The court affirmed the Industrial Commission's award of temporary total disability compensation to the employee, rejecting the employer's mandamus petition challenging the commission's credibility findings and factual determinations.
Excerpt
Where the Industrial Commission had evidence to support its view that the employee was not fired for assaulting his employer, the court will not overturn that credibility assessment. The Commission did not abuse its discretion in awarding temporary total disability after finding that the employer did not prove that the injured worker voluntarily had abandoned his employment. Objections to Magistrate's decision overruled writ of mandamus denied.
What This Ruling Means
**What Happened:**
Welsh Enterprises fired a worker who had been injured on the job. The company claimed the employee assaulted his employer and voluntarily quit his job. The worker disagreed and applied for workers' compensation benefits, specifically temporary total disability payments while he couldn't work due to his injury. The Ohio Industrial Commission investigated and awarded the worker these benefits. Welsh Enterprises challenged this decision in court, asking the judge to overturn the Commission's ruling.
**What the Court Decided:**
The court sided with the worker and upheld the Industrial Commission's decision. The judge found that the Commission had enough evidence to conclude the worker was not actually fired for assault and had not voluntarily quit his job. The court refused to second-guess the Commission's assessment of who was telling the truth, ruling that the Commission acted properly in awarding the disability benefits.
**Why This Matters for Workers:**
This case shows that workers' compensation agencies will carefully examine employer claims about misconduct or voluntary resignation when injuries are involved. If you're injured at work and your employer disputes your right to benefits by claiming you were fired for cause or quit voluntarily, the workers' compensation system will investigate and make its own determination based on the evidence, not just accept the employer's version of events.
This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.
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