34A-1-302. Presiding officers for adjudicative proceedings -- Subpoenas --
Independent judgment -- Consolidation -- Record -- Notice of order.
(1) (a) The commissioner shall authorize the Division of Adjudication to call, assign a
presiding officer, and conduct hearings and adjudicative proceedings when an application for a
proceeding is filed with the Division of Adjudication under this title.
(b) The director of the Division of Adjudication or the director's designee may issue
subpoenas. Failure to respond to a properly issued subpoena may result in a contempt citation
and offenders may be punished as provided in Section 78B-6-313.
(c) Witnesses subpoenaed under this section are allowed fees as provided by law for
witnesses in the district court of the state. The witness fees shall be paid by the state unless the
witness is subpoenaed at the instance of a party other than the commission.
(d) A presiding officer assigned under this section may not participate in any case in
which the presiding officer is an interested party. Each decision of a presiding officer shall
represent the presiding officer's independent judgment.
(2) If, in the judgment of the presiding officer having jurisdiction of the proceeding the
consolidation would not be prejudicial to any party, when the same or substantially similar
evidence is relevant and material to the matters in issue in more than one proceeding, the
presiding officer may:
(a) fix the same time and place for considering each matter;
(b) jointly conduct hearings;
(c) make a single record of the proceedings; and
(d) consider evidence introduced with respect to one proceeding as introduced in the
others.
(3) (a) The commission shall keep a full and complete record of all adjudicative
proceedings in connection with a disputed matter.
(b) All testimony at any hearing shall be recorded but need not be transcribed. If a party
requests transcription, the transcription shall be provided at the party's expense.
(c) All records on appeals shall be maintained by the Division of Adjudication. The
records shall include an appeal docket showing the receipt and disposition of the appeals.
(4) A party in interest shall be given notice of the entry of a presiding officer's order or
any order or award of the commission. The mailing of the copy of the order or award to the
last-known address in the files of the commission of a party in interest and to the attorneys or
agents of record in the case, if any, is considered to be notice of the order.
(5) In any formal adjudicative proceeding, the presiding officer may take any action
permitted under Section 63G-4-206.
Amended by Chapter 3, 2008 General Session
Amended by Chapter 382, 2008 General Session
Download Code Section Zipped WordPerfect 34A01_030200.ZIP 3,061 Bytes
Sections in this Chapter|Chapters in this Title|All Titles|Legislative Home Page
Last revised: Thursday, May 28, 2009