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Tuesday, May 27, 2014

US 6th Circuit Holds Loss Of Employee Benefits Not Actionable Under RICO

RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
_________________

JAY BROWN, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
AJAX PAVING INDUSTRIES, INC.; AMERICAN CONTRACTORS INSURANCE GROUP, INC.; WARD NORTH AMERICA, LP; VERICLAIM, INC.; NOVAPRO RISK SOLUTIONS, LP; NOVAPRO US RISK, LLC; PAUL DROUILLARD, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 11-1391

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit
No. 2:10-cv-10137—Gerald E. Rosen, Chief District Judge. Decided and Filed: May 19, 2014
BEFORE: SUTTON and COOK, Circuit Judges; MARBLEY, District Judge.*
_________________
COUNSEL 

ON BRIEF: Marshall Lasser, MARSHALL LASSER, P.C., Southfield, Michigan, for 
Appellant. James J. Urban, Paul M. Mersino, BUTZEL LONG, Lansing, Michigan for Appellee 
Ajax Paving. Joseph A. Fink, Jeffery V. Stuckey, D. Lee Khachaturian, DICKINSON WRIGHT 
PLLC, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellees American Contractors, Ward North, VeriClaim and 
NovaPro. Daniel B. Tukel, BUTZEL LONG, Detroit, Michigan, Michael F. Smith, THE 
SMITH APPELLATE LAW FIRM, Washington, D.C., for Appellee Drouillard. 
 *
The Honorable Algenon L. Marbley, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Ohio, sitting 
by designation. 
_______________ 

OPINION 
_________________ 
SUTTON, Circuit Judge. This case began as a dispute over who should pay for Jay 
Brown’s shoulder injury. Brown claimed that he suffered the injury while paving a road for his 
employer Ajax Paving, and that the company as a result owed him workers’ compensation. At 
the workers’ compensation hearing, however, Ajax introduced medical testimony suggesting that 
the injury occurred outside of work. While the case remained pending before the Michigan 
administrative agency, Brown and Ajax settled. 

Unlike most settlements, this one did not end the controversy. Brown thought that Ajax 
had introduced false medical testimony in order to deny or at least diminish his benefits and that 
it had done the same thing to other employees. As a result, he sued Ajax and its alleged 
accomplices—insurers, claims administrators and the doctor—under the Racketeer Influenced 
and Corrupt Organizations Act. The district court dismissed the complaint. 

In order to sue under the Act, Brown must show that illegal racketeering activities have 
“injured [him] in his business or property.” 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c); see also id. § 1962. Brown 
attempts to meet this requirement by arguing that his employer’s use of false testimony prompted 
him to accept a small settlement, and so cost him some of the workers’ compensation benefits he 
otherwise deserved. Not long ago this theory of injury might have worked. This circuit used to 
treat “expected [workers’ compensation] benefits” as “property” under the Act. Brown v. 
Cassens Transp. Co., 675 F.3d 946, 951 (6th Cir. 2012). 

But last year, while the appeal in this case lay pending, the court reversed course while 
sitting en banc. In Jackson v. Sedgwick Claims Management Services, a carbon copy of this 
case, we turned back a lawsuit challenging a scheme to introduce false testimony at workers’ 
compensation hearings. 731 F.3d 556, 558 (6th Cir. 2013) (en banc). We held that “loss or 
diminution of benefits the plaintiff expects to receive under a workers’ compensation scheme 
does not constitute an injury to ‘business or property’ under RICO.” Id. at 566. We gave two 
key reasons for our holding. One was that workers’ compensation compensates for personal 
injury. The Act, which puts its spotlight on “business or property,” does not cover losses that 
flow from personal injuries. Id. at 565–66. The other was that a contrary rule would allow the 
Act to police fraud in the workers’ compensation system, planting the national banner on land 
traditionally patrolled by the States. The Act does not speak with enough clarity, we reasoned, to 
authorize such an intrusion. Id. at 566–69. 

