Thousands of construction workers are injured or killed in construction site accidents each year. Construction companies must inspect each site with safety engineers and provide safety programs, but unfortunately accidents still occur due to the inadequacy of these provisions.
When a construction site
accident occurs, the owners, architects, insurance
companies and manufacturers of equipment can be held
responsible for inadequate safety provisions. The
general contractor and all subcontractors are required
to provide a reasonably safe site, to warn of hazards
inherent in the site and work, to hire careful
employees, to coordinate job safety and to supervise
compliance with safety specifications.
Third Party Negligence
Manufacturers of construction equipment are responsible designing and maintaining safe products. Defective or dangerous products may include the following: scaffolding, cranes, power tools, derricks, hoists, conveyors, woodworking tools, ladders, winches, trucks, graters, scrapers, tractors, bulldozers, forklifts, back hoes, heavy equipment, boilers, pressure vessels, gas detectors and other types of construction equipment.
It is often possible to
find liable third parties in the event of an accident or
injury. Since most sites involve many
subcontractors, it is very common to locate several
potential third party Defendants. The lawyer may also
consider claims against the general contractor, who may
be responsible for supervision and my be contractually
responsible for the injury. In more complex cases, the
legal principles of Agency and analysis of Corporate law
may lead to sophisticated determinations as to who is
technically an "employee" and who the "third parties"
are in a given situation.
Workers' Compensation
Workers' Compensation law is designed to help
injured workers as well as employers in dealing with the
problems of health insurance. The Workers' Compensation
Act provides benefits to workers who are injured on the
job or suffer an occupational disease arising out of and
in the course of employment. The benefits under Workers'
Comp include weekly payments based on a percentage of
the employee's average weekly wage for temporary total
disability, partial disability, permanent and total
disability and permanent loss of function and
disfigurement. Workers' Comp also covers medical
expenses for treatment that is reasonable, necessary and
related to the industrial injury and vocational
rehabilitation services.
Unfortunately Workers' Compensation alone may be insufficient compensation especially in the case of very serious and catastrophic personal injuries. As indicated above it is necessary to look for a negligent third party such as the manufacturer of a dangerous or defective product, improper safety devices or some other party who is at fault. These cases require immediate attention and expertise because the responsible third party may be difficult to locate and evidence (such as a piece of defective machinery) needs to be preserved.
