The Last (Maritime) Employer Rule and the Aggravation Rule are the two methods of assigning liability in Longshore Act cases. Since they are well-established in Longshore Act jurisprudence, it may be useful to summarize the prevailing principles of these doctrines.
Here, in no particular order, are the top ten general principles governing the doctrine of the Last Employer Rule in occupational disease cases under the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (“the Act”).
The Last Responsible Employer is defined as the last employer covered (by the Act) prior to the injured worker’s awareness of his injury.
The Last Responsible Employer Rule in occupational disease cases has a counterpart in traumatic injury cases, known as the Aggravation Rule, but there are differences.
For example, under the Aggravation Rule there must be an aggravation, acceleration, or contribution to an existing impairment, constituting a new injury. Exposure alone, as in occupational disease cases, is not enough for liability to be assessed against the last employer.
The determination of the responsible employer in cumulative traumatic injury cases turns on the distinction between whether a claimant’s disability is the result of the “natural progression” of a work-related injury or an “aggravation” of that injury. Natural progression means that the disability would have occurred and been the same without the occurrence of a subsequent injury or aggravation. If the disability results from the natural progression of an initial injury, then the employer at the time of that initial injury is the Responsible Employer for the entire disability. But if the conditions of employment with a subsequent employer aggravated, accelerated, or combined with the earlier injury, then the employer at the time of the later injury is liable for the entire resulting disability.
Also, the burden of proof to avoid liability among potentially liable employers is simultaneous, rather than sequential last-to-first as in occupational disease cases.
Also, in cumulative traumatic injury cases, the U.S. Department of Labor’s Benefits Review Board has created an extra statutory credit for the last employer in scheduled award cases. The Last Employer will get a dollar-for-dollar credit in the later case for previous scheduled awards involving the same schedule. There is no similar credit for the last employer in occupational disease cases.
The Last Responsible Employer rule and its assignment of liability are well-established, but it is not automatic. Next month, we will discuss two recent cases where the last employer chronologically was found not to be liable for benefits. One is a traumatic injury case, and the other is a curious occupational disease case.