Unfortunately for Brown, Jackson resolves this appeal. Brown’s alleged injury consists 
of getting less workers’ compensation than he deserved. Because “loss or diminution” of 
expected workers’ compensation “does not constitute an injury to ‘business or property,’” id. at 
566, Brown’s claims must fail. 

In response to all of this, Brown makes a partial but not a complete retreat. He submits 
that Jackson applies only to disputes between employer and employee, leaving in place his 
claims against the insurers, the claims administrators and the doctor. Yet this argument 
overlooks what happened in Jackson itself. The defendants in that case included not only an 
employer, but also a claims administrator and a doctor (in fact the same doctor sued in this case). 
The court rejected the claims against all of the defendants. See id. at 558–59. To limit Jackson 
to lawsuits against employers is to rewrite history. 

This argument not only slights Jackson’s outcome, but it also disrespects its reasoning. 
Jackson explained that expected workers’ compensation benefits stand outside the Act’s 
perimeter because they flow from personal injuries. It added that extending the Act to expected 
workers’ compensation benefits would clash with the States’ customary control of their workers’ 
compensation systems. Each argument applies with equal force whether an employee sues his 
employer or somebody else. Changing the defendant neither weakens the link between the 
benefits and personal injury nor dims the respect owed to the States’ authority over workers’ 
compensation. 

Last but not least, Brown’s attempted distinction between employers and others collides 
with the statute Congress enacted. The Act’s applicability turns on the nature of the injury—that 
the plaintiff was “injured in his business or property.” 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c). It does not turn on 
the nature of the defendant. We do not see how the same harm, loss of expected workers’ 
compensation benefits, could count as an injury to business or property against some defendants 
but not against other defendants. 

Brown complains that our decision “immunize[s] any insurer, claim adjuster or medical 
examiner who fraudulently denied or conspired to deny” workers their benefits. Reply Br. at 5. 
That is an overstatement. States can and do impose liability upon people—employers as well as 
others—who defraud the workers’ compensation system. Brown’s own brief tells us that 
Michigan’s courts would entertain claims that “an insurer, claim adjuster or medical examiner 
tortiously interfered with an employee’s receipt of . . . benefits.” Id. at 3. And the commission 
that heads the Michigan workers’ compensation system punishes abuses of the workers’ 
compensation process. See Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 418.861b. Our decision does not 
“immunize” anyone from these exercises of state power. Our decision means only that federal 
judges may not use the Act to seize this power for themselves. That of course was the whole 
point of Jackson. 

The defendants’ alleged actions in short did not injure Brown “in his business or 
property.” 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c). Because this flaw undoes all of Brown’s claims, we need not 
decide whether Brown’s settlement with Ajax covers this case. Nor need we consider whether 
Brown has satisfied other requirements imposed by the Act. 
For these reasons, we affirm. 

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Jury awards Texas family nearly $3 million in fracking case

Fracking in Texas

Today's post was shared by FairWarning and comes from www.latimes.com

In a landmark legal victory that centered on fracking, a middle-class north Texas ranching family won nearly $3 million from a big natural gas company whose drilling, they contend, caused years of sickness, killed pets and livestock, and forced them out of their home for months.

Tuesday's $2.95-million civil verdict by a six-person Dallas jury is thought to be the first of its kind in the nation. Other landowners have sued over drilling and reached settlements, but legal experts think this is the first jury verdict.

Robert and Lisa Parr filed suit against Aruba Petroleum Inc. in 2011, contending that its operations near their land had contaminated the air and harmed their health. Their lawsuit has been closely watched by both critics and supporters of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, which involves pumping water laced with chemicals into shale formations to unlock trapped oil and gas.

"I am just overwhelmed," Lisa Parr said in a telephone interview Wednesday. "I feel like I am just this little bitty girl, this little family who just beat the biggest, most powerful industry in the world."

Aruba Petroleum, based in Plano, Texas, said it had done nothing wrong and had operated within safe and legal guidelines. "We contended the plaintiffs were neither harmed by the presence of our drilling operations nor was the value of their property diminished because of our natural gas development," Aruba said in a statement.

The company said it would...

