Employers Insurance of Wausau
58 federal employment cases from public court records (2000–2024)
58 with a published ruling
What public court records show
Public federal court records list Employers Insurance of Wausau as an employer in 58 employment matters between 2000 and 2024.
Of the 56 matters with a recorded outcome, the most common were: 23 ended in a ruling for the employer, 13 had a mixed result, 10 ended in a ruling for the worker, and 8 were sent back to a lower court.
Workers obtained a favorable ruling in about 18% of matters with a recorded outcome.
The most common claims on record were Breach Of Contract, Retaliation, and Whistleblower.
Cases were filed across 8 states, most often in NY.
These figures summarize publicly available U.S. federal court records only. Most workplace disputes are resolved privately and never appear in litigation. A case outcome reflects many factors and is not a finding that any employer violated the law.
Does not imply wrongdoing — many cases are dismissed or resolved without findings of liability.
AI-extracted from court records; figures may be amounts at issue, not amounts paid. Not a finding of liability.
About this employer
Employers Insurance of Wausau appears in 56 federal employment-law court rulings on record. These cases sit within the insurance sector, where claims-adjuster wage-and-hour disputes, age-discrimination, and whistleblower-retaliation claims are most common. The set below covers rulings that produced written federal-court decisions; private settlements, EEOC charges resolved without litigation, and state-court cases are not included.
The case involves a breach of contract claim. Browse other breach of contract rulings for comparable fact patterns and how courts have ruled. Breach of Contract.
Rulings span New York (3), Michigan (1), New Hampshire (1), Massachusetts (1). New York is an EEOC deferral state, which extends the federal Title VII / ADA / ADEA filing deadline from 180 to 300 days. Browse state-specific employment rulings for jurisdictional patterns. New York rulings, Michigan rulings, New Hampshire rulings and Massachusetts rulings.
Case Outcomes
Case Stages
The stage at which courts issued Employers Insurance of Wausau’s 56 stage-identified rulings.
Of the 8 summary-judgment rulings, 2 ended the case in Employers Insurance of Wausau’s favor and 6 let the worker’s claims continue.
What do these stages mean?
- Appeal
- A higher court reviewing an earlier decision. Many published opinions come from this stage, after a lot has already happened in the case.
- Summary judgment
- A ruling where the judge decides the case — or part of it — without a trial, because one side argues the key facts are not in dispute. For workers, getting past this step is often the biggest hurdle.
- Motion to dismiss
- An early request — usually by the employer — to throw the case out before any evidence is gathered.
- Trial verdict
- A judge or jury heard the evidence and reached a decision. Relatively few disputes get this far.
Published federal-court opinions only — most workplace disputes are resolved privately. This is not anyone’s odds, and not a finding that any employer violated the law.
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Claim Types
Federal cases
public court recordsOne row per case · a badge means the case reached a published ruling · plaintiff names redacted
Other Insurance employers
Browse rulings involving similar workplaces.
Data sourced from public federal court records via CourtListener.com. Case outcomes extracted using AI analysis. This information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The presence of an employer on this page does not imply wrongdoing — many cases are dismissed or resolved without findings of liability.