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WILLIS
LAW FIRM
1221 McKinney
Suite #3333
Houston, Texas
TOLL FREE
1(800)883-9858
1(800)468-4878

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Maritime Injuries & The Jones Act
The
Jones Act, 46 U.S.C.
688 (1970), is an Act of Congress, which governs the liability of
vessel operators and marine employers for the work-related injury or death
of an employee. It is a federal cause of action, meaning that the United States
Congress intended for all seamen's injuries throughout the nation to be guided
by the same liability standards. Although the Jones Act protects seamen, it
is
not the same as workers' compensation. It does not require that maintenance
& cure payment are paid to the injured seaman, regardless of fault.
In order to have a separate Jones Act Lawsuit however, a worker must prove some negligence
or fault on the part of the vessel's owners, operators, officers, and/or
fellow employees or by reason of any defect in the vessel, its gear, tackle,
or equipment.
If you are a seaman and have been injured on a ship or vessel and your employer is not paying your medical bills, refusing to send you to a medical specialist or not paying you maintenance, then call us for a FREE CONFIDENTIAL CONSULTATION at 1-800-883-9858.
In essence, the Jones Act provides an injured seaman a remedy under
maritime law against his or her employers for injuries arising from
negligent acts of the employer or co-workers during the course of employment
on a vessel. This means that the employer must do something unreasonable
or fail to perform a reasonable act that would have prevented injury in order
for the seaman to win his claim Claims brought under the Jones Act can also
raise claims against a vessel's owner that a vessel was unseaworthy.
WHO
IS A JONES ACT SEAMAN?
One
of the central questions in any maritime injury case is whether the
injured party is a seaman, since only a seaman can recover under the
Jones Act. A seaman is a member of the crew of a vessel or someone who
assigned to a vessel or a fleet of vessels. For example, those who work on
tankers, freighters, jack-up rigs, semi-submersibles, towboats / tugs,
supply boats, crew boats, barges, lay barges, and fishing vessels are members
of the crew are considered seamen. (Other
Vessels) Those who are crew members on movable or jack-up drilling rigs
are also seamen. Officers and crew are all considered seamen. Longshoremen,
pilots, and those who work on fixed platforms are not seamen, but have other
maritime remedies available for injuries. Often there is a dispute as to
seamen status and whether the seaman was working on a vessel when he was
injured. It is very important to allow the maritime injury attorney to study
the facts surrounding the accident and the vessel to help make the
determination of seaman status and to which law should apply.
The
essential requirements for seaman status are:
(a).
An employee's duties must contribute to the function of the vessel or to
the accomplishment of its mission;
(b).
A seaman must have a connection with a vessel in navigation (or to an
identifiable group of such vessels), that is substantial in terms of both
its duration and its nature ; (c). The
duration of a worker's connection to a vessel and the nature of the worker's
activities, taken together, determine whether a maritime worker is a seaman
because the ultimate inquiry is whether the worker in question is a member
of the vessel's crew or simply a land-based employee who happens to be
working on a vessel at a given time;
(d).
A distinction must be made between sea-based workers and land-based workers
who have only a transitory or sporadic connection to a vessel in navigation. Land-based
maritime workers do not become seamen because they happen to be working aboard
a vessel
when they are injured, and seamen do not lose Jones Act protection where the
course of their service to a vessel takes them ashore. In evaluating the
employment-related connection of a maritime worker to a vessel in navigation,
courts should not employ a "snapshot" test for seamen status,
inspecting only the situation as it exists at the instant of injury; but
rather, the total circumstances of an individual's employment must be weighed
to determine whether he has a sufficient relation to the vessel and
(e)
Jones Act coverage( seaman status ) depends not on the place where the injury
