Can I Sue My Employer if I’m Injured at Work?

Injured at Work Can I Sue | West Palm Beach Workers Compensation Lawyer | LaBovick Law Group of South Florida

“I’ve just been injured at work. Can I sue?” This might not be the first thought that goes through your head, but it is one of the most lasting. A serious injury at work might be worth a lawsuit. There are several other factors to consider first. Above everything else, remember: you’re not a lawyer. You need professional advice from a worker’s compensation lawyer.

What Is Workers Compensation?

Workers’ compensation is a program that ensures you get money to help with medical and regular bills. New medical expenses can rack up quickly. As you can’t work, even regular expenses can start piling up. Workers comp helps pay you through your injury so that you can keep on living your life without these expenses compiling.

If workers comp didn’t exist, the only recourse an injured employee would have would be to sue. The problem with this is that lawsuits take time. Your bills won’t wait patiently. Workers’ comp benefits help protect employees and employers both. Payments are dependent on the type of injury suffered. Workers comp is a “no-fault” system. That means neither party is held at fault for the injury. If you want to file workers comp, you can’t sue for the injury occurring – at least in most cases.

What you can sue for is if your employer’s negligence contributed to the injury, or if the employer intentionally injured you. If there is provable negligence or intention that contributed to your injury, then you can sue and you should seriously consider it. You can also sue if an employer harasses, threatens, or otherwise seeks retribution for you taking the action of filing a workers comp claim.

Proving Negligence

Negligence can be difficult to prove. There needs to be evidence of that negligence. It can’t be a case of you saying one thing and your employer saying another. Perhaps there were OSHA violations that went uncorrected. Is there a record of these? Is there proof of an unsafe working condition? Is there proof of your employer ignoring communications asking for an unsafe condition to be fixed?

Part of the problem is that when you’re recovering from an injury, you’re not at your workplace collecting evidence. An employer might fix that condition right after your injury, which erases your proof. This is where a lawyer is handy. Their office can begin collecting evidence immediately.

The best case here is to sue for pain and suffering, as well as the physical harm you endured. This also needs evidence. It’s about the pain of recovery, the stress on your family, the impact on your quality of life, and experiences you can longer enjoy because of the injury.

Be aware that most of these cases are settled. Employers’ lawyers will quickly identify their chances and calculate a settlement offer with that math in mind. Your lawyer will do the same for you, and ensure that any settlement offered is satisfying and meets your approval.

How to Get Workers Compensation

Free Workers' Comp Case Evaluation | LaBovick Law Group

To secure your worker’s compensation, you will want a worker’s compensation lawyer. In Florida, workers comp is decided by using an administrative court system.

You’ll first need to file a petition for benefits. The petition will be mediated by a third party with neutrality. Generally, the worker’s compensation claim is decided here. If it’s not, then the claim will continue to trial. Then you’ll go in front of a workers’ compensation judge. There is no jury.

It can get very messy defining the line between a worker’s compensation claim vs. a lawsuit against your employer. You can’t just fumble between the two and hope for the best. Going down one path can make the other more legally difficult. You need to know at the outset of this process what your best course of action is and make an appropriate plan.

Workers Comp, Lawsuit, or Both?

In an ideal world, this would come down to the legitimacy of your claim and case. Was there negligence involved? Did it contribute to your injury? Of course, in an ideal world, you wouldn’t have gotten injured in the first place.

In this world, your finances have to be considered, too. Pursuing workers comp means your medical bills may be paid, you can still be paid regularly while out of work, and that you have rights when coming back to work.

Pursuing a lawsuit may be the right thing to do, but you also won’t see that money for several months if not a year or two. In certain cases, you can pursue both workers comp and a lawsuit without a problem. In other cases, only one of those may be most appropriate. In still more cases, a lawsuit may arise from retribution your employer takes because you filed workers comp. Each situation is different and requires an expert to walk you through it.

Your Florida workers compensation lawyer can help this make sense for you, as well as collecting evidence, talking with insurance companies, and assessing your chances for each possible path you can take.

