Search 142,000+ federal and state court decisions on employment law — updated daily from public court records.
142,000+
Total Rulings
1964
Earliest Filing
2026
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This database contains 142,000+ federal and state court rulings related to employment law, spanning from 1964 to present. Every ruling includes the case name, filing date, court, docket number, and — where available — the outcome, damages awarded, employer involved, and specific claims raised.
You can search by keyword, filter by federal statute (Title VII, ADA, FMLA, FLSA, and more), narrow by date range, and click into any ruling for the full details and related cases. Each ruling links to the original source on CourtListener for verification.
Pursuant to statute (§ 31-294c (a)), no proceedings for workers' compensa- tion shall be maintained unless a written notice of claim for compensa- tion is given, inter alia, within one year of the date of the accident that caused the personal injury. The defendant employer appealed to this court from the decision of the Compensation Review Board reversing the decision of the Workers' Compensation Commissioner denying and dismissing, for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, the plaintiff employee's claim for workers' compen- sation benefits. During the course of her employment with the defendant, the plaintiff was injured, and, thereafter, the plaintiff's direct supervisor advised the plaintiff to submit a workers' compensation claim when her pain did not resolve. Subsequently, the plaintiff visited the defendant's workers' compensation insurance agency, P Co., in person, after it failed to return her calls requesting to file a claim. At P Co., the plaintiff stated that she wanted to file a claim and a P Co. employee, F, told her not to worry because she had two years to file a claim. F assisted the plaintiff with completing a first report of injury and told the plaintiff that she would file the claim for the plaintiff. The plaintiff thereafter received a phone call from the defendant's workers' compensation insurer, B Co., and the plaintiff provided a recorded statement about the incident and the treatment she had received. Shortly thereafter, the plaintiff received correspondence from B Co. indicating that the insurer had opened a claim and assigned a claim number for the plaintiff's date of injury. B Co. also enclosed in that correspondence a pharmacy card. The defendant subsequently filed a form 43 contesting both the jurisdiction and compen- sability of the plaintiff's claim. The plaintiff did not file a form 30C notice of claim or request a hearing within one year of the injuries she had sustained, as required by § 31-294c. The commissioner determined that, bec
Pursuant to statute (§ 31-294c (a)), no proceedings for workers' compensa- tion shall be maintained unless a written notice of claim for compensa- tion is given, inter alia, within one year of the date of the accident that caused the personal injury. The defendant employer appealed to this court from the decision of the Compensation Review Board reversing the decision of the Workers' Compensation Commissioner denying and dismissing, for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, the plaintiff employee's claim for workers' compen- sation benefits. During the course of her employment with the defendant, the plaintiff was injured, and, thereafter, the plaintiff's direct supervisor advised the plaintiff to submit a workers' compensation claim when her pain did not resolve. Subsequently, the plaintiff visited the defendant's workers' compensation insurance agency, P Co., in person, after it failed to return her calls requesting to file a claim. At P Co., the plaintiff stated that she wanted to file a claim and a P Co. employee, F, told her not to worry because she had two years to file a claim. F assisted the plaintiff with completing a first report of injury and told the plaintiff that she would file the claim for the plaintiff. The plaintiff thereafter received a phone call from the defendant's workers' compensation insurer, B Co., and the plaintiff provided a recorded statement about the incident and the treatment she had received. Shortly thereafter, the plaintiff received correspondence from B Co. indicating that the insurer had opened a claim and assigned a claim number for the plaintiff's date of injury. B Co. also enclosed in that correspondence a pharmacy card. The defendant subsequently filed a form 43 contesting both the jurisdiction and compen- sability of the plaintiff's claim. The plaintiff did not file a form 30C notice of claim or request a hearing within one year of the injuries she had sustained, as required by § 31-294c. The commissioner determined that, bec
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This database indexes 142,000+ employment law court rulings from federal district courts, circuit courts of appeals, and state courts across the United States. Cases cover the full spectrum of employment law claims, including Title VII discrimination, ADA accommodation disputes, FMLA retaliation, FLSA wage and hour violations, wrongful termination, whistleblower protections, and more.
All rulings are sourced from CourtListener, a project of the Free Law Project (501(c)(3) nonprofit). We ingest new rulings daily through automated feeds, then classify each ruling by employment law statute, claim type, outcome, and employer using a combination of keyword matching and AI-assisted extraction.
Use the search and filters above to find rulings relevant to your situation. You can search by case name, employer, or keyword, then filter by statute and date range. Click any ruling to see the full details, including outcome, damages, related laws, and similar cases. If you find a ruling involving your employer, visit their employer profile to see their full complaint history.
This information is provided for educational and research purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Court rulings are public records. Consult a licensed attorney for advice specific to your situation.