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JONES ACT CLAIMS Personal Injury

JONES ACT CLAIMS Personal Injury . A Primer. WORKERS’ COMPENSATION. State Workers Compensation Federal Workers Compensation Longshore Act Compensation Jones Act. Workers Compensation. No Fault Usually 2/3 wages Course and Scope of Employment Permanent Partial Disability Awards

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JONES ACT CLAIMS Personal Injury

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  1. JONES ACT CLAIMSPersonal Injury A Primer

  2. WORKERS’ COMPENSATION • State Workers Compensation • Federal Workers Compensation • Longshore Act Compensation • Jones Act

  3. Workers Compensation • No Fault • Usually 2/3 wages • Course and Scope of Employment • Permanent Partial Disability Awards • No Pain and Suffering • No Lawsuit for Benefits

  4. Jones Act Status • Substantial Connection to a Vessel of Sufficient Nature and Duration • Vessel in Navigation • Performs a Function that Helps to Accomplish the Mission of the Vessel

  5. BLUE WATER SHIPS • Sailors are Jones Act Seamen

  6. Blue Water Seaman • Lives on Vessel and Therefore has Sufficient Connection • Ship is in Navigation and Transports Cargo • Performs a Function that Assists the Vessel’s Mission

  7. On the Job Injury

  8. Jones Act vs. Workers Comp • Must sue to get benefits • Must prove negligence or unseaworthiness • Full Wage Loss, Past and Future, Recoverable • Pain and Suffering Recoverable • Maintenance and Cure Recoverable • Right to Jury Trial

  9. Seaman Causes of Action • Negligence (Jones Act) • Unseaworthiness • Maintenance and Cure • Attorney’s Fees • Damages for Failure to Pay Maintenance and Cure

  10. Maintenance and Cure • Injury or Illness that Manifests Itself in the Service of the Ship • No requirement that injury or illness arises in the course and scope of employment • Food, Lodging and Medical Care • Not a Substitute for Wages • Subsistence Amount • Often Governed by Collective Bargaining Agreement

  11. Defenses to Maintenance • Willful Misconduct (Usually Intoxication) • Fraudulent Concealment • Failure to Mitigate • Comparative Negligence Not a Defense

  12. Unearned Wages • Wages to the End of the Voyage • Usually the Seaman signs Foreign Articles • Foreign Articles not mandatory for Unearned Wages

  13. Causation • Jones Act -- Any Negligence no Matter How Slight the Connection to the Injury will be Grounds for Liability • Unseaworthiness – Unseaworthy Condition Must Be a Substantial Factor in the Injury for Liability

  14. Defenses • Comparative Negligence • No Assumption of Risk • Primary Duty Rule

  15. Damages Under Jones Act • Past and Future Lost Wages • Past and Future Pain and Suffering • No Loss of Consortium or Society • No Punitive Damages

  16. When you receive an Injury Notification • Medical Treatment • Accident Report (See ISM Guidelines) • Statements may be admissible • Good Faith Investigation • Any doubt favors Seaman

  17. Seaman’s Release • Burden of Proof of Validity on Employer • Red Letter Release • Take deposition to establish known waiver of rights • Adequacy of Compensation is Test

  18. Wage Agreements • Pay Wages and Arbitrate any claim • Only after Injury • Avoid Jury Trial

  19. Jones Act Claim Status Check List • Determine Nature and Function of Vessel • Determine Percentage of Time Worker Spends on Vessel • Establish Type of Job Worker Doing • Check Compensation Status • Put Compensation Carrier on Notice • Mark File for Possible Lien

  20. Harbor Worker • No Connection to the Vessel of Significant Nature or Duration • A Vessel May or May Not be in Navigation • Performs Tasks Which Benefit the Vessel but Do Not Assist in Performing its Function

  21. Negligence Under LHWCA • Limited Duties Under the De Los Santos Decision: 1. “Turn Over” Duty 2. Active Negligence 3. Limited Duty to Intervene

  22. Employer As Vessel Owner • Must Pay Compensation as Employer • May be Liable for General Damages as Vessel Owner • Only Liable for Negligence of Vessel Agents in Connection with Turn Over Duty, Active Control of Vessel or Duty to Intervene