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Thursday, April 10, 2014

EPA Reaches Agreement with Two Companies Requiring the Cleanup of Asbestos at a School and Head Start Facility in Penuelas, Puerto Rico

Today's post was shared by US EPA News and comes from yosemite.epa.gov

 

Release Date: 04/08/2014

      (New York, N.Y.) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has reached an agreement with the Homeca Recycling Center Co, Inc. and Tallaboa Industrial Park, LLC to clean up asbestos that spread from a building in the Tallaboa Industrial Park during demolition to the nearby Jorge Lucas Perez Valdevieso School and a children’s Head Start facility. The building was being demolished as part of the redevelopment of the former Puerto Rico Olefins facility in Penuelas, Puerto Rico. Under the agreement, the companies will remove asbestos fibers and materials from the Jorge Lucas Pérez Valdivieso School and the Tallaboa Encarnacion Head Start facility with EPA oversight of the work.

      Asbestos was once used in insulation and other building materials. The inhalation of asbestos fibers can lead to cancer and asbestosis, a serious respiratory disease. The removal of asbestos-containing materials during demolition requires strict adherence to procedures outlined in the Clean Air Act to protect public health.

      “Asbestos can cause serious health problems and must be handled properly to protect people’s health,” said Judith A. Enck, EPA Regional Administrator. “The cleanup of asbestos at the school and Head Start will protect the health of children in this community and allow these educational facilities to reopen.”

      In November 2013, EPA discovered that an ongoing demolition conducted at the facility was disturbing...

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Saturday, April 5, 2014

EPA Takes Action to Protect Public from an Illegal Nano Silver Pesticide in Food Containers; Cites NJ Company for Selling Food Containers with an Unregistered Pesticide Warns Large Retailers Not to...

Today's post was shared by US EPA News and comes from yosemite.epa.gov

 The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has issued an order to the Pathway Investment Corp. of Englewood, New Jersey to stop the sale of plastic food storage containers that have not been tested or registered with the EPA, in violation of federal pesticides law. The company’s Kinetic Go Green Premium Food Storage Containers and Kinetic Smartwist Series Containers both contain nano silver as an active ingredient, and the company markets other products as containing nano silver, which the company claims helps reduce the growth of mold, fungus and bacteria. Such claims can only be made on products that have been properly tested and are registered with the EPA.

“Claims that mold, fungus or bacteria are controlled or destroyed by a particular product must be backed up with testing so that consumers know that the products do what the labels say,” said EPA Regional Administrator Judith A. Enck. “Unless these products are registered with the EPA, consumers have no information about whether the claims are accurate. The EPA will continue to take action against companies making unverified public health claims.”

Some pesticides have been linked to various forms of illnesses in people, ranging from skin and eye irritation to cancer. Some pesticides may also affect the hormone or endocrine systems. In many situations, there are non-chemical methods that will effectively control pests.

Under federal pesticide...

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….
Jon L. Gelman of Wayne NJ is the author NJ Workers’ Compensation Law (West-Thompson) and co-author of the national treatise, Modern Workers’ Compensation Law (West-Thompson). For over 4 decades the Law Offices of Jon L Gelman  1.973.696.7900  jon@gelmans.com  have been representing injured workers and their families who have suffered occupational accidents and illnesses.

Related:
New York City workers have high pesticide exposure
Oct 04, 2013
The findings “underscore the importance of considering pest and pesticide burdens in cities when formulating pesticide use regulations,” the researchers from the city's Department of Health and Mental Hygiene wrote in the ...
http://workers-compensation.blogspot.com/

Intentional Tort Claim Against Employer Proceeds for Pesticide
Aug 11, 2010
A US District Court in NJ is allowing a claim of injured agricultural worker to proceed against an employer directly for an intentional tort flowing from a pesticide spraying. The workers, residents of Puerto Rico, were employed ...
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Workers' Compensation: Highly hazardous pesticides should be ...
Aug 11, 2013
The tragic incident in Bihar, India, where 23 school children died after eating a school meal contaminated with monocrotophos, is an important reminder to speed up the withdrawal of highly hazardous pesticides from markets ...
http://workers-compensation.blogspot.com/

