Serving The New Jersey Citizens Of Oradell

What happens if I’m injured by a third party at work?

On Behalf of | Jun 16, 2025 | Blog

Workplace accidents sometimes trace back to someone other than your direct employer, like a subcontractor’s lapse, a defective machine or a negligent property owner. When that happens, New Jersey workers may be able to combine traditional workers’ compensation benefits with a separate lawsuit against the outside party.

How third-party accidents arise

Construction sites, delivery routes and warehouse docks often feature multiple companies working side by side. If a visiting electrician leaves live wires exposed or a forklift rented from another firm malfunctions, the resulting injuries can implicate that outside entity.

Workers’ compensation: the first safety net

Workers’ comp pays medical bills and a percentage of lost wages without requiring proof of fault. It cannot, however, cover pain, suffering or full wage loss.

When a third party’s careless act contributed to the accident, the injured employee may file a personal-injury claim seeking damages that workers’ comp omits, such as emotional distress and future earnings.

Coordination between the two paths

The claims run on parallel tracks. Workers’ comp pays promptly, while the lawsuit proceeds through investigation and negotiation. If the lawsuit succeeds, the workers’ comp insurer may assert a lien for benefits already paid, but the employee can still emerge with a larger net recovery.

First, workers’ compensation delivers immediate medical coverage and partial wages, no matter who caused the harm. Second, third-party claims target the negligent outsider for extra damages, filling gaps such as pain and suffering. Finally, both avenues can coexist, but coordination is crucial to prevent reimbursement surprises. Knowing how the two systems complement each other helps New Jersey employees pursue full financial recovery after an injury involving someone outside their employer’s control.

Archives

Categories