It’s easy to get started

Fill out the form or call us at 561-888-8888

Meet your legal team

We fight to win you more

It’s Easy to Get Started

Fill out the form or call us at 561-888-8888

Meet your legal team

We fight to win you more

Premises liability

PREMISE LIABILITY

$450,000

James was searching for equipment for painting at Home Depot. In the aisle next to him, there was a worker on a lift stocking the highest shelf. The worker pushed boxes so far across the shelf that they fell off the other edge and hit James in the head. The force almost knocked James unconscious. He sat down and the loud bang got the worker off the ladder to see what fell. When they saw James they offered him a bucket and made a report. James did not recall leaving the store or how he got home. He did not recall much except being at home depot and getting hit in the head. Home Depot told him that it was a small box of dust masks that hurt him. We discovered it was actually a large box of emergency kits that fell off the shelf.

Personal injury

PERSONAL INJURY

$850,000

In this case, our client slipped and fell on water that had accumulated near the hot tubs/showers on the Lido deck of a major cruise line ship. The client suffered torn ligaments to her shoulder that required 2 arthroscopic surgeries. The cruise line took the position that the condition on the floor was open and obvious.

Premises liability

PREMISES LIABILITY

$980,000

Georgia was visiting a friend in the hospital when she walked out of the elevator and into her friend’s room. As soon as she entered the room she slipped on a newly mopped floor without any wet floor sign present. The floor was so wet that Georgia’s entire outfit was soaked. Because of the muted tile floor, the water was invisible. Georgia needed a back operation which was unsuccessful and caused her to slip into a coma. She luckily survived.

Motor vehicle accident

MOTOR VEHICLE ACCIDENT

$1.1 MILLION

AUTOMOBILE REAR END COLLISION

Rodrigo was driving his work truck home when he was rear-ended at a stoplight. Rodrigo needed a fusion of his thoracic spine. A terrible and complex operation. Unfortunately, while Rodrigo was undergoing the spinal operation, one of his children died and he was unable to be with his grieving wife. It was a tragic case that eventually settled.

Bicycle vs car accident

BICYCLE VS CAR ACCIDENT

$1.45 MILLION

David was a teacher at a local high school. He rode his bike to school in the morning and after school would ride another 10 miles for exercise. On a sunny afternoon on his way home an older driver turned right into him as he was riding down the street. He hurt his shoulder and neck and needed two operations. Defendant felt his injury was due to playing football 10 years earlier and would not provide him a fair or reasonable offer.

Car vs commercial truck accident

CAR VS COMMERCIAL TRUCK ACCIDENT

$3.4 MILLION

Joe was driving his 18 wheeler on the Florida Turnpike headed south after a long-haul run.  He was “bobtailing” which means he did not have a cargo trailer on the back of his truck rig.  A drunk driver lost control of his car causing Joe to avoid the accident but drive off the highway and into a canal.  He was injured in the accident but also witnessed a child die when he climbed out of the truck and came to the accident site.  There the injured child was trapped under the car and he was powerless to save the child before it passed.

Auto accident T-Bone

AUTO ACCIDENT T-BONE

$4.5 MILLION

Xao, a Vietnamese immigrant was driving home after work at night to see his pregnant wife. He stopped at a 4-way intersection and looked both ways. He did not see anyone in either direction. As Mr. X when through the intersection he was hit on the passenger side door by a mid-sized black SUV driving without their lights on. Mr. X was catastrophically injured.

Personal injury

PERSONAL INJURY

$8.2 MILLION

This was a hard-fought pedestrian accident case, in which our client was struck by an SUV driven by a teen driver, as they attempted to cross North Military Trail in West Palm Beach, FL. As a result of the accident, our client suffered numerous fractures, partial loss of vision and frontal lobe brain injury that affected his speech, and other personal injuries that required him to be hospitalized for 58 days.

At the time of the accident, our client was a cashier at Walmart and has been unable to return to work.

“This case is the epitome of what we consider part of our Core Culture and broad vision – which is to be Warriors for Justice,” stated Brian LaBovick. “Mr. Jacobus has serious permanent injuries and will continue to fight to regain his life into the foreseeable future. This verdict will allow him to get the professional help he needs to safely navigate the rest of his life.”

Medical malpractice

MEDICAL MALPRACTICE

$15 MILLION

Brain damages child due to medical negligence.  Mother was misdiagnosed upon entry to the hospital while under contractions.  The child was born severely disabled.