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Court Ruling — C.D. Cal, 2025 #10732550

C.D. Cal.November 5, 2025No. 2:25-cv-10193
Defendant WinW.K. Kellogg
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Case Details

Nature of Suit — the legal category of the dispute
Civil Rights: Americans with Disabilities - Other
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Unknown
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
motion to dismiss

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Claim Types

Workers’ Compensation

Outcome

The Tennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims denied Mr. Coleman's claim for benefits related to a mental injury allegedly arising from a work incident. The court found that Mr. Coleman failed to demonstrate that the event was extraordinary compared to the stress ordinarily experienced by employees in the same type of duty, applying an objective rather than subjective standard.

What This Ruling Means

**Worker Loses Mental Injury Claim Against Kellogg** Mr. Coleman, an employee at W.K. Kellogg, filed a workers' compensation claim seeking benefits for a mental injury he said resulted from a workplace incident. He argued that the stress from this event at work caused psychological harm that should be covered under workers' compensation. The Tennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims rejected Coleman's claim and sided with Kellogg. The court ruled that Coleman failed to prove his case because the workplace incident wasn't "extraordinary" compared to the normal stress that employees in similar jobs typically face. Importantly, the court used an objective standard, meaning they looked at whether a reasonable person in the same position would find the event unusually stressful, rather than focusing on how Coleman personally experienced it. This ruling matters for workers because it shows how difficult it can be to win workers' compensation claims for mental injuries. Courts don't just consider how stressful an incident felt to you personally—they compare it to what workers in similar jobs normally experience. To succeed with a mental injury claim, workers must typically show that their workplace incident was truly extraordinary or unusual, not just personally upsetting.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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