Court
§ of the State of Delaware
v. §
§ C.A. No. K18A-05-003
TERESA HOLBEN, §
§
Claimant Below, Appellee. §
§
Submitted: January 22, 2019
Decided: February 1, 2019
Before STRINE, Chief Justice; VALIHURA and VAUGHN, Justices.
ORDER
After consideration of the notice to show cause, the appellant’s response, and
the decisions of the Superior Court and the Industrial Accident Board, it appears to
the Court that:
(1) On January 10, 2019, the appellant, Pepsi Bottling Ventures, LLC
(“Pepsi”), filed a notice of appeal from a December 13, 2018 decision of the Superior
Court in an appeal from a decision of the Industrial Accident Board (the “Board”).
(2) The appellee, Teresa Holben, experienced a work-related injury while
employed by Pepsi. After Holben partially recovered following a period of total
disability, the parties disputed how the Board should calculate the compensation rate
for Holben’s temporary partial disability benefits. After a hearing, the Board
awarded compensation at a lower rate than Holben claimed was warranted. The
Board awarded Holben medical witness fees under 19 Del. C. § 2322(e), but it
determined that she was not entitled to an award of attorneys’ fees under 19 Del. C.
§ 2320 because Pepsi had made a settlement offer at least thirty days before the
hearing that was greater than the award that Holben received from the Board.1
Holben appealed to the Superior Court.
(3) On appeal, the Superior Court affirmed the Board’s compensation
award, but it reversed the denial of attorneys’ fees, holding that attorneys’ fees were
available under the statute because Pepsi’s settlement offer had explicitly excluded
medical witness fees and the Board had awarded Holben medical witness fees. The
Superior Court remanded the case to the Board “with direction to the Board to award
Ms. Holben attorney’s fees pursuant to 19 Del. C. 2320.”
(4) On January 10, 2019, Pepsi filed a notice of appeal in this Court. Pepsi
did not comply with Rule 42, which sets forth the procedural requirements for
invoking the jurisdiction of this Court to consider an appeal from an interlocutory
1
See 19 Del. C. § 2320(10)(a)-(b) (providing for an award of attorneys’ fees to a successful
claimant, unless “an offer to settle an issue pending before the Industrial Accident Board is
communicated to the claimant or the claimant’s attorney, in writing, at least 30 days prior to the
trial date established by the Board on such issue and the offer thus communicated is equal or
greater than the amount ultimately awarded by the Board at the trial on that issue . . . . The written
offer shall also unequivocally state whether or not it includes medical witness fees and expenses .
. . .”).
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order. The Senior Court Clerk issued a notice directing Pepsi to show cause why the
appeal should not be dismissed as an improper interlocutory appeal.
(5) In response to the notice to show cause, Pepsi argues that the Superior
Court’s ruling is not interlocutory. Specifically, Pepsi contends that the Superior
Court’s order remanding the case to the Board requires the Board to perform a
merely ministerial function, and not a quasi-judicial one.
(6) The Court disagrees. “An order is deemed final and appealable if the
trial court has declared its intention that the order be the court’s ‘final act’ in
disposing of all justiciable matters within its jurisdiction.”2 The further action
required by the Board in this matter following remand from the Superior Court does
not involve a purely ministerial act but an exercise of discretion by the Board in
fashioning an appropriate fee award.3 The Superior Court’s ruling is therefore
interlocutory.
2
Black v. Staffieri, 2013 WL 1045221 (Del. Mar. 13, 2013). See also Pollard v. The Placers, Inc.,
692 A.2d 879, 880 (Del. 1997) (“An order is deemed final when the trial court has declared its
intention that the order is the court’s final act in a case.”).
3
Black, 2013 WL 1045221. See also 19 Del. C. § 2320(10)(a) (requiring the Board to award a
“reasonable” fee); Street v. Butler, 2017 WL 991079 (Del. Mar. 13, 2017) (“Although the Family
Court’s order on the cross-petitions for contempt sustained Butler’s entitlement to an award of
attorney fees, the amount of that award has not been established thus rendering the judgment
interlocutory.”); Del. Bay Surgical Servs., P.A. v. Swier, 2005 WL 541016 (Del. Feb. 15, 2005)
(“This Court consistently has held that a judgment on the merits is not final until an outstanding
related application for an award of attorneys fees has been decided. In this case, attorneys fees
were awarded as part of the November 30th judgment. The Superior Court, however, has yet to
determine the appropriate amount of the award. The further action required by the Superior Court
in this matter is not a purely ministerial act but an exercise of discretion by the court in fashioning
an appropriate implementing order.”).
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(7) Absent compliance with Supreme Court Rule 42, the appellate
jurisdiction of this Court is limited to the review of final orders. Pepsi’s failure to
comply with Supreme Court Rule 42 leaves this Court without jurisdiction to hear
its interlocutory appeal.
NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED that this appeal is hereby
DISMISSED.
BY THE COURT:
/s/ Leo E. Strine, Jr.
Chief Justice
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