UNDER THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION LAW PRESUMPTION IN SECTION 21, AN ASSAULT AT WORK IS EMPLOYMENT-RELATED AND COMPENSABLE ABSENT SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE THE ASSAULT WAS MOTIVATED BY PERSONAL ANIMOSITY (CT APP).
The Court of Appeals, in a full-fledged opinion by Judge Halligan, reversing the Appellate Division, determined the presumption that injury from an assault at work is employment-related and compensable applied in this hospital-shooting case. A former hospital employee entered the hospital wearing a white medical coat and shot six people in a non-public area, killing one. Petitioner, a first-year resident, was one of the wounded. Petitioner did not know and had never had any contact with the shooter. The Appellate Division held that there was no connection between petitioner’s employment and the shooting and, therefore, the presumption the assault was work-related did not apply:
The Appellate Division essentially inverted Seymour’s “nexus” standard by requiring the Board to come forward with evidence of a nexus to employment. Instead … Seymour stands for the principle that “an assault which arose in the course of employment is presumed to have arisen out of the employment, absent substantial evidence that the assault was motivated by purely personal animosity” (… see … Seymour, 28 NY2d at 409 [presumption cannot be rebutted by the inference of personal animosity “in the absence of substantial evidence to support it”]). To the extent the Appellate Division has read Matter of Seymour to require an additional affirmative showing of a “nexus” with employment when there is a workplace assault, such a showing is not required.
… [I]t is undisputed that the assault occurred in the course of Mr. Timperio’s [petitioner’s] employment, thereby triggering the WCL [Workers’ Compensation Law] § 21 (1) presumption. It is also undisputed that the record includes no evidence of the motivation for the assault or any indication of a prior relationship between the assailant and the claimant; Bello [the shooter] and Timperio never worked together, did not know each other, and had no prior communication. The Appellate Division therefore erroneously disturbed the WCB’s [Workers’ Compensation Board’s] determination that the claim is compensable. Matter of Timperio v Bronx-Lebanon Hosp., 2024 NY Slip Op 02723, CtApp 5-16-24
Practice Point: Here petitioner was shot at work by a former employee he did not know. The presumption that the assault was employment-related (section 21 of the Workers’ Compensation Law) applied because there was no evidence the assault was motivated by personal animosity. The injury from the assault was therefore compensable under the Workers’ Compensation Law.