  23. Damages Under LHWCA • Past and Future Lost Wages • Past and Future Pain and Suffering • Loss of Consortium and Society • Punitive Damages

  24. Passengers • Broadly Defined as Anyone Aboard the Ship for Purposes Not Inimical to the Ship’s Business • Often Called a Kermarec Claimant • No Special Duty of Care: Reasonable Care Under the Circumstances • Circumstances Can Require a Heightened Duty of Care

  25. Forum Clauses • Enforceable if Forum Reasonably Related to the Transaction • Must be Prominently Displayed on the Passenger Ticket • Foreign Forum Not Necessarily Against Public Policy

  26. II. What? • Witnesses • Documents • Government Reports

  27. Witnesses • Statements from Potentially Adverse Witnesses • Memoranda of Interview from Managerial Employees

  28. Spoliation • Failure to Preserve Evidence • Notice that an Item May be Relevant to Outcome of Litigation • Possession, Custody or Control of that Item • Use of Due Care to Preserve the Item • Adverse Inference from its Non-Production

  29. Logbooks Work Books Operations/Employee Manuals Other Voyage/ Cargo/ Passenger Records Diaries Electronic Messages Equipment Manuals Maintenance and Repair Records Documents

  30. Contracts • Indemnity and Hold Harmless Given to Assured • Indemnity and Hold Harmless Given by Assured • Policies on Which Assured is Named as an Additional Assured

  31. Indemnity • Tender Defense to Indemnitor • Determine Policy Coverage for Indemnity Given By Assured • Reserve Rights, If Necessary • Indemnity From LHWCA Employer to Vessel Void

  32. Government Reports • Required After Casualty by OSHA and Coast Guard and Possibly State Agencies • Prepared by Assured Hopefully with Professional Assistance • Time Limit for Filing • Potential Government Investigation

  33. Government Investigation • Use of Counsel During Witness Interviews • Stress Assured’s Cooperation with Government Agents • Avoid Obstruction of Justice or Impeding Investigation • Learn from Martha Stewart

  34. AUTHORIZATION FOR USE AND DISCLOSUREOF PROTECTED HEALTH INFORMATION TO: Doctor/Hospital Re: Claimant’s Name, Date of Birth and Social Security Number 1. I authorize the use or disclosure of the above-named individual’s health information as described below: • The following individual or organization is authorized to make the disclosure: Doctor/Hospital including any member of Provider’s workforce or any business associate of provider is authorized to use or disclose the protected information. 3. The type and amount of information to be used or disclosed is as follows: The protected health information that Provider will use or disclose includes my complete medical chart, including, but not limited to, my name, address, telephone number, social security number, insurers, payors, prior medical history, current medical status, diagnoses, x-rays, Cat Scans, MRIs, operative procedures, course of treatment, emergency room records, and all documentation and test results created thereby. 4. Use or disclosure authorized hereunder is for the purpose of litigation, personal injury claims. 5. I understand that the information in my health record may include information relating to sexually transmitted disease, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), or human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). It may also include information about behavioral or mental health services, and treatment for alcohol and drug abuse.

  35. AUTHORIZATION FOR USE AND DISCLOSUREOF PROTECTED HEALTH INFORMATIONCONTINUED • This information may be disclosed to and used by the following individual or organization: John J. Walsh FREEHILL, HOGAN & MAHAR, LLP 80 Pine Street, 24th Floor New York, NY 10005-1759 • Provider may not condition treatment, payment, enrollment or eligibility for benefits on whether I sign this authorization, except where the authorization is for research-related treatment, or solely for the creation of protected health information for disclosure to a third party. • I understand I have the right to revoke this authorization at any time. I understand if I revoke this authorization I must do so in writing and present my written revocation to the health information management department. I understand the revocation will not apply to my insurance company when the law provides my insurer with the right to contest a claim under my policy. • Unless otherwise revoked, this authorization will expire on the following date, event or condition: June 25, 2005. 10. I understand that authorizing the disclosure of this health information is voluntary. I can refuse to sign this authorization. I understand I may inspect or copy the information to be used or disclosed, as provided in CFR 164.524. I understand any disclosure of information carries with it the potential for an unauthorized redisclosure and the information may not be protected by federal confidentiality rules.

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