You Be the Judge

Did Assault Occur in the Course of Employment?

When an employee is assaulted in a parking lot outside of normal work hours, the court must determine whether her injuries are compensable.
By: | November 23, 2015

A caregiver for Care Solutions assisted aged or persons with disabilities in household living activities. As she was getting ready to leave a client’s home at the end of her workday, the client complained of chest pains and breathing problems. The caregiver called a Care Solutions nurse for instructions.

She was directed to call 911 and to accompany the client to the hospital and remain there until he was admitted or released. As the client was transported to the hospital, the caregiver followed in her personal vehicle. Hours later, the client was admitted to the hospital. The client asked her to take his medicine and clothing to his house and to tell his wife about his admission to the hospital.

The caregiver walked to her car in the hospital’s parking lot, and as she opened the door to get inside, a man accosted her and got into her vehicle. The man told her that he had just been released from jail, and he wanted her to drive him somewhere.

The caregiver tried to push him from her car. The man struck her several times in the face with a hard object. The caregiver’s screams scared the man away, and she went back to the hospital’s emergency room to seek treatment for her injuries. She sustained crushed and fractured facial bones under her eye, a broken nose, a laceration from her nose to her mouth, and a dislocated cheekbone.

The caregiver sought workers’ compensation benefits. Care Solutions disputed the claim. The workers’ compensation judge found that the caregiver was injured in the course and arising out of her employment. Care Solutions appealed.

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How the Court Ruled

The court explained that the caregiver accompanied the client to the hospital at the direction of Care Solutions. The court said Care Solutions’ request could be considered a special mission. The court found that the injury arose out of her employment because she would not have been at the hospital but for the specific instructions of Care Solutions. The court sent the case back to the WCJ to evaluate the evidence on the issue of her disability.

B is incorrect. The court noted that it was irrelevant that the caregiver may have been finishing her shift or even “off the clock” when she went to the hospital with her client. She did so because she was instructed by a nurse for Care Solutions.

C is incorrect. The court found that the caregiver went to the hospital at the direction of Care Solutions.

A is correct. In Maxwell v. Care Solutions, Inc., No. 50,088-WCA (La. Ct. App. 09/30/15), the Louisiana Court of Appeal held that the caregiver’s injuries from the assault were covered by workers’ compensation.

Editor’s note: This feature is not intended as instructional material or to replace legal advice.

Christina Lumbreras is a Legal Editor for Workers' Compensation Report, a publication of our parent company, LRP Publications. She can be reached at [email protected]

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