Source: https://www.maflaw.com/legal-services/workers-compensation/
Timestamp: 2018-09-25 10:44:05
Document Index: 163666932

Matched Legal Cases: ['Art. 101', 'Art. 101', 'Art. 101', 'Art. 101', 'Art. 101', 'Art. 101', 'Art. 101', 'Art. 101', 'Art. 101', 'Art. 101']

Workers Comp Lawyer in Maryland | Michael A. Freedman Law Offices
If you have been injured in the course of your job, you may be eligible for benefits.
Workers Comp Lawyer in Maryland
If you are injured at work and experience any complexity with your injury, benefits, or employer relationship – you may need an experienced workers’ compensation lawyer.
When someone is injured at work, their employer is required to have Workers Compensation insurance for them. Workers’ Compensation is an insurance. Your employer pays for this insurance so you can receive benefits and medical care if you are injured, ill or disabled at your job. For minor injuries, this may work well with no legal intervention. In complex cases, however, there are issues that can arise where you need the advice and support of a workers’ compensation attorney:
Medical issues preventing you from returning to work
Loss of job, hours slashed, loss of compensation due to injury
You’re not sure a settlement offer is good enough
Permanent disability – (partial or total)
If you require representation for a job-related injury, or you are looking for a Workers Comp Lawyer in Maryland, the team at Michael A. Freedman can help you with the process. We’ve been helping Maryland workers and their dependents get the benefits they deserve for over 35 years. If you are looking for quality, personal and professional legal representation – contact us today.
Our attorneys have helped Maryland workers of all types, including:
Public servants (police, fire, rescue)
Warehouse, Factory Workers
Workers’ Compensation Act in Maryland
The Act gives an injured worker and his dependents a no-fault remedy against his employer to receive certain compensation benefits for accidental injuries arising out of and in the course of employment. Art. 101, Section 15 of the Annotated Code of Maryland. In exchange for this strict liability, an employer is given certain protection, in that the Act provides that the employer’s liability is limited to the payment of compensation and medical and funeral expenses set forth in schedules and further that the worker and his dependents may not maintain a tort action against the employer for damages since the workers’ compensation remedy is exclusive.
Can one be fired for filing a claim?
No! An employer may not discharge an employee solely because he filed a claim for workers’ compensation. He is not, however, liable for wrongful discharge if the termination is based on one’s inability to perform the work or excessive absenteeism resulting from the injury. Call a Workers Comp Lawyer in Maryland – free consultation.
The Act applies to all accidents in Maryland except:
Those occurring on navigable waters and certain adjacent areas, which would be covered by the federal Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act.
The Act does apply to injuries occurring outside the state if:
The employment outside Maryland is only casual, occasional or incidental, and
The employer is a resident of Maryland and the employee is regularly employed in Maryland.
III. THE EMPLOYER-EMPLOYEE RELATIONSHIP
An independent contractor is not an employee and has been defined as: “One who contracts to perform a certain work for another according to his own means and methods, free from the control of his employer in all details connected with the performance of the work, except as to its product or result”. Thus, the result in a given case will depend upon the degree of supervision exercised over the worker.
Once an employer-employee relationship is established, the parties will be subject to the Workers’ Compensation Act unless they are considered casual employmees, which has by far given rise to the most litigation. This is defined generally as employment that is irregular, unpredictable, sporadic and brief in nature.
What determines whether or not one is an “employee”?
The Maryland Court of Appeals has developed the following list of factors to be applied in determining the existence of an employer-employee relationship:
The selection and engagement of the employee;
The power of control over the employee’s conduct;
Whether the work is usually done, in the environment, under the direction of the employer or by a specialist, without supervision;
The skill required in the occupation. These criteria are often applied in cases where a worker works for more than one person as a result of being borrowed or hired from one to the other.
IV. INJURIES COVERED BY THE ACT
The Act covers disability or death “resulting from an accidental personal injury sustained by the employee arising out of and in the course of his employment.
The Maryland courts have adopted a very strict interpretation of the word “accidental.” They have consistently held that the sudden and unexpected rupture of some portion of the internal structure of the body, or the failure of some essential function of the body, is an “accidental injury” only when it results from some unusual strain or exertion of the employee or some unusual condition in the employment. In other words, if an accidental injury is to be found, there must have occurred not merely an unexpected result but an accidental cause. In determining whether a particular task is a normal incident of the employee’s work, two factors to be considered are (1) the nature of the particular task in comparison to the other duties required of the employee, and (2) the relative frequency with which the particular task is required to be performed in comparison to other incidents of the job.
Heart attack sustained by truck driver when a heavy drum he was loading tilted over on him and required unusual execution to upright it. Worker injured his back when he tried to do a job by himself without the usual assistance of another worker. Back injury sustained by a worker when a sudden gust of wind blew a door back on him and he threw up his arm to keep it from hitting him in the face.
