2025 Session Last amended: 2000 session

§ 176.061 — Third-party Liability

Plain-Language Summary

When a work injury is caused by someone other than the employer (a third party), the injured worker may be able to sue that third party for damages in addition to receiving workers' compensation benefits. The employer has a right of subrogation to recover the benefits it paid from any third-party settlement or judgment.

Practical Notes
When this applies: When a work injury is caused or contributed to by someone other than the employer, such as a negligent driver, equipment manufacturer, or contractor. Who this affects: Injured workers, employers, insurers, and third parties responsible for the injury. Key points: If the third party and employer are both insured and working on the same project or premises, you must choose between suing the third party or collecting workers’ comp – you cannot do both. In all other cases, you can collect workers’ comp and also sue the third party. From any third-party recovery, after attorney fees, one-third goes to you free of any subrogation claim. The employer is then reimbursed for benefits paid. Any remaining balance is credited against future benefits. A coworker is not liable for your injury unless the coworker was grossly negligent or caused the injury intentionally.