Can You File Both Workers’ Comp and a Lawsuit After a Workplace Injury in New York?
Can You File Both Workers’ Comp and a Lawsuit After a Workplace Injury in New York?
After a serious workplace injury, most people assume they must choose between filing for workers’ compensation or pursuing a personal injury lawsuit. That assumption is understandable, but in many New York cases it is simply wrong. At Hill & Moin LLP, we regularly help injured workers in Manhattan, Brooklyn, the Bronx, Queens, Staten Island, and across the greater New York area understand that these two legal avenues are not always mutually exclusive, and that pursuing only one of them may mean leaving significant compensation on the table.
New York law creates a framework where workers’ compensation handles certain claims through an administrative process, while the civil court system remains open for lawsuits against parties outside the direct employment relationship. Knowing how these two systems interact, and when both apply to your situation, can make an enormous difference in your financial recovery and long-term wellbeing.
How Workers’ Compensation Works in New York
Workers’ compensation is a no-fault insurance program that New York requires virtually all employers to carry. When you are injured at work, you are generally entitled to benefits that cover a portion of your lost wages, your medical treatment costs, and in some cases a disability award if your injury leaves you with lasting impairment. The phrase ‘no-fault’ is important here: you do not need to prove that your employer did anything wrong to collect these benefits.
The trade-off, however, is significant. By accepting workers’ compensation, you give up the right to sue your direct employer in civil court. This is sometimes called the workers’ compensation bar. The benefits themselves are also limited: lost wage replacement is typically capped at two-thirds of your average weekly wage, and the system provides nothing for pain and suffering, which is often the largest component of a serious injury claim. For many injured workers, particularly those with permanent or catastrophic injuries, workers’ comp alone falls far short of full recovery.
What Is a Third-Party Lawsuit and When Does It Apply?
A third-party lawsuit is a personal injury claim brought against someone other than your direct employer. The workers’ compensation bar does not apply to these parties, which means you can pursue civil litigation against them while simultaneously receiving workers’ compensation benefits from your employer’s insurer.
Third-party claims arise in many workplace injury scenarios. Consider a few common examples: a delivery driver injured in a collision caused by another motorist; a construction worker hurt because a subcontractor on the same job site left exposed hazards; a factory employee injured by a defective piece of machinery manufactured by a third party; or a worker who slips and falls on a property that their employer does not own or control. In each of these cases, a party separate from the direct employer may bear responsibility under New York negligence law.
This dual-track approach is one of the most powerful tools available to seriously injured workers. A third-party lawsuit can recover damages that workers’ compensation simply does not provide, including full lost earnings, pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, and compensation for the burden placed on family members.
Common Scenarios Where Both Claims Are Available
The situations where workers’ comp and a personal injury lawsuit can be pursued simultaneously are more common than many injured workers realize. Some of the most frequent examples include:
- Construction Site Accidents: New York Labor Law Sections 240(1) and 241(6) impose liability on property owners and general contractors for gravity-related injuries and unsafe working conditions, regardless of who directly employs the injured worker. A construction laborer can collect workers’ comp from their employer while suing the site owner or GC.
- Motor Vehicle Accidents During Work: Workers injured in car, truck, or taxi accidents while on the job can file workers’ comp and also pursue an auto accident lawsuit against the at-fault driver.
- Defective Equipment or Machinery: When a tool, machine, or piece of safety equipment fails due to a manufacturing or design defect, a products liability claim against the manufacturer or distributor can proceed alongside a workers’ comp claim.
- Premises Liability at Third-Party Locations: If your job requires you to work at a location your employer does not own, such as a client site, a vendor’s facility, or a public space, the property owner may be liable for dangerous conditions that caused your injury.
- Negligent Co-Workers from a Different Employer: On multi-employer job sites, negligent conduct by workers employed by a different company can support a third-party claim against that company, even when everyone is working toward the same project.
How the Two Systems Interact: The Lien Issue
Filing both a workers’ compensation claim and a third-party lawsuit is permitted, but the two systems do interact in a way that injured workers need to understand. When you receive workers’ compensation benefits and later recover money through a personal injury lawsuit, New York law gives the workers’ compensation carrier a lien against that lawsuit recovery. In plain terms, the insurer that paid your medical bills and wage replacement while your case was pending has a right to recover some of those funds from your civil settlement or verdict.