Saturday, November 9, 2013

ABA: Too few judges, lack of funding hurting federal courts

Today's post was shared by Legal Newsline and comes from legalnewsline.com

Goodlatte
Goodlatte

The American Bar Association, in a letter last week, says the combination of too few judges and insufficient funding is diminishing the ability of the federal courts to “serve the people and deliver timely justice.”
Thomas Susman, director of the ABA’s Governmental Affairs Office, sent a letter to U.S. Rep. Robert Goodlatte to be made part of the record in a hearing on the need for federal judgeships.
Goodlatte
Last week, Goodlatte, R-Va. and chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, held a hearing titled, “Are More Judges Always the Answer?”
Goodlatte contends President Barack Obama and Senate Democrats see the courts as an avenue to advance their agendas.
“When the Senate Majority Leader said, ‘We’re focusing very intently on the D.C. Circuit’ and ‘We need at least one more. There’s three vacancies. And that will switch the majority,’ he clearly wasn’t referring to the court’s needs,” he said during the Oct. 29 hearing.
But the ABA argues that when federal courts do not have sufficient judges to keep up with the workload, civil trial dockets end up taking a back seat to criminal dockets.
“As a result, persistent judge shortages increase the length of time that civil litigants and businesses wait for their day in court, create pressures that ‘robotize’ justice, and increase case backlogs that will perpetuate delays for years to...
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Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Stryker Corp. Settles FCPA Case, Pays $13 Million

Today's post was shared by FairWarning and comes from blogs.wsj.com

Stryker Corp. settled a long-running U.S. foreign bribery case, agreeing on Thursday to pay $13.3 million to the Securities and Exchange Commission to resolve the allegations — without admitting or denying them.
The Kalamazoo, Mich.-based medical device company first disclosed in 2007 that the SEC and the U.S. Justice Department had made inquiries regarding possible violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which bars the use of bribes to foreign officials to get or keep business.
An SEC investigation found that Stryker’s subsidiaries in Argentina, Greece, Mexico, Poland and Romania made about $2.2 million in illicit payments, describing them in company books as legitimate expenses such as charitable donations, service contracts, travel expenses and commissions. The company made about $7.5 million in profit as a result of the payments, the SEC said.
“Stryker’s misconduct involved hundreds of improper payments over a number of years during which the company’s internal controls were fatally flawed,” said Andrew Calamari, director of the SEC’s New York office, in a statement.
Joe Cooper, the director of communications for Stryker, said in an email the company has enhanced its company-wide anti-corruption compliance program, and was advised that the Justice Department closed its investigation.
A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment.
The SEC issued an administrative order (pdf) against Stryker requiring the company to pay...
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Toyota settles acceleration lawsuit after $3-million verdict

Today's post was shared by FairWarning and comes from www.latimes.com


Toyota Motor Corp.'s first loss in a sudden acceleration case, in an Oklahoma courtroom this week, could embolden attorneys nationwide who are looking to bring hundreds of similar cases.
Worse for the Japanese automaker, the verdict centered on the company's electronics, which have been a focus for plaintiffs seeking to prove safety defects in the company's cars.
Toyota on Friday confirmed that it had reached a confidential settlement in the lawsuit, which involved the fatal 2007 crash of a Camry. The settlement came hours after a jury assessed $3 million in compensatory damages but before the panel could levy a punitive award.
The verdict could provide a road map for attorneys seeking to hold the automaker liable for injuries and deaths.
Toyota has denied any safety defects in its cars, arguing that many incidents of unintended acceleration stemmed from drivers who stepped on the gas instead of the brake. But plaintiffs in the Oklahoma case successfully argued that Toyota's electronic throttle system was flawed, causing the car to speed out of control.
The 2005 Camry crashed into an embankment, severely injuring the driver, 76-year-old Jean Bookout, and killing her passenger, Barbara Schwarz.
By striking a quick settlement, the company likely sought to avoid bad publicity and damage to its reputation, said Jill Wieber Lens, a product liability expert at Baylor University Law School in Waco, Texas.
The Oklahoma defeat could increase pressure on the automaker to come up...
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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Kansas SC suspends former AG’s law license indefinitely | Legal Newsline