is inflicted, but on the nature of the seaman's service, his status as a
member of the vessel, and his relationship as such to the vessel and its
operation in navigable waters.
MAINTENANCE
AND CURE If
a seaman becomes injured on a vessel, regardless of the fault of the vessel
or its operators, his or her legal remedy is called maintenance
and cure. "Maintenance"
is a small daily compensation designed to provide the food and shelter
that would have been provided to the seaman while aboard the vessel. Today,
maintenance rates range from $10 to $35 per day. "Cure"
is the obligation of the seaman's employer to provide medical treatment, prescription
drugs, nursing services, hospitalization, rehab & therapy,
until the seaman reaches maximum medical improvement. Maximum medical
improvement means that the seaman's condition will not improve any further or
he is permanently disabled. When a seaman reaches maximum medical improvement,
the vessel owner's obligation to pay maintenance and cure ceases, regardless
of whether the seaman can return to work or not . The seaman has a right to
his choice of physicians and does not have to accept treatment by his
employer's choice of physician. If an employer refuses to pay maintenance and
cure, the employer can be held liable for damages and attorneys' fees.
UNSEAWORTHINESS
The vessel owner owes the seaman a strict and absolute duty to provide
a seaworthy vessel. A seaworthy vessel is one that is reasonably fit for its
intended use, it should be a safe place to work and live. A seaworthy vessel
should be equipped with appropriate safety gear and equipment, safe recreation
facilities, and a competent crew. The duty owed to a seaman is more rigorous
than the seaworthiness promised in a contract for the carriage of marine
cargo.In addition to holding a seaman's employer responsible for the negligent
acts of its employees and officers, a seaman can recover if he can prove that
the vessel was unseaworthy and that he was injured as a result.
A
vessel that is unseaworthy does not mean that it is in danger of sinking. A
vessel is unseaworthy if a piece of equipment breaks or is inoperable, the
vessel's crew is too small or incomplete, not adequately trained, or a
condition such as oil, grease or rust exists where it is not intended to exist
and the unseaworthy condition is a direct cause of injury to the seaman. In
other words, negligence focuses on acts of the seaman's employer, and
unseaworthiness focuses on the condition or inadequacy of the vessel itself.
Unlike the Jones Act claims, which is against the seaman's employer, an
unseaworthiness claim is made against the vessel's owner. In many cases those actions
will be against the same party. A unseaworthiness claim will bring the
owner into a lawsuit as an additional source of recovery for the seaman. As
with the Jones Act, an unseaworthiness claim must be filed within three years
of the injury, and must be combined with a Jones Act claim.
JONES
ACT- STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
The
Statute of Limitations in a Jones Act case is generally three (3)
years from the date of the injury. There are exceptions to this general
rule, however such as seaman assigned to vessel owned, operated, or
contracted by the United States government. Actions against the vessel
owner for unseaworthiness, must also be brought within three (3) years
from the date of the seaman's injury.
CAUTION
!! There are other situations in which a Jones Act casue
of action or lawsuit is not available to the injured worker or that
it is not the best choice of remedies or cause of action available to the maritime
plaintiff. In those situations the injury and the applicable facts may be
governed under a Statute of Limitations as SHORT AS ONE YEAR from
the date of the negligent act in question. It is for this reason alone to
see a
martime lawyer as soon as possible to investigate the facts of your case.
Once a Statute of Limitations to file a claim or suit passes, it is
very difficult and most of the times impossible to restore.
LEGAL DAMAGES
UNDER THE JONES ACT?
An
injured worker under the Jones Act lawsuit or claim can seek to
recover the following legal damages:
-
(Past
Loss Income) Wages lost from the time of the injury to the time of trial
;
-
(Future
Loss Income) Wages loss in the future;
-
Medical
expenses in the past and in the future; and pain, suffering,
disfigurement and mental anguish in the past and in the
future.

