Recently, the Massachusetts Department of Industrial Accidents, Review Board, held that a judge had erred by substituting his own findings for those of the examining physician and that the employee was entitled to the reversal of his decision. In this case, the Board assessed whether in this successive insurer situation, the second employer could potentially be responsible for compensating the employee for work-related injuries. The successive insurer in this case was the most recent employer, which argued that they should not be required to compensate the employee for her disability.
Here, the Department of Industrial Accidents found the judge had erred by failing to find the second employer responsible for compensating the employee for an injury to her right shoulder due to a work-related accident suffered at her former place of employment. The successive insurer rule holds employers accountable for compensating employees who endure the worsening of an injury originally caused while working for an earlier employer. Here, the employee worked as a certified nursing assistant. In October 2007, she worked for the first employer and was injured when she fell down a flight of stairs. Specifically, she injured her left shoulder and right knee. Her employer paid her weekly total incapacity benefits, according to § 34. Her benefits continued through March 2008.