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Worker Who Fell Returning from Lunch is Entitled to Benefits
The ruling affirms a previous decision by a Workers’ Compensation Board that Aetna appealed, according to the Associated Press. The court agreed with the board’s decision that the common staircase leading to Aetna’s offices could be considered part of Aetna’s premises since it constituted a type of right of passage through which the employer had something equivalent to an easement, the AP said.
The state’s high court considered whether Robyn Fournier should be subject to the “going and coming rule,” an established workers’ compensation principle that provides that an accident occurring off an employer’s premises while the employee is merely on his way to or from work is not compensable. It also considered Aetna’s argument that Fournier was not entitled to benefits because her injury did not arise out of or in the course of her employment.
The justices of the court again agreed with the board decision that she was entitled to benefits because the activity which led to the injury “was an insubstantial deviation from her employment,” did not violate work rules and was not reckless.
In a recent ruling by the 7th US Circuit Court of Appeals, appellate judges found that a company was justified in denying accident disability benefits to an employee who fell in the restroom because going to the restroom can be excluded from an employee’s job responsibilities (See Case Sensitive: Duty Bound? ).