Nev. Court Rules Workers’ Comp OK in Some Suicide Cases

July 28, 2008

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In a precedent-setting case, the Nevada Supreme Court held last Thursday that worker comp benefits can go to families of people who kill themselves if an industrial accident broke down their “rational mental process” and left them suicidal.

The high court ruling revives a case brought by Sharon Vredenburg, whose husband Danny shot himself in the head because he couldn’t stop the pain of a severe back injury suffered when he slipped on stairs while working as a bartender at a hotel-casino in Laughlin.

The ruling directs a Clark County district judge to remand the case to an appeals officer who previously had rejected the widow’s bid for worker compensation death benefits.

Nevada law prevents surviving family members from recovering benefits if an employee’s death results from “a willful intention to injure himself.” But justices said benefits can be paid if an on-the-job accident “caused some psychological condition severe enough to override the employee’s rational judgment” and that condition eventually led to suicide.

Vredenburg continued to have pain following back surgery, even after having a morphine pump implanted in his spine, and a doctor determined that he had become “psychologically destabilized.” Before killing himself, Vredenburg wrote several suicide notes and told a friend he could no longer take the pain and all his pain medications, according to court records.

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Latest Comments

  • April 22, 2009 at 6:37 am
    tim says:
    For all of you that have not been subjected to workerscomp laws. After years of having everyday citizens lives sold down the river for a golf game and a steak dinner to have l... read more
  • July 29, 2008 at 9:55 am
    lastbat says:
    This is one reason w/c should continue to not cover mental health conditions. This ruling opens the door for many other conditions that are not caused by work but will be blam... read more
  • July 28, 2008 at 3:36 am
    JAM says:
    M, After being in force for two years, a life insurance policy is incontestable and they have to pay any suicide claim. Regardless, I don't think a W/C policy should pay for a... read more
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