Jul 11, 2012 | Uncategorized, Workers' Compensation
In Bentley v. Spartanburg County (the opinion is attached below), the South Carolina Supreme Court held that when a deputy shoots and kills an unarmed suspect he is not entitled to a workers compensation recovery for the mental injuries caused by the shooting.
In workers compensation, employees are entitled to recovery for mental injuries sustained on the job only if the injury is caused by an extraordinary and unusual employment condition. The court basically decided that cops know that they are liable to have to shoot and kill suspects on the job. They are told so during training, and they are trained to do the shooting. Since the officer in question could have expected killing someone on the job, the event was neither extraordinary nor unusual for the purposes of a mental injury recovery under the workers compensation act.
The relevant part of the Workers’ Compensation Act, Section 42-1-16, requires that the employee prove by a preponderance of the evidence that:
the employee’s employment conditions causing the stress, mental injury, or mental illness were extraordinary and unusual in comparison to the normal conditions of the particular employment.
The result in this case is almost entirely unremarkable given the current law.
What makes the opinion interesting though is that while the Court ruled against Bentley in this particular case, it also issued a protest against the extraordinary and unusual requirement for mental injury recoveries. The court recognized that they must judge on the basis of the statute, but they argued that like other states have already done, South Carolina should begin to view mental injury recoveries with less skepticism.
Traditionally, claims of mental injury have been disallowed altogether or subjected to greater hurdles than claims of physical injury. But recognizing that physical injuries are just as susceptible to fraud and just as injurious, the Court asked the legislature to reconsider the current law.
Justice Hearn wrote a dissent, with Justice Beatty concurred, that embraced the protest in the majority opinion, but argued that even under the current standard, the killing of a suspect is an extraordinary and unusual workplace condition for a Spartanburg deputy sheriff.
South Carolina Workers’ Compensation Attorneys of Reeves, Aiken & Hightower
The SC workers compensation lawyers at Reeves, Aiken, & Hightower know the South Carolina worker’s compensation system and are ready to get you the recovery you deserve. Browse our website, examine our credentials, and compare us to anyone else. Then call us at 877-374-5999 or contact us at this link for a private consultation.
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Jul 9, 2012 | Uncategorized, Workers' Compensation
As you may know, employees usually have no right to sue their employers for injury outside of workers compensation. Workers Compensation was formed years ago to provide workers some remedy where they had traditionally had none at all. The bargain was that employers would give up their virtual immunity from suit by their employees in exchange for a limited, statutory system of compensation for the employees. That statutory system applies to most situations, but not all. The statutory system is intended to apply to the most obvious accidents that occur on the job, when an employee is on the job, acting within the scope of employment, and the only relationship between the employer and the employee at the time of the accident is an employer-employee relationship.
The most common situations where the statutory system does not apply, i.e. when the Exclusive Remedy Doctrine does not apply and the employee will be able to recover outside of the workers compensation system, are:
- Dual Capacity
- Intentional Torts
- Liability for Third-parties
Dual Capacity
When an employee is injured by the employer, when the employer is not solely in an employer-employee relationship with the employee, the employee will be able to recover to the extent of the injuries incurred by the employee outside of the employer-employee relationship. For example, an employee will be able to recover from his or her employer when they are off-duty patronizing their employer’s business. For a more complicated example, if an employee is at work, using a forklift, and the employer, in addition to being the employee’s employer, was the manufacturer of the forklift, the employee could recover for injuries attributable to design defect in the forklift.
Intentional Torts
If an employer intentionally injures an employee, the employee is entitled to recover under common law causes of action, rather than be constrained to workers comp recoveries.
Liability for Third-Parties
Sometimes employers will contract to hold third parties harmless from claims that arise while those third parties are contracted by the employer. For Example, a contractor might hold a subcontractor harmless from claims by the contractor’s own employees. In these cases, the employee will be able to sue the employer under the theory that the employer is indemnifying the third party.
Workers Comp Attorneys of Reeves, Aiken & Hightower
The SC workers compensation lawyers at Reeves, Aiken, & Hightower know the South Carolina worker’s compensation system and are ready to get you the recovery you deserve. Browse our website, examine our credentials, and compare us to anyone else. Then call us at 877-374-5999 or contact us at this link for a private consultation.
Jun 27, 2012 | Uncategorized, Workers' Compensation
Often, when you have been hurt on the job, doctors will at first remove you from work entirely while you heal. During this time, you will generally get compensated at 2/3’s of your weekly wages after the first 7 days you are out of work. When the doctor your employer’s workers compensation insurance carrier chose for you determines you are able to go back to work, your benefits end (if not before). What if the doctor allows you to go back to work on light duty though?
