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Union Carbide Corp. v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office of the State

COLOCTAPPDecember 1, 2005No. 05CA0081Cited 5 times
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Webb, Marquez, Piccone
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Claim Types

Workers’ Compensation

Outcome

The court affirmed that Union Carbide Corporation and its insurer are solely liable for all workers' compensation death benefits, rejecting the employer's argument that the Subsequent Injury Fund should share liability. The court held that an occupational disease 'occurs' on the date of onset of disability, not diagnosis, placing the disease after the SIF's closure date.

What This Ruling Means

**Union Carbide Corporation Loses Appeal on Workers' Compensation Death Benefits** This case involved a dispute over who should pay workers' compensation death benefits after an employee died from an occupational disease. Union Carbide Corporation argued that Colorado's Subsequent Injury Fund should help cover the costs, but the company's insurance carrier disagreed and said Union Carbide should pay everything. The key issue was determining when the occupational disease legally "occurred." Union Carbide claimed it happened when the disease was first diagnosed, which would have been before the state fund closed. However, the court ruled that an occupational disease occurs when the employee first becomes disabled from it, not when doctors diagnose it. Since the disability began after the fund had closed, the fund couldn't be held responsible. The Colorado Court of Appeals sided with Union Carbide's insurance company, ruling that Union Carbide and its insurer must pay all death benefits without any help from the state fund. **What this means for workers:** This decision protects workers and their families by ensuring someone will always be responsible for paying full workers' compensation benefits, even when employers try to shift costs to closed state programs. It clarifies that benefits are tied to when disability actually begins affecting a worker's life.

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

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