Today's post was shared by Legal Newsline and comes from legalnewsline.com

The Kansas Supreme Court has suspended former state Attorney General Phill Kline’s law license indefinitely.
The high court released its decision Friday.
Kline
“As fully detailed below, after reviewing each instance of misconduct found by the panel, we find clear and convincing evidence that Kline committed 11 (Kansas Rules of Professional Conduct) violations,” according to the court’s per curiam opinion.
“In assessing discipline, we have considered the facts and circumstances of each violation; the ethical duties violated by Kline to the public, the legal system, and the legal profession; the knowing nature of his misconduct; the injury that resulted from the misconduct; the existence of aggravating and mitigating factors; and the applicable advisory American Bar Association Standards for imposing discipline.
“Ultimately, after applying that framework, we reject the Disciplinary Administrator’s suggestion of disbarment and conclude Kline’s misconduct warrants indefinite suspension, the discipline recommended by the panel.”
In October 2011, a panel for the Kansas Board for Discipline of Attorneys recommended that Kline should have his state law license suspended indefinitely.
Kline served as the state’s top lawyer from 2003 to 2007, and as Johnson County District Attorney from 2007 to 2009.
The three-member panel pointed to Kline’s actions during investigations of abortion...
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Sunday, October 20, 2013

The Damage Done

Today's post was shared by Steven Greenhouse and comes from www.nytimes.com

The government is reopening, and we didn’t default on our debt. Happy days are here again, right?
Well, no. For one thing, Congress has only voted in a temporary fix, and we could find ourselves going through it all over again in a few months. You may say that Republicans would be crazy to provoke another confrontation. But they were crazy to provoke this one, so why assume that they’ve learned their lesson?
Beyond that, however, it’s important to recognize that the economic damage from obstruction and extortion didn’t start when the G.O.P. shut down the government. On the contrary, it has been an ongoing process, dating back to the Republican takeover of the House in 2010. And the damage is large: Unemployment in America would be far lower than it is if the House majority hadn’t done so much to undermine recovery.
A useful starting point for assessing the damage done is a widely cited report by the consulting firm Macroeconomic Advisers, which estimated that “crisis driven” fiscal policy — which has been the norm since 2010 — has subtracted about 1 percent off the U.S. growth rate for the past three years. This implies cumulative economic losses — the value of goods and services that America could and should have produced, but didn’t — of around $700 billion. The firm also estimated that unemployment is 1.4 percentage points higher than it would have been in the absence of political confrontation,...
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Thursday, October 10, 2013

ABA president, others express concern over shutdown’s effects on judiciary

Today's post was shared by Legal Newsline and comes from legalnewsline.com

Silkenat

American Bar Association President James Silkenat is calling on members of Congress to send a budget to the President.

Silkenat, a partner in the New York office of Sullivan & Worcester, took office in August.

In a statement last week, Silkenat called the government shutdown, which began Oct. 1, a “historic failure that imperils justice.”

“The political brinksmanship that brought our government to a standstill reflects the same intransigence and unwillingness to compromise that imposed sequestration on our national government and hardships on many who contract with, work for or receive certain nonentitlement benefits from the federal government,” he said.

“Federal courts already face staff reductions and programmatic cuts that threaten public safety. The failure to reach accord on a continuing resolution to fund the government has also scuttled both chambers attempts to add extra funding to pay for indigent defense representation.”

He added, “Congress has practically abdicated its constitutional responsibility to provide a budget for the government. It is time to end the scorched earth tactics and send a budget to the President.”
Silkenat, who argues that citizens’ access to justice will increasingly be in jeopardy, testified on Capitol Hill Tuesday about the effects of the shutdown on the judiciary.
He, along with other lawyers and former judges, told members of the...
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Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Judge denies jury trial in Chevron RICO case

Today's post was shared by Legal Newsline and comes from legalnewsline.com


The federal judge overseeing a fraud lawsuit filed by Chevron Corp. has decided to deny the defendants in the case a jury trial.

