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  2. Personal injury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_injury

    Personal injury is a legal term for an injury to the body, mind, or emotions, as opposed to an injury to property. [1] In common law jurisdictions the term is most commonly used to refer to a type of tort lawsuit in which the person bringing the suit (the plaintiff in American jurisdictions or claimant in English law) has suffered harm to their ...

  3. Workers' compensation (United States) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workers'_compensation_...

    However, such appeals are difficult and are regarded skeptically by most state appellate courts, because the point of workers' compensation was to reduce litigation. A few states still allow the employee to initiate a lawsuit in a trial court against the employer. For example, Ohio allows appeals to go before a jury. [54]

  4. Federal Employers Liability Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Employers...

    The Federal Employers Liability Act was designed to put on the railroad industry some of the costs of the legs, arms, eyes, and lives which it consumed in its operation. Not all these costs were imposed, for the Act did not make the employer an insurer. The liability which it imposed was the liability for negligence.

  5. Workers' compensation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workers'_compensation

    Dangerous tasks are common in the construction workplace. Workers' compensation or workers' comp is a form of insurance providing wage replacement and medical benefits to employees injured in the course of employment in exchange for mandatory relinquishment of the employee's right to sue his or her employer for the tort of negligence.

  6. Toxic tort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toxic_tort

    An occupational toxic injury case may result in a workers' compensation claim, which is made against the worker's employer. The same injury can potentially support a toxic tort case against "third parties", that is, people or entities other than the employer, such as manufacturers or distributors of chemicals, substances or equipment that ...

  7. Negligence in employment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negligence_in_employment

    Second, an employer can be found liable for negligent hiring even without provision of any dangerous instrument to the employee. However, where an employer hires an unqualified person to engage in the use of a dangerous instrumentality, as in the above example with the bus driver, the employer may be liable for both negligent entrustment and ...

  8. Federal Employees Liability Reform and Tort Compensation Act ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Employees...

    The Federal Employees Liability Reform and Tort Compensation Act of 1988, also known as the Westfall Act, is a law passed by the United States Congress that modifies the Federal Tort Claims Act to protect federal employees from common law tort lawsuit while engaged in their duties for the government, while giving private citizens a route to seek damage from the government for violations.

  9. Employers' Liability Act 1880 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Employers'_Liability_Act_1880

    The act states that any worker (or an immediate family member) is entitled to compensation for injury (or death) when the injury was caused by a defect in equipment or machinery, negligence of any person given authority over the worker by the employer, or an act or omission made by following the orders or bylaws of the employer or their representative.