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Lois Taylor v. Director, Office Of Workers Compensation Programs

9th CircuitJanuary 28, 2000No. 98-71004Cited 12 times
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Case Details

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

Wrongful Termination

Outcome

The court granted the widow's petition for review, holding that she was not a 'person entitled to compensation' under Section 33(f) of the LHWCA when she entered into third-party settlements before her husband's death, and therefore the employer was not entitled to offset death benefits by those settlement amounts.

What This Ruling Means

**What Happened:** Lois Taylor's husband died from a work-related injury while employed at Plant Shipyard Corporation. Before her husband's death, Taylor had received money from settlements with third parties (companies other than the employer) related to his injury. After her husband died, Taylor applied for death benefits under federal workers' compensation law. The employer argued they should be allowed to reduce the death benefits they owed by the amount Taylor had already received from those earlier settlements. **What the Court Decided:** The Court of Appeals ruled in Taylor's favor. The court found that because Taylor received the third-party settlements before her husband died, she was not yet a "person entitled to compensation" under the law at that time. Therefore, the employer could not subtract those earlier settlement amounts from the death benefits they owed her. **Why This Matters for Workers:** This decision protects families of workers who die from job-related injuries. It means that if family members receive settlement money from third parties before the worker dies, employers cannot use those payments to reduce death benefits later. This ensures that surviving family members receive the full workers' compensation death benefits they're entitled to under federal law.

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

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