The trial is set to begin Oct. 15.

Now, instead of pleading their case in front of a jury, New York attorney Steven Donziger and the Ecuadorians must do so before Judge Lewis Kaplan for the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.

In his seven-page memorandum opinion Monday, Kaplan declined to order a jury trial in the case.
Last week, Chevron said it would drop money damages claims against Donziger if Kaplan tried the case. The oil giant already said it would drop money damages claims against the two Ecuadorians, Hugo Gerardo Camacho Naranjo and Javier Piaguaje Payaguaje.

Donziger and the Ecuadorians argued they are entitled to a jury as a matter of fairness.
“But that argument — even if it had merit, which it does not — is beside the point,” Kaplan wrote. “Insofar as is relevant to this case, the availability of trial by jury depends on one thing alone — whether the Seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution requires it.”

It does not, the judge said.

Kaplan explained that when a party — in this case, Chevron — withdraws its damages claims and pursues only equitable relief, a jury trial is no longer available and issues must be tried by the court.
“In such circumstances, trial by jury is available only if the parties and...
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Saturday, August 31, 2013

Second Circuit to consider petition to reassign federal judge in Chevron RICO case

Today's post was shared by Legal Newsline and comes from legalnewsline.com

Kaplan
Kaplan
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit will consider a petition to reassign a federal judge overseeing a case stemming from a $19 billion judgment against oil giant Chevron Corp.

In a notice filed Aug. 14, the Second Circuit set Sept. 26 for oral argument on the petition to reassign Judge Lewis Kaplan for the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.

Kaplan is currently presiding over a RICO lawsuit that Chevron filed against a group of Ecuadorians and their lawyers. The fraud case was filed by the company in the New York federal court in 2011.

New York attorney Steven Donziger and Ecuadorian plaintiffs Javier Piaguaje and Hugo Camacho filed a petition for writ of mandamus with the federal appeals court in June. They want the judge to be removed from the case for his alleged bias.

In a rare move, the court asked Kaplan for a legal brief in his defense. However, the judge “respectfully declined” the court’s invitation, according to a letter last month.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has filed an amicus brief in the case.

“The Chamber is concerned that improper resolution of Petitioners’ tactical use of a request for judicial reassignment could set a dangerous precedent with long-standing effects,” former U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey wrote in the brief, filed July 29.

The Chamber’s Institute for Legal Reform owns Legal Newsline.
This week, Donziger and the Ecuadorian...
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Workers’ Compensation No Longer The Exclusive Remedy: RICO On The Radar

Today's post was shared by WCBlog and comes from www.insurancethoughtleadership.com


It appears that the exclusive remedy provision for workers' compensation will no longer serve to prevent costly civil litigation.

Workers' Compensation origins can be traced to the late Middle Ages and Renaissance times in the Unholy Trinity of Defenses, the doctrine that first outlined that work-related injuries were compensable. 

This doctrine began in Europe and made its way to America with the Industrial Revolution.  There were so many restrictions with it that changes occurred and led to the doctrine of Contributory Negligence which outlines that employers are not at fault for work-related injuries.

This principle was established in the United States with the case Martin vs. The U.S. Railroad. In this case, faulty equipment caused the injuries, but the employee did not receive compensation, as it was deemed that inspection of equipment was part of his job duties.

Additionally, the case Farnwell vs. The Boston Worchester Railroad Company led to the "Fellow Servant Rule" where employees did not receive compensation if their injuries were in any way related to negligence from a co-worker.

For a while, in the United States, we had the Assumption of Risk Doctrine that held employers were not liable for injuries because employees knew of job hazards when they signed their work contracts. By agreeing to work, they assumed all risks. These...
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….

Jon L. Gelman of Wayne NJ is the author NJ Workers’ Compensation Law (West-Thompson) and co-author of the national treatise, Modern Workers’ Compensation Law (West-Thompson). For over 4 decades the Law Offices of Jon L Gelman  1.973.696.7900  jon@gelmans.com  have been representing injured workers and their families who have suffered occupational accidents and illnesses.