Worker’s Refusal of Light Duty Does Not Have to Relate to Injury, Georgia Court Says

 An injured employee in Georgia does not need to show that his reason for refusing light-duty work is injury-related, the Georgia Court of Appeals found in a decision that could continue to prove tricky for employers and insurers, especially during the next pandemic.



“I do not believe this case creates an opening for an onslaught of new exposure. However, it is certainly something to keep in mind when both sides are crafting their arguments before the courts,” said Sara Phillips, a workers’ compensation defense attorney with the Swift Currie law firm, in Atlanta.

The appellate court early last year, in John Taylor vs. Argos USA, overruled the state Board of Workers’ Compensation. The court agreed with the injured worker’s lawyer and the Georgia Legal Foundation that the board had erred by essentially creating a requirement that a worker’s reason for refusing to return to work has to be linked to the initial injury.

“Simply put, there is no requirement that an employee’s refusal to return to work correlate to the work injury in order for the employee to be justified in refusing,” the Court of Appeals wrote, saying the comp board had relied on an “erroneous theory of law.”

Taylor had been a truck driver for Argos for more than 30 years. He sustained injuries in a road accident in 2019 and was granted temporary partial disability benefits. The employer later sent him to a nonprofit organization for full-time, light-duty work while he recovered.

But when the COVID-19 pandemic began sweeping the planet, the nonprofit closed its doors in March 2020, the court explained. A month later, Argos offered Taylor a light-duty job at its trucking operation facility.

But Taylor’s lawyer explained that the truck driver was 67 years old at the time, was diabetic, and was “really scared” of catching COVID. When the employer did not provide adequate information about its pandemic safety protocols, Taylor declined to return to the facility.

Two days later, Argos terminated the longtime employee for what the company called “job abandonment,” the court opinion noted. Taylor then applied for temporary total disability benefits. After a hearing, an administrative law judge awarded Taylor continuing TTD benefits.

Argos and its insurance carrier appealed to the workers’ compensation board, which overruled the ALJ and found that the driver was not justified in refusing the light-duty work.

“The preponderance of competent, credible evidence shows that [Taylor’s] individual health and safety concerns during the pandemic were personal to [Taylor] and unrelated to his compensable work injury,” the board wrote in its decision.

The Superior Court in Dekalb County affirmed the board’s ruling. Taylor in 2024 petitioned the state appeals court to review. A year later, the court struck down the lower court and the comp board, sparking some concern for employers and carriers around the state.

The appeals court appeared to base its decision at least partly on the reasoning of the Georgia Legal Foundation, a nonprofit organization that assists injured workers in litigation. The Foundation had penned a friend-of-the-court brief that the appeals court called “thoughtful and helpful.”

The Foundation’s amicus attorney, David Garner, explained that during the COVID scare as many as 42 people a day were dying in Georgia from the disease. By June 2020, the state’s governor had lifted some shelter-in-place orders, but not for people with underlying medical conditions, including diabetes.

Garner argued that Georgia workers’ comp law requires only that an employee’s refusal to work must relate, in some manner, to his physical capacity or his ability or skill to perform the job. The comp board’s appellate division needlessly added “a new requirement that the refusal must relate to the work injury … in order to be justified,” the Legal Foundation’s brief reads.

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