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If you have been seriously injured while as a member
of the crew of a boat, jack-up rig, tug boat, barge or other marine
ship or vessel, then call us for a Free Confidential Consultation.
Talk to Board Certified Personal Injury Trial Lawyer with over
20 years of experience. (Click Here)

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If I am injured on a ship, should I give a statement
to my employer ? When should I file a notice of injury report ? Under
the Jones Act, do I have the right to choose my own medical doctor ?
(Click Here)

What does maintenance and cure mean
under the Jones Act ? Under what circumstances can I recover pain & suffering
and loss wages under the Jones Act ? (Click
Here)

What
does it mean for a ship to be unseaworthy ? Under the Jones Act can part
of the ship or vessel be seaworthy and another part unseaworthy? (More)

Under the Jones Act and maritime law, what is the
deadline or Statute of Limitation to file a claim or lawsuit if I was
injured on a ship or vessel ? (More)

What if I am not a Jones Act seaman, but I was injured on a ship, vessel or an offshore oil rig or platform ? Does maritime law still apply ? Can I file a maritime claim or lawsuit to recover for my injuries? (More)

Can I file a Jones Act claim if my loved on has been diagnosed
with asbestos lung cancer or mesothelioma from asbestos exposure while
working on a ship or at the shipyard ? (More)
Does maritime law protect me if I was exposed to benzene and later I am
diagnosed with leukemia ? (More)

What if my spouse is killed while at sea? Does the Death
on the High Sea Act (DOHSA) apply to all deaths on ships vessels, helicopters,
and
ships on the high seas?
(More DOHSA info)

What are my legal rights if I have had a previous or old injury but now I have suffered a new injury to my back and neck and may need surgery but the Maritime Insurance company's adjuster says I am not covered and he will not approve it ? Yes, you are covered whether it is aggravation of a old injury or new one, if you were a Jones Act seaman injured on the vessel and the employer was at fault or negligent then you can file a Jones Act lawsuit for any type of injury such as heart attacks, strokes, head injury, brain damage, paralysis, burns, broken bones, paraplegia, quadriplegia, loss of an arm or leg, blindness and for emotional trauma or mental anguish, disfigurement, medical expenses and for loss wages or lost earnings in the past and future.
(Jones Act Lawsuit Damages) |
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NOTE: The statements and information provided on this web site are for the informational purposes only. This site is not intended to provide legal advice to the reader and NO attorney-client relationship shall be deemed to arise from the receipt this page and/or its associated pages or any oral or e-mail communication to or from with David Willis or The Willis Law Firm. There will be NO lawsuits filed, claims made, letters or phone calls made for a prospective client, until that person is represented by the firm. An attorney client relationship only arises after the attorney and client have signed a written attorney client agreement, after the attorney has evaluated the background facts provided and has accepted the representation of the client's legal action.
Mr. Willis is a licensed attorney in New York and Texas. Principle office is Houston, Texas.
He is a Board Certified in Personal Injury Trial Lawyer, certified by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization.
Mr. Willis has represented clients in maritime personal injury, barge accidents, boating accidents, transports, crew boats, diving accidents, rig workers, injuries in river, lakes, canals, ICC, wrongful death lawsuits, oilfield accidents, oilrig accidents, tankers, shrimp boats, fishing vessels, tug boats, push boats, auto accident, explosions, crane accidents, rollover, asbestos, mesothelioma, sandblasters disease - silicosis, benzene solvents-aml leukemia, MDS, toxic chemical, lung cancer, 3rd party actions, electrical shock, fires, burns, explosions, helicopter crashes, tugboats, trucking accidents, third party lawsuits, and other product liability and negligence cases from across the United States, including clients from Alabama, Arkansas, Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Virginia, Mexico, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Mississippi, Montana, North Carolina, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, West Virginia & Wyoming.
Further, any statement or reference to past personal injury, products liability lawsuits, settlements or verdicts should NOT be relied upon in one's own case or in your decision on which law firm to hire. All cases, facts, injuries, damages, venues and lawsuits are different and there is NO way to predict the outcome of a particular case, verdict of a jury or judge or the strength of a case before a judge, jury or the appellate court system. The client is responsible for all of their own medical expenses. All cases are handled on a contingent fee basis. No attorney’s fees or case costs charged to client, unless a recovery is made for the client. Often in very serious and catastrophic maritime injury and offshore seaman injury cases Mr. Willis may associate with another attorney as co-counsel and in other matters, the case may be referred. In cases where a legal matter is referred, Mr. Willis will continue to maintain joint responsibility with the handling attorney or lead counsel and actively monitor the progress and development of the case |
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