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Tenth Circuit Affirms Indemnification Award Involving Incident At Wyoming Well

In 2001, an owner and operator of oil and gas wells entered into a master services agreement with a contractor for work on a Wyoming well.  The agreement contained an indemnity provision whereby the contractor agreed to indemnify the owner “from and against all claims, damages, losses …” resulting from either the contractor’s or the owner’s negligence.  Under the contractor’s...

Worker’s Retaliation Claims Dismissed Where Employer Implemented And Uniformly Applied Injury-Reporting Disciplinary Policy

A waste-removal driver claimed he injured his back while loading two tree stumps into a truck in 2012.  He did not, however, inform his employer of the claim until seven months later after his employer learned of a filed workers’ compensation claim.  At that time, the employer asked the worker to complete an incident report.  The company handbook provided that employees must report all...

Personal Jurisdiction In USA Exists Over Offshore Company For Injury Off Russian Coast

Following injuries sustained while working on a vessel off the coast of Russia, a U.S. worker brought suit against multiple entities involved in the operation claiming, among other things, that they provided faulty and unsafe equipment and that they failed to provide a safe workplace.  The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana denied the parent company of the...

California Unfair Competition Law Cannot Create Additional Liability For Workplace Safety Issues

Following a catastrophic workplace incident at a plastics manufacturing plant that resulted in the death of two workers, the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health issued a number of citations to the plant owner for alleged safety violations.  The local district attorney, however, in addition to filing criminal charges against the plant’s manager and maintenance...

Worker’s LHWCA Claims For Pain And Suffering Not Subject To Maryland’s Noneconomic Loss Cap

Working on a vessel in Baltimore harbor, a longshoreman was attempting to maneuver a forklift around an open hatch but after issues with the machinery’s brakes, the forklift skidded on the deck, fell through the hatch, and severely injured a worker below.  The injured worker filed suit alleging that the companies involved in the operation—the vessel owner and the commercial manager...

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