If you are offered the opportunity to go to light duty employment by the doctor, you must take it. If you do not, you will lose all workers compensation benefits until you return to work. Fortunately though, if your employer is paying you less than 2/3’s of your weekly wages before the accident, you are entitled to the difference between what you are being paid and that 2/3’s figure, to bridge the gap.
If you feel that you are unable to perform the light duty work assigned, you should contact an attorney to be able to fully exercise your rights at a hearing. At the hearing, the Workers Compensation Commission will review the doctor’s determination and decide whether you are capable of performing the light duty work.
Workers Compensation Lawyers in South Carolina
If you’ve been hurt on the job, contact the experienced workers compensation lawyers at Reeves, Aiken, & Hightower. We know the South Carolina worker’s compensation system and are ready to get you the recovery you deserve. Browse our website, examine our credentials, and compare them to any other firm. Then call us at 877-374-5999 or contact us at this link for a private consultation.
Jun 26, 2012 | Uncategorized, Workers' Compensation
A lot of people who find themselves hurt on the job are surprised to find that they are entitled only to a set recovery based on the type of their injury. They find themselves wondering why they are not entitled to damages based on pain and suffering and why they are not able to argue that they are entitled to greater compensation.
The unsatisfying answer is mainly historical accident. The law in regard to injury developed before industrialization and factories. People rarely got seriously injured and when they did it was usually at their own hand. When the law that developed in that environment was applied to workers getting injured in factories and working on the railroads, invariably the worker was unable to win a lawsuit against their employer for some reason or another, whether because of contributory negligence or assumption of risk or some other doctrine. The worker who was enriching their employer by working for him was left out in the cold to fend for him or herself after being injured on the job.
Clearly this was unjust.
The state legislatures stepped in to create employer liability for the first time. Obviously, employers were well represented before the legislatures and workers, maybe not so much. The laws largely passed based on this compromise: workers get compensation without regard to fault, but that compensation is severely limited. Today that means no pain and suffering and mere fraction of what a recovery would be in a negligence action.
Still, workers compensation assures a remedy for those actually injured on the job. Proving the actually injured on the job bit is often the hard party and it is where especially clever lawyers can especially help.
Workers Compensation Lawyers
The SC workers compensation lawyers at Reeves, Aiken, & Hightower know the South Carolina worker’s compensation system and are ready to get you the recovery you deserve. Browse our website, examine our credentials, and compare us to any other firm. Then call us at 877-374-5999 or contact us at this link for a private consultation.
Jun 10, 2012 | Uncategorized, Workers' Compensation
This past Wednesday, June 6th, the South Carolina Senate unanimously confirmed a new SC Worker’s Compensation Commissioner. Commissioner Gene McCaskill will begin his six (6) year appointed term on July 1, 2012. He fills the remaining vacanat seat created when former Chairman David Huffstetler resigned. Although I will sincerely miss Commissioner Huffstetler, we all look forward to trying cases before Commissioner McCaskill.
The Workers’ Compensation Commission has six (6) full time Commissioners on rotating appointments. They hear cases throughout the State three weeks out of four every month. The fourth week is reserved for Full Commission appeals. In this difficult economy, there are more lawyers “dabbling” in trying to handle workers’ compensation cases. However, the family of serious workers’ compensation attorneys is fairly small. Although most mistakenly think workers’ compensation is “easy,” it is not. This is a complex area of law with numerous time frames in which claimant’s must act or their case can be negatively impacted or even waived. For example, if hurt on the job while driving, you have potentially two claims – a workers’ compensation case as well as a “third party” lawsuit. If your lawyer begins the third party case without proper notice and filings, the workers’ compensation claim is deemed legally abandoned or waived. Better make sure your attorney is well versed and experienced in this area. His or her innocent mistakes could cost you and your family all.
Mr. Reeves of Reeves, Aiken & Hightower LLP is a 23 year veteran workers’ compensation attorney. For the first seven (7) years, he was a workers’ compensation insurance defense lawyer. And before going to law school, he was an ICU Registered Nurse (RN). As a result of his background and training, he understands complex injury and how to prepare serious workers’ compensation cases. For more information about him and our firm, please visit our website at www.rjrlaw.com. And, for a confidential review of your particular case, call us directly at 877-374-5999 toll free. We hope to have an opportunity to help you and your family through this most difficult time in your life. Call today.