This is not necessarily a reason to avoid the dual-track approach. The lien is calculated under a specific formula set out in New York Workers’ Compensation Law Section 29, and experienced attorneys routinely negotiate reductions that preserve a meaningful net recovery for the injured worker. The key point is that the overall compensation available through a third-party lawsuit, even after the lien is satisfied, almost always exceeds what workers’ compensation alone would provide in a serious injury case.
Managing this interaction correctly requires legal experience. Our attorneys work to maximize the net amount that actually reaches you, coordinating both claims and negotiating with carriers at the appropriate stage of the process.
Compensation Available Through a Third-Party Lawsuit
The financial gap between workers’ compensation benefits and a successful third-party recovery can be substantial. A civil lawsuit may pursue compensation across all of the following categories:
- Full Lost Wages and Earning Capacity: Unlike the two-thirds wage cap in workers’ comp, a lawsuit can recover your actual lost earnings, both past and projected into the future if your injury affects your ability to work.
- Pain and Suffering: Workers’ compensation provides no recovery for physical pain, emotional distress, or the psychological toll of living with a serious injury. A personal injury lawsuit does.
- Loss of Enjoyment of Life: Compensation for activities, relationships, and quality of life that the injury has permanently diminished.
- Future Medical Expenses: Projected costs of ongoing care, surgery, rehabilitation, assistive devices, and home health services.
- Wrongful Death Damages: If a workplace injury proves fatal, surviving family members may have a wrongful death claim covering funeral expenses, loss of financial support, and loss of parental guidance and companionship.
Deadlines You Cannot Afford to Miss
Both the workers’ compensation system and the civil court system operate under strict time limits, and failing to meet them can permanently end your right to recover. For workers’ compensation in New York, you must notify your employer of the injury within 30 days and file a claim with the Workers’ Compensation Board within two years of the date of injury. These are hard deadlines; delay in reporting can jeopardize your claim.
For a third-party personal injury lawsuit, New York’s statute of limitations is generally three years from the date of the accident. There is an important exception, however: if the negligent third party is a government entity, such as a city agency, a public authority, or a government-owned property, you must file a Notice of Claim within 90 days of the injury and commence your lawsuit within one year and 90 days. Missing the Notice of Claim deadline against a government defendant is typically fatal to the case, with very limited exceptions.
These overlapping deadlines are one of the strongest reasons to consult with an attorney as soon as possible after a workplace injury. Acting early also preserves evidence, protects witness recollections, and gives your legal team the time they need to evaluate every available claim.
Mistakes That Can Affect Both Claims
Running two legal tracks simultaneously creates complexity, and the wrong move in one system can ripple into the other. Several mistakes come up repeatedly in cases where workers try to manage these matters on their own.
- Failing to Report the Injury Promptly: Late reporting to your employer jeopardizes your workers’ comp benefits and weakens the narrative of causation in your civil lawsuit.
- Giving Statements to the Third Party’s Insurer: Adjusters for the responsible party’s insurance carrier are not on your side. Recorded statements made without legal counsel can be used to minimize or deny your civil claim.
- Settling Too Early: Accepting a quick workers’ comp settlement or an early offer from a third-party insurer before understanding the full extent of your injuries can permanently undercut your recovery.
- Not Identifying All Third Parties: In complex workplace accidents, multiple parties may share liability. Overlooking one of them, whether a property owner, equipment manufacturer, or another contractor, can mean leaving a significant claim unfiled.
Talk to Hill & Moin LLP About Filing Both a Workers’ Comp Claim and a Lawsuit
If you have been seriously injured at work in New York City or the surrounding area, you owe it to yourself and your family to understand every legal option available to you before making any decisions. Hill & Moin LLP has more than 45 years of experience helping injured workers pursue both workers’ compensation claims and third-party personal injury lawsuits when the facts support it. Our attorneys handle the full range of workplace and construction accident matters throughout Manhattan, Brooklyn, the Bronx, Queens, Staten Island, and beyond, and we know how to build the strongest possible case across both systems.
We offer a free consultation so you can speak with our legal team and understand your rights with no obligation. Call Hill & Moin LLP at (212) 668-6000 or contact us online to get started. The deadlines in these cases move quickly, and the sooner we can review your situation, the more we can do to protect your recovery.