Outcome
Jury found for plaintiff Liberty Mutual on breach of contract and SCUTPA violation claims against Employee Resource Management, awarding actual damages of $956,953.08, which the court trebled to $2,869,776.24 based on willful SCUTPA violation.
What This Ruling Means
**Liberty Mutual Insurance v. Employee Resource Management**
This case involved a contract dispute between Liberty Mutual Insurance and Employee Resource Management, Inc., a company that provides staffing services to other businesses. Liberty Mutual claimed that Employee Resource Management broke their contract and violated South Carolina's consumer protection laws.
The court sided with Liberty Mutual after a jury trial. The jury found that Employee Resource Management had indeed breached their contract and violated state consumer protection laws. Initially, the jury awarded Liberty Mutual nearly $957,000 in damages. However, because the court determined that Employee Resource Management's violations were willful (intentional), it tripled the damages to approximately $2.87 million under South Carolina law.
**What This Means for Workers:**
While this case was between two companies rather than involving individual workers directly, it highlights important protections under consumer protection laws. When businesses act intentionally to break contracts or violate regulations, courts can impose significant financial penalties by tripling damages. For workers, this demonstrates that legal systems have tools to hold companies accountable for willful misconduct, which can create stronger incentives for businesses to follow the law and honor their commitments.
This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.
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This ruling information is sourced from public court records via CourtListener.com. It is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.