It is generally held that an injury arises “in the course of employment” when it occurs within the period of employment at a place where the employee reasonably may be in the performance of his duties and while he is fulfilling those duties or engaged in doing something incident thereto. An injury “arises out of” employment when, it is apparent to the rational mind that there was a causal connection between the conditions under which the work is required to be performed and the ensuing injury.
V. RULES DETERMINING COMPENSATION
Since certain fact situations arise repeatedly, the Courts have developed “rules” (and, numerous exceptions to these “rules”) to be applied deciding these cases.
VI. OCCUPATIONAL DISEASES
In addition to accidental personal injuries, the statute covers certain occupational diseases if the worker is disabled from performing work which is reasonably analogous to his last occupation in which he is injuriously exposed or if he dies as a result of the disease.
What defenses can be raised by the employer?
No compensation is payable for injury or death caused by the willful intention of the injured employee to injure himself or another, by willful misconduct, or solely by intoxication or drug use.
Since contributory negligence is not a defense to a workers’ compensation claim, a worker’s misconduct must be more than thoughtless, heedless or inadvertent. To defeat the claim the employer must show that the worker intentionally placed himself in a position where he might expect to be injured.
VIII. COMPENSATION BENEFITS
Compensation benefits are based upon various classifications of disability set forth in Art. 101, Section 36. The amount of compensation is calculated differently for each kind of disability.
The benefits payable are those in effect on the date of the accidental injury.
IX. DEATH BENEFITS
If a worker dies as a result of an accidental injury or occupational disease, the death is a separate compensable event and his dependents are entitled to recover the death benefits set forth in Art. 101 Section 36(7).
How does the Act define “Dependency”?
A dependent is defined as one who relies in whole or in part upon a worker for the reasonable necessities of life.
To support a finding of dependency there must be a showing that the worker provided actual support to the person. A mere legal or moral obligation to support is not sufficient.
Dependents awarded death benefits have included a worker’s:
X. MEDICAL EXPENSES
The employer has an obligation to pay, for the worker’s lifetime, all medical, surgical and nursing expenses required by the injury as well as the cost of prosthetic devices.
Amounts Payable.
The Commission publishes a Medical Fee Schedule pursuant to Art. 101, Section 37(c) and (e), which sets limits on the amount an employer must pay for various types of medical and surgical treatment.
XI. VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION
When is this rehabilitation available?
In addition to paying compensation and medical expenses, the employer is required to pay benefits for vocational rehabilitation if the worker is disabled from performing work for which he was previously qualified and if the Commission approves the rehabilitation program.
The obligation of the employer is to return the worker to “suitable gainful employment,” which is defined as that which restores him, to the extent possible, to the level of support at the time of the injury, giving consideration to his qualifications, interests, incentives, pre-injury earnings, future earning capacity, the nature and extent of the injury, and the current and future condition of the labor market.
XIII. NOTICE AND LIMITATIONS
For any other information please call the Law offices of Michael A. Freedman P.A..
Define “accidental”.
Can you give some examples of “accidental” injuries?
What if you are going to work?
It is generally held that an injury sustained while the worker is traveling to or from his place of employment is not compensable. The rule was applied to deny compensation to an employee whose injury occurred when he was stepping across the sidewalk in front of the employer’s premises, even though he had walked only seven feet from the employer’s building line.
However, there are a number of exceptions to this general rule. If the injury takes place before the hour when work begins, but after the worker has arrived on the employer’s premises, that injury may be compensable. The premises include the parking lot of the building where the employer’s business is located, even though the employer had no ownership interest or right of control over the parking lot, as long as the employees had unrestricted use of the lot and customarily used it. Traveling on public street on direct route between employer’s parking lot and the employer’s plant, is compensable. If transportation to or from work is furnished or paid for by the employer, the injury is compensable. When an employee, having identifiable time and place limit on his employment, makes an off-premises journey which would not have been made except for the obligation of employment, the journey may be brought within the course of employment. For example, an employee who is “on call” after regular working hours and is injured while called into work, is entitled to compensation under this exception to the going and coming rule.
What about coffee breaks and lunch periods?
Injuries occurring during lunch or coffee breaks on the employer’s premises are compensable.
Injuries during social and recreational activities sponsored by the employer are compensable if:
They occur on the premises during a lunch or recreational period as a regular incident of the employment; or
The employer, by expressly or impliedly requiring participation.
I have heard that a special exemption exists for hernias.
That is correct. Unlike other injuries, a hernia may be compensable even though it did not result from an accidental injury but merely from a strain arising out of and in the course of employment. However, the claimant must prove:
That the hernia did not exist prior to the injury or strain or if it did, that the pre-existing hernia became so strangulated or aggravated that an immediate operation was necessary, and
That the injury or strain was reported to the employer within thirty days after its occurrence.
