If an employee is injured on the job, is the employee’s
exclusive remedy a workers’ compensation claim? What if an employer is
reckless? The Ohio Supreme Court recently looked at a pair of cases to resolve
these questions.
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What happened. Employees of two different employers, in separate cases, were injured on the
job and claimed their remedies should not be limited to those available under
Ohio’s workers’ compensation law.
The two employees challenged the constitutionality of an Ohio
statute (Ohio Rev. Code 2745.01) that significantly limits lawsuits by
employees for intentional workplace torts by employers. They claimed the
standard required to prove an employer’s intent is too high under the law
(i.e., the employer committed the act with the intent to injure or with the
belief that the injury was substantially certain to occur). The law’s
limitations, the employees argued, denied them their right to an open court, a
remedy, a jury trial, due process, and other rights guaranteed under the state
constitution.
What the court said. According to the court, the state legislature acted within its power in
determining that an employee who cannot demonstrate an employer’s “deliberate
intent” to cause injury as required under the statute has the same status as an
employee injured by employer negligence. Both must seek recovery under the
state’s workers’ compensation statutes, and neither has a constitutional right
to a jury.
The court asserted that injuries resulting from an employer’s
intentional torts fall outside the employment relationship because when an
employer intentionally harms its employee, “that act effects a complete breach
of the employment relationship, and for purposes of the legal remedy for such
an injury, the two parties are not employer and employee, but intentional
tortfeasor and victim.” While the statute significantly restricts an employee’s
ability to recover, the court pointed out that the statute does not give
employers complete immunity for intentional torts and allows an employee to
bring a civil suit for damages under common law. The court also noted that the
statute conforms to the workplace intentional tort laws in a majority of
states. Kaminski v. Metal & Wire Prods. Co., 2010 Ohio 1027 and Stetter v. R.J. Corman Derailment Servs.,
L.L.C., 2010 Ohio 1029 (3/23/10).
Point to remember: This decision limits employees’ recovery to the workers’ comp system unless
there is deliberate intent to cause an injury. Employers that focus on
workplace safety improve their chances of avoiding workers’ comp claims as well
as claims of intentional harm.