Workers' comp pays benefits without proving fault — but it never pays for pain and suffering. A third-party claim can.
Workers' compensation is a vital safety net: if you are hurt on the job in New York, it pays your medical bills and a portion of your lost wages regardless of who was at fault. But it comes with a trade-off, and it leaves a gap that many injured workers never learn about until it is too late.
The trade-off: no pain and suffering
In exchange for no-fault benefits, workers' compensation is generally the 'exclusive remedy' against your employer — you usually cannot sue your own employer, and comp does not pay for pain and suffering. For a serious injury, that gap can be enormous.
The exception: a negligent third party
Here is what many workers miss. If someone other than your employer contributed to your injury, you may have a separate personal-injury lawsuit in addition to your workers' comp claim — and that lawsuit can recover pain and suffering and full economic losses.
A negligent driver who hit you while you were working, a property owner, a general contractor, a subcontractor, or the manufacturer of defective equipment.
Construction sites are the clearest example
On a construction site, the property owner and general contractor often are not your direct employer — and New York's Labor Law §§ 240 and 241 give injured workers powerful claims against them. That is why a construction injury can support both a workers' comp claim and a Labor Law lawsuit at the same time.
Why it pays to ask
Getting your workers' comp benefits is essential, but stopping there can leave the larger recovery on the table. A lawyer who looks at the whole picture can tell you whether a third party shares the blame — and whether a separate claim could be worth far more than comp alone.