The employer who is liable for payment of compensation is the one in whose employment the worker was last injuriously exposed to hazards that could have been a contributory cause of the disease. The insurance carrier responsible is the one that covered the risk as of that date.
What makes an occupational disease compensable?
A compensable occupational disease is some ailment, disorder, or illness that is the expectable result of working under conditions naturally inherent in and inseparable from the employment, and is usually slow and insidious in its approach.
What are “Temporary Total Disability” benefits?
This disability is the healing period during which the worker is wholly disabled and unable by reason of his injury to work.
Compensation for temporary total disability is two-thirds of the worker’s average weekly wage not to exceed 100 percent of the average weekly wage of the State of Maryland.
Temporary total benefits are payable until the date when the worker reaches his maximum improvement or the disability becomes permanent.
What is “Permanent Total Disability”?
This kind of disability has been defined as the incapacity to do work of any kind.
Compensation for permanent total disability is two-thirds of the worker’s average weekly wage not to exceed 100 percent of the average weekly wage of the State of Maryland.
Benefits are payable for life, unless the workers’ conditions improves so that he is no longer totally disabled.
What is “Permanent Partial Disability”?
Permanent partial disability is that which is partial in character but permanent in quality. There is no necessity to establish an actual wage loss in order to recover compensation for permanent partial disability.
Art. 101, Section 36(3) contains a list of certain members of the body and specifies a number of weeks during which compensation is payable for the total loss of that member. The number of weeks in a given case is calculated by multiplying the total number of weeks by the percentage of loss or loss of use of that member which the worker has sustained as a result of his injury.
How do you figure “Average Weekly Wage”?
The Commission generally determines the amount of average weekly wage on the basis of the worker’s earnings for the 13 week period immediately preceding the date of injury.
Where the worker’s permanent disability or death is due in part to his accidental injury or occupational disease and in part to a pre-existing disease or infirmity, the employer is required to pay compensation only for the portion attributes solely to the accidental injury or occupational disease. The Commission must apportion the amount of permanent disability by determining how much is due to the pre-existing condition.
Parents and step-parents.
Posthumous or illegitimate children.
Woman friend who was not his wife.
What if the accident occurs on the job but a third party is responsble?
If a person other than the employer is legally liable for the worker’s injury or death, the employer, insurance carrier, Subsequent Injury Fund, and/or the worker of his dependents may maintain a tort action for damages against that third person. If damages are recovered, the employer or insurer and the Subsequent Injury Fund are first reimbursed for any benefit paid under the Workers’ Compensation Act and the balance is paid to the worker of his dependents.
First of all you can file a Workers Compensation claim and a third party case. You can not, however, recover twice. If the Compensation carrier pays you benefits they are entitled to that money from your third party recovery. Therefore if you settle a third party case or obtain a final verdict before filing your workers’ compensation claim, thereby prejudicing the employer’s right to sue the third party for subrogation, your workers’ compensation claim is barred.
If the employer has already noted his right of subrogation against a third party, the third party may not settle separately with the employee or the employer; all the parties must agree to the settlement.
What are the time limitations for filing?
The time limitations for notifying an employer of an accidental injury, death or occupational disease are as follows:
Accidental injury or death:
Notice in writing or otherwise, within 10 days after the accidental injury and 30 days after death.
Written notice within one year after the employee knows or has reason to believe he is suffering from an occupational disease and within one year after death resulting from such disease.
Failure to give the required notice bars a claim for compensation unless the Commission excuses the failure on the ground that notice for some sufficient reason could not have been given or that the employer-insurer was not prejudiced by the lack of notice. Art. 101, Section 26(a) and 38(a). The burden of proving prejudice is upon the employer-insurer. Art. 101, Section 26(a)(2) and 38(a).
Filing claims for accidental injury and death.
A claim for compensation in accidental injury cases must be filed at the Commission within 60 days after the date of the accident, but failure to file the claim may be excused by the Commission on the ground that the employer-insurer has not been prejudiced thereby or for some other sufficient reason. Art. 101, Section 39(a). However, failure to file the claim within two years after the date of the accident constitutes a complete bar. Art. 101, Section 39(a).
An application for death benefits resulting from an accidental injury must be filed at the Commission within 18 months from the date of death.
Art. 101, Section 38(b) requires that an employer must file a report with the Commission within 10 days after he has notice or knowledge of an accident causing disability for more than three days.
Can you reopen a case?
An application for the Commission to change or modify a previous award of compensation must be made within five years from the last payment of compensation for temporary or permanent disability.
There is no period of limitation for reopening a claim to require the employer to pay medical expenses, since the employer’s liability for payment of medical expenses continues for the workers’ lifetime.