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Lechner v. WSI

N.D.December 6, 2018No. 20180203
Defendant WinM I Drilling Fluids
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Tufte, Jerod E.
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 North Dakota Supreme Court affirmed the lower court's decision upholding WSI's denial of workers' compensation benefits, finding that the claimant failed to file his claim within the required one-year deadline and did not prove he sustained a compensable injury.

Excerpt

A claim for workers' compensation benefits must be filed within one year after the injury. The date of injury for purposes of determining whether a claim for benefits is timely filed is the first date a reasonable lay person, not learned in medicine, knew or should have known that he suffered a compensable work-related injury and has either lost wages or received medical treatment.

What This Ruling Means

**What Happened** A worker named Lechner filed for workers' compensation benefits after suffering an injury while working for M I Drilling Fluids. However, he waited more than one year after his injury to file his claim. The state workers' compensation agency (WSI) denied his claim, saying it was filed too late. Lechner appealed this decision to the courts. **What the Court Decided** The North Dakota Supreme Court sided with WSI and denied Lechner's benefits. The court ruled that he missed the legal deadline to file his workers' compensation claim. Under North Dakota law, workers must file their claims within one year of when they first knew or should have reasonably known they had a work-related injury that caused them to lose wages or need medical treatment. **Why This Matters for Workers** This ruling emphasizes how critical timing is for workers' compensation claims. Workers need to act quickly after a workplace injury - the one-year clock starts ticking from when you first realize your injury is work-related and affects your ability to work or requires medical care. Waiting too long to file can result in losing benefits entirely, even if the injury is legitimate and work-related.

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

More Rulings in This Case

Other orders and opinions in Lechner from the same court.

Similar Rulings

Lechner
N.D.Dec 2018

A claim for workers' compensation benefits must be filed within one year after the injury. The date of injury for purposes of determining whether a claim for benefits is timely filed is the first date a reasonable lay person, not learned in medicine, knew or should have known that he suffered a compensable work-related injury and has either lost wages or received medical treatment.

Defendant Win
Young
NCDec 2000

<bold>Workers' Compensation — Causation — fibromyalgia — doctor's opinion</bold> <bold>testimony</bold> <block_quote> The Court of Appeals erred in concluding that competent evidence was presented to support the Industrial Commission's findings of fact with regard to the cause of plaintiff-employee's fibromyalgia based solely on the opinion testimony of one doctor.</block_quote>

Remanded
McRae
NCJun 2004

<bold>1. Workers' Compensation — Seagraves test — injured employee's</bold> <bold>right to continuing benefits — termination for misconduct</bold> <block_quote> Our Supreme Court adopts the <italic>Seagraves</italic>, <cross_reference>123 N.C. App. 228</cross_reference> (2003), test for determining an injured employee's right to continuing workers' compensation benefits after being terminated for misconduct whereby an employer must demonstrate initially that the employee was terminated for misconduct, the same misconduct would have resulted in the termination of a nondisabled employee, and the termination was unrelated to the employee's compensable injury, in order to find that an employee constructively refused suitable work, thus barring workers' compensation benefits for lost earnings unless the employee is then able to show that his inability to find or hold other employment at a wage comparable to that earned prior to the injury is due to the work-related injury.</block_quote> <bold>2. Workers' Compensation — constructive refusal of suitable</bold> <bold>employment — termination for misconduct unrelated to</bold> <bold>workplace injuries</bold> <block_quote> The Industrial Commission erred in a workers' compensation case by concluding that defendant employer met its burden of providing competent evidence that plaintiff employee's failure to perform her UPC labeling duties was not related to her prior compensable injury under workers' compensation, which thereby led to her termination for misconduct and denial of additional workers' compensation benefits based on an alleged failure to accept a suitable position reasonably offered by her employer, because: (1) the evidence relied upon by the Commission's majority indicated that plaintiff was having continuing problems in the wake of, and as a result of, her injuries; (2) there was no competent evidence referenced in the Commission's opinion and award that supported a showing by defendant employer that

Plaintiff Win
Island Creek Coal Company v. Dennis E. Compton Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, United States Department of Labor
4th CircuitMay 2000
Remanded
Murray
UTAHJun 2013
Defendant Win

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