Articles Tagged with spoliation

It is not uncommon for a personal injury case and a workers’ compensation case to arise out of the same accident. This is often the case when an employee is hurt in the course and scope of his job through the negligence of a third-party. Our law firm handles both types of cases.

Florida Statute 440.39 gives the employer or its workers’ compensation insurance carrier, as the case may be, lien rights in the proceeds of any recovery made in the personal injury liability case. In consideration of this right, the employer and carrier have a “duty to cooperate” with the employee in prosecuting claims and potential claims against third-party tortfeasors. See sec. 440.39(7).

The court in Shaw v. Cambridge Integrated Servs. Group, Inc., 888 So.2d 58, 64 (Fla. 4th DCA 2004), declared that the duty to cooperate found in section 440.39(7) is “[o]ne of the most important rules and conditions stated in the Workers Compensation statute.” For example, an employer/carrier’s failure to cooperate can have adverse consequences on their lien rights. 440.39(3)(a) provides that

the failure by the employer or carrier to comply with the duty to cooperate imposed by subsection (7) may be taken into account by the trial court in determining the amount of the employer’s or carrier’s recovery, and such recovery may be reduced, as the court deems equitable and appropriate under the circumstances, including as a mitigating factor whether a claim or potential claim against a third party is likely to impose liability upon the party whose cooperation is sought, if it finds such a failure has occurred.

A violation of 440.39 can also subject the employer/carrier to a spoliation claim for failing to preserve evidence. This cause of action is not barred by the employer’s workers’ compensation immunity outlined in section 440.11, Florida Statutes. See General Cinema Beverages of Miami v. Mortimer, 689 So.2d 276, 278 (Fla. 3d DCA 1995)

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