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Third-Party Claims — The Lawsuit Workers' Comp Doesn't Tell You About

Workers' compensation is a trade-off: you give up the right to sue your employer for negligence, and in exchange you get no-fault benefits. But workers' comp doesn't prevent you from suing other parties who caused or contributed to your injury. This is called a third-party claim — and it can be worth significantly more than WC alone.

Educational purposes only. Not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney about your specific situation.

WC vs. Third-Party Lawsuit — What You Can Recover

Recovery TypeWorkers' CompThird-Party Lawsuit
Medical bills✓✓
Lost wages (partial)✓ (60–75%)✓ (100%)
Future medical costs✓ (with approval)✓
Pain and suffering✗ Not available✓
Emotional distress✗ Not available✓
Disfigurement/scarringLimited✓ Full value
Loss of enjoyment of life✗ Not available✓
Punitive damages✗ Not availableSometimes
Spouse/family claims✗ Not available✓ Loss of consortium

Who Could Be the Third Party?

A third party is anyone other than your employer whose negligence caused or contributed to your injury. Common examples:

Equipment & Machinery Manufacturers

A tool, machine, or piece of equipment failed or was defective. Product liability claims can be brought against the manufacturer, distributor, or seller. This is one of the most common and valuable third-party claims.

Examples: Faulty scaffolding, defective power tools, malfunctioning forklifts, unsafe vehicles.

Property Owners / Premises Liability

You were injured on someone else's property that wasn't owned by your employer — a client's warehouse, a job site owned by a general contractor, a delivery location.

Examples: Wet floors at a client's facility, unmarked construction hazards, unsafe loading docks.

General Contractors & Subcontractors

In construction, injuries caused by another contractor on the same job site can be sued even if you can't sue your own employer.

Examples: A subcontractor leaves equipment in a dangerous position; a GC fails to maintain a safe site.

Negligent Drivers (Vehicle Accidents)

If you were in a car accident while driving for work — deliveries, service calls, commuting between work sites — and another driver caused it, you can pursue a standard personal injury claim alongside WC.

Examples: Delivery drivers, construction workers driving between sites, sales reps in company vehicles.

Toxic Substance Manufacturers

Exposure to asbestos, chemicals, or other toxic substances manufactured by a third party can support a product liability or toxic tort claim entirely separate from workers' comp.

Examples: Mesothelioma from asbestos exposure, chemical burns from improperly labeled products.

Staffing Agencies

If you're placed by a staffing agency, you may be a "borrowed servant" with claims against both the agency and the host employer depending on your state.

Examples: Temp workers injured at a host company's facility.

Important: The WC Lien

When you pursue a third-party lawsuit while receiving workers' comp benefits, your WC insurer typically has a lien on your third-party recovery. This means they are entitled to be reimbursed for the benefits they paid from your lawsuit proceeds.

This sounds bad — but it's usually still worth pursuing. The total value of a third-party settlement (which includes pain and suffering) almost always exceeds the WC lien amount. You end up with more money overall.

Example: Your WC paid $50,000 in medical and TTD benefits. You sue a negligent equipment manufacturer and settle for $300,000. WC takes back $40,000 (their lien, often negotiated down). You keep $260,000 — compared to $50,000 in WC benefits alone.

Steps If You Think You Have a Third-Party Claim

1
Preserve all evidence — photograph equipment, the scene, the hazard. Don't let anything be repaired or removed.
2
Get the name and contact information of every other party on the job site.
3
Document who owned or was responsible for the equipment or premises that caused your injury.
4
Report the injury through workers' comp as normal — this doesn't affect your third-party claim.
5
Contact an attorney who handles BOTH workers' comp AND personal injury — you need someone who can coordinate the lien and maximize total recovery.
6
Act quickly — third-party personal injury statutes of limitations (typically 2–3 years) may be shorter than WC deadlines, and evidence disappears fast.

You May Be Leaving Serious Money on the Table

Most injured workers don't know about third-party claims. A free consultation with a WC attorney who also handles personal injury can tell you in 15 minutes whether you have one.

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