Estate of Rock v. Univ. of Conn.

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James Rock (the decedent) was employed by the University of Connecticut for more than thirty-five years before he died from a form of cancer that can be caused by occupational exposure to asbestos. The decedent never filed a notice of claim for workers’ compensation benefits. Plaintiff, the Estate of James Rock, filed a notice of claim for workers’ compensation benefits on behalf of the decedent. The Workers’ Compensation Commissioner dismissed Plaintiff’s claim for benefits for lack of standing. The Compensation Review Board upheld the dismissal but remanded the case to allow Plaintiff to advance a claim for burial expenses, lost wages the decedent sustained between his injury and his death, and medical expenses attributable to a compensable injury. The Supreme Court reversed in part, holding that an estate is not a legal entity capable of advancing a claim for any form of workers’ compensation benefits, and therefore, Plaintiff did not have standing to pursue any type of workers’ compensation benefits. View "Estate of Rock v. Univ. of Conn." on Justia Law