Posted On: September 24, 2007 by Jack E. Clay, Esq.

Georgia Workers' Compensation Case Law Update - Personal Injury Proceeds From Truck Accident in Atlanta Should Not Go To The Workers' Compensation Insurance Company

On September 11, 2007, the Georgia Court of Appeals issued its decision in Paschall Truck Lines v. Kirkland. In this case, the injured worker was hurt in a truck accident when another commercial vehicle struck the vehicle he was driving. He collected filed a Georgia workers' compensation claim and a Kentucky workers' compensation claim. When the Georgia personal injury / truck accident claim settled for $100,000.00, the workers' comp. insurance company sought to recover money based on a purported lien.

This case is governed by O.C.G.A. 34-9-11.1(b) which states that for an insurer to successfully intervene and recuperate money paid to an injured worker in a third party personal injury case, the insurer must show that the injured worker was fully and completely compensated for economic and non-economic damages.

This case was a victory for the injured worker. Workers' compensation insurers in Georgia often try to get paid back from personal injury settlements or verdicts that injured employees bring against third-parties. In some states, the workers' compensation insurance company has strong rights of recovery. This is not the case in Georgia. I have been successful in my handling of similar cases in maximizing the recovery on behalf of my clients. Interestingly, some claimants' attorneys are especially loathe to repay a workers' compensation insurer because they feel the fruit of their efforts (i.e. compensation) should go to their clients and not the insurance company.