7780 Westmoreland Drive 

(On U.S. 41 by the Airport at the corner of Westmoreland)

Sarasota, Florida  34243

(941) 358-5400

Fax (941) 358-5477

 

 

What if I'm in a Car Accident While I'm Driving for Work?
by
Tom Hudson and Lawrence R. Diamond
The Hudson Law Office

You are driving while at work when suddenly my vehicle is struck in the rear by a negligent driver of a another vehicle. I am injured, but how can I get compensation.

Since this happened while at work, the Florida Workers Compensation Statute is primary over your Florida No-Fault benefits. That means workers compensation will pay for medical bills and lost wages. The Workers Compensation Statute is limited in terms of what an injured worker can recover. It dictates medical treatment and only provides for 2/3 lost wages if you are unable to work. Even though this is a car accident you are not entitled to pip benefits. Finally, you cannot recover damages for pain and suffering under workers compensation.

Under our workers compensation system, you give up something and you get something.  In exchange for giving up your right to sue for items of damages, such as pain and suffering, you get your medical bills paid automatically.  Medical bills and lost wages are covered regardless of fault. However, over the last twenty years, our state legislature has revised the workers compensation statute many times. Each time, the injured worker was entitled to less and less.  So the end result is a restrictive system that does not fully compensate an injured employee!  That is why it is important to understand when you may be entitled to bring a lawsuit for personal injuries even when injured on the job, in the course of your employment.  You could receive compensation for damages that include your pain and suffering.

Generally, if a third party caused your injuries you may file suit against that party. You are not permitted to sue your employer for anything other than workers compensation benefits in most cases. Therefore, if your boss sends you on an errand during work, and you are involved in a motor vehicle accident, you can make a claim against the negligent driver of the other vehicle even though you may be covered by worker's compensation. In fact, if you don't pursue , the worker's compensation insurance carrier is entitled to file a claim on your behalf to recover what they paid you. The statute gives them the right to subrogation. If you bring a claim against a responsible third party, the workers compensation carrier will have a lien on any recovery for benefits they have paid.


Back to our Home Page
 

 

 

THE MAKE-BELIEVE PROBLEM OF CLASS ACTION LAWSUITS

 

By Tom Hudson

It's not unusual to hear complaints on talk radio or the talking head cable stations about the so-called problem of class action lawsuits.  It just doesn't seem fair that some lawyer brings a class action, and makes a million dollars in attorney fees, and all I got was a lousy few dollars, or maybe just a gift certificate.

Right?

Wrong.

It doesn't seem fair only if you don't understand what class actions were invented to do.  And unfortunately, most Americans don't understand.  

Here's the type of problem that class actions were intended to correct:  Suppose I own an electric company, and I figure out a way to overcharge each of my customers by ten dollars.  Millions of customers!  Tens of Millions of dollars!!  And here's the beauty part: Since each customer only lost ten dollars, who is going to hire a lawyer to try to get it back?  What a great scam!!  Even if it's discovered, most people will simply write off the loss as too small a problem to worry about.  But as the electric company owner, I have hit the jackpot to the tune of ten million dollars!

That's the type of wrong that class actions were intended to correct.  And without class actions, the wealthy can nickel-and-dime the little guy, safe in the knowledge that the individual losses are too small to bother with, even for a working man. 

How do class actions solve this problem?

In a class action, a bunch of people can act together to recover those little overcharges.  One lawyer acts for everyone, so that it becomes economically feasible to go to court.  Here's how it works:  One victim gets a lawyer.  If that lawyer can convince the judge that there are a large number of similarly-situated other victims, then the judge can "certify" the class.  Once a class is certified, then any victim who does not specifically object is automatically included. 

At the end of the case, all of the members of the class get their ten dollars back, less the fee for the attorney who brought the suit.  Sometimes, that fee is a million dollars. 

Now, a million dollar attorney fee may seem like a lot.  And it is.  But class actions are a huge amount of work, and are very risky.  If the wrongdoer goes out of business, all of that work may be for nothing.  But the bottom line is this:  The purpose of class actions is to recover money that was stolen from the little guy. 

And isn't it better to return most of the money, less the attorney fee,  than it is to allow the thief to keep it all?

Home