90 results for: Wilmington
Defense Digest
Delaware ‘Meet and Confer’ Rule Requires Human Contact??!
June 1, 2023
by Lisa M. Grubb
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
The Delaware Superior Court affirms Industrial Accident Board’s decision setting aside a workers’ compensation agreement pursuant to Superior Court Civil Rule 60(b) due to fraud on the part of the claimant.
May 1, 2023
by Benjamin K. Durstein
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
The IAB concludes that regenerative medicine procedures, including orthobiologic injections, do not constitute “reasonable” or “necessary” treatment for a compensable lumbar spine condition.
April 1, 2023
by Benjamin K. Durstein
Case Law Alerts
The Workers' Compensation Exclusivity Exception Must Be Narrowly Construed and the Contract at Issue Must Contain Sufficient Language to Establish a Third-Party Indemnity Obligation
April 1, 2023
by Lisa L. Maeyer
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
Superior Court confirms IAB’s termination of total disability benefits and rejects argument that IAB “precedent” requires a DME doctor to examine a claimant following a subsequent, intervening event in order to offer an opinion on work capabilities.
March 1, 2023
by Benjamin K. Durstein
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
On remand, the Industrial Accident Board concluded that a COVID-19 workplace exposure at a poultry processing plant did not qualify as a compensable occupational disease.
February 1, 2023
by Benjamin K. Durstein
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
Industrial Accident Board determines that a general contractor on a construction site is responsible for claimant’s workers’ compensation benefits as both his employer and by operation of Section 2311.
January 1, 2023
by Benjamin K. Durstein
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
TOP 10 DEVELOPMENTS IN DELAWARE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION IN 2022
December 1, 2022
by Benjamin K. Durstein
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
Delaware Supreme Court holds that a lapse in a Delaware doctor’s provider certification under the Workers’ Compensation Act rendered a cervical spine surgery non-compensable as a matter of law.
November 1, 2022
by Benjamin K. Durstein
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
Board denies petition for increased infusion treatment bills under theory that Delaware Fee Schedule did not apply; Board should order payment of “reasonable cost” of treatment. Board held that treatment in accordance with §2322B(7) was correctly paid.
October 1, 2022
by Benjamin K. Durstein
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
Superior Court holds that § 2322(b) was not superseded by adoption of § 2322B. Therefore, when employer refuses to furnish medical treatment, claimants are entitled to recover “reasonable cost” of medical treatment instead of Delaware Fee Schedule amount.
September 1, 2022
by Benjamin K. Durstein
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
Delaware Supreme Court affirms Superior Court’s decision regarding an IAB appeal holding that an employer may challenge medical treatment via petition for review if causation is in dispute.
August 1, 2022
by Benjamin K. Durstein
Case Law Alerts
Producing hospital bills, alone, does not satisfy discovery requirements of Rule 9.
July 1, 2022
Case Law Alerts
DE court clarifies that physical injury is required and mere physiological responses are not enough.
July 1, 2022
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
Court affirms Board’s decision, rejects employer’s arguments it was denied due process of law by refusal to allow certain evidence and improper determination that implied agreement existed for more severe injury than what was agreed to by the parties.
July 1, 2022
by Benjamin K. Durstein
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
What's Hot in Workers' Comp - Special DE Alert
June 9, 2022
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
The Board Dismisses Petition that Sought Benefits for a Workplace COVID-19 Exposure for Lack of Jurisdiction, But Concluded that COVID-19 “Can Certainly Be a Compensable Occupational Disease in a Proper Situation.”
June 1, 2022
by Benjamin K. Durstein
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
DE Supreme Court affirms Board’s decision that the claimant failed to meet his burden to prove he sustained a permanent impairment to the cervical spine that was causally related to an accepted work accident.
May 1, 2022
by Benjamin K. Durstein
Case Law Alerts
Biomechanical engineer permitted to testify as to how an accident occurred, but not with respect to the plaintiff’s ability to withstand physical forces.
April 1, 2022
Case Law Alerts
Marriage is not enough to establish privity related to collateral estoppel or res judicata.
April 1, 2022
Case Law Alerts
DE Superior Court dismisses legal malpractice claims for failure to identify expert witness who would support claims at jury trial.
April 1, 2022
by Aaron E. Moore
Legal Updates for Lawyers' Professional Liability
Delaware Superior Court Dismissed Plaintiff’s Legal Malpractice Claims Because He Failed To Identify an Expert Witness Who Would Support His Claims at His Forthcoming Jury Trial.
March 10, 2022
by Aaron E. Moore
Case Law Alerts
Biomechanics expert overcomes motion to preclude his testimony, and Delaware Superior Court reaffirms criteria required for admissibility.
January 3, 2022
Case Law Alerts
Plaintiff waives PIP coverage in Maryland but is entitled to PIP coverage in Delaware.
January 3, 2022
Case Law Alerts
Delaware legal malpractice claim dismissed because plaintiff failed to produce an expert report before discovery deadline.
October 1, 2021
by Aaron E. Moore
Defense Digest
Important Distinctions for the Statute of Limitations in a Medical Negligence Case in Delaware
September 1, 2021
by Lisa L. Maeyer
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
What’s Hot in Workers’ Comp, Vol. 25, No. 7, July 2021
July 1, 2021
by Kiara K. Hartwell, Linda Wagner Farrell, and Francis X. Wickersham
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
What's Hot in Workers' Comp, Vol. 25, No. 5, May 2021
May 1, 2021
by Linda Wagner Farrell, Kiara K. Hartwell, and Francis X. Wickersham
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
What's Hot in Workers' Comp, Vol. 25, No. 4, April 2021
April 1, 2021
by Linda Wagner Farrell and Francis X. Wickersham
What's Hot in Workers' Comp
What's Hot in Workers' Comp, Vol. 25, No. 3, March 2021
March 1, 2021
by Linda Wagner Farrell and Francis X. Wickersham