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Arthur Chapman has announced the election of Corey S. Bronczyk and Beth A. Prouty as shareholders.
January 6, 2020
Arthur, Chapman, Kettering, Smetak & Pikala, P.A. has announced the election of Corey S. Bronczyk and Beth A. Prouty as shareholders.
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Workers' Compensation for Medical Marijuana? Not So Fast.
January 1, 2020
Think MDOLI has settled the issue? Think again. By Sue Conley and Jeff Markowitz | There are times in the law when everyone thinks you’re wrong but you just can’t shake the feeling that you’re right. It is a bit jarring, and it can make you (quite reasonably) second-guess yourself. But you double- and triple-check your facts and the law, take a deep breath, and conclude, yes, I got this right.
We respectfully suggest that we are in that situation when it comes to whether, through the 2015 promulgated opioid rules, the Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry (MDOLI)—by defining medical marijuana that is used consistent with Minnesota law as not an “illegal substance”—made such medical marijuana reimbursable through Minnesota workers’ compensation.
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Arthur Chapman Named a Forbes Top Trusted Corporate Law Firm
October 16, 2019
Arthur Chapman is pleased to announce its inclusion in the Forbes 2019 list of "America's Top Trusted Corporate Law Firms." Furthermore, the Firm is one of only 29 law firms nationwide - and the only Minnesota based firm - to receive the "most recommended practice area" designation for Labor & Employment.
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Supreme Court Addresses PTSD Amendments
July 19, 2019
Supreme Court Addresses PTSD Amendments
By Emily A. LaCourse, Noelle L. Schubert, Christine L. Tuft, and James S. Pikala
The Minnesota Supreme Court issued a significant ruling on what evidence a compensation judge must consider and what analysis a compensation judge should employ when determining a valid claim for work-related post-traumatic stress disorder ("PTSD").
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Eighth Circuit Affirms Application of Absolute Pollution Exclusion
April 29, 2019
Arthur Chapman attorney Beth Jenson Prouty obtained affirmance at the Eighth Circuit for her insurer client in the case Restaurant Recycling v. EMC. The opinion reaffirms Minnesota’s plain-meaning application of the Absolute Pollution Exclusion. The opinion applies the “in whole or part” language of the pollution exclusion and also defines the plain-meaning of the word “dispersal.”
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Minnesota Supreme Court Decision Clarifies Correct Application of Workers' Compensation Treatment Parameters
April 25, 2019
On April 24, 2019, the Minnesota Supreme Court issued a decision clarifying employers and insurers’ ability to utilize defenses under the Treatment Parameters. In Johnson, William v. Darchuks Fabrication, Inc., File No. A18-1131 (April 24, 2019), the Minnesota Supreme Court, in a case of first impression, ruled that employers and insurers can apply the Treatment Parameters even when contesting a diagnosis, as long as they do not deny all obligations to pay compensation for the underlying injury.
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Arthur Chapman Ranked #18 on List of Minnesota’s Largest Law Firms
April 9, 2019
With 50 lawyers, the firm Arthur, Chapman, Kettering, Smetak & Pikala tied for #18 on Minnesota Lawyer’s recently released list of Minnesota’s Largest Law Firms, 2018. For comparison, the firm moved up from its 2016 ranking when we had 46 lawyers.
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Arthur Chapman Attorney Stephen Warner Joins American Board of Trial Advocates (ABOTA)
February 13, 2019
Please join us in congratulating Steve Warner on his induction as a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates (ABOTA).
Steve joins his partners Sally Ferguson, Colby Lund, Paul Rocheford, Michael Ryan, and Eugene Shermoen in this well respected organization.
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Forget Plausibility – Three Tools to Help Your Motion To Dismiss In Minnesota State Court, Even After Walsh
January 31, 2019
By Jeffrey M. Markowitz
"Justice delayed is justice denied." That legal maxim recognizes that securing justice eventually is not enough. The injury of delay can deny, or at least diminish, later-secured justice. Often the battle cry of the plaintiff seeking prompt redress, so too may the maxim be the battle cry of the defendant seeking prompt dismissal of a claim destined for a defense judgment. The longer it takes a defendant to march toward justice, the more time, burden, and expense even ordinary litigation will cause. And, particularly if the claim should never have made it past the pleadings stage, every dollar and hour spent in discovery diminishes eventually secured justice.
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Minnesota Court of Appeals Holds Joint and Several Liability Statute Does Not Apply to Fault of Employer
January 25, 2019
Minnesota Court of Appeals Holds Joint and Several Liability Statute Does Not Apply to Fault of Employer
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Attorney Jeffrey Markowitz, a former MN Court of Appeals clerk, offers five tips to navigate your next appeal
December 14, 2018
Whether you hit a home run in district court, or lost hard, every litigator will repeatedly face the question of whether and how to appeal that shutout, or how to defend that big win.
Attorney Jeffrey Markowitz, a former MN Court of Appeals clerk, offers five tips to navigate your next appeal.
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Arthur Chapman’s female shareholders featured in Women in the Law edition of Attorney at Law
December 7, 2018
In a firm where nearly half of the attorneys are women, nine are shareholders. In this article, each took a moment to reflect on why she chooses to practice at Arthur Chapman, how the firm is fulfilling its commitment to diversity and inclusion, and how the firm supports her in achieving work/life balance.
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Minnesota Supreme Court Broadly Defines Insured to Bar Subrogation
November 27, 2018
Minnesota Statute § 60A.41(a) prohibits an insurance company from “proceed[ing] against its insured in a subrogation action where the loss was caused by the nonintentional act of the insured.” (Emphasis added.)
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ACKSP mourns the loss of attorney Robert W. Kettering Jr.
April 30, 2018
Robert W. Kettering, Jr., 69, died on April 22, 2018. Bob was a consummate lawyer, endearing father, and caring husband. Bob was diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s disease several years ago, which forced him to leave the law practice that he dearly loved in 2011.
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Minnesota Claims: From Perham to President
August 7, 2017
Small-town values and big-city litigation have helped fashion the philosophy of TCCA president Shayne Hamann.
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Wisconsin Supreme Court Denies Disability Benefits Resulting from Medical Treatment Unrelated to Work Injury
June 30, 2017
The Wisconsin Supreme Court has determined that employers and insurers are not responsible for disability benefits resulting from undertaking medical treatment that is not causally related to a work injury.
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Minnesota Supreme Court Alters “Arising Out Of” Requirement
June 29, 2017
In Hohlt v. University of Minnesota, filed on June 28, 2017, the Minnesota Supreme Court has limited the scope of its prior decision in Dykhoff v. Xcel Energy, 840 N.W.2d 821 (Minn. 2013). The Hohlt decision will immediately impact how cases are analyzed with regard to the “arising out of” and “in the course of” compensability determinations, and may very well impact cases that are currently in litigation.
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Supreme Court Decision Heightens Importance of Rehabilitation Plan Contents
May 5, 2017
In a decision issued by the Minnesota Supreme Court on May 3, 2017, the Court significantly raised the level of importance of the contents of a Rehabilitation Plan prepared as part of a workers’ compensation matter. In Gilbertson v. Williams Dingmann, LLC, File No. A16-0895 (May 3, 2017), the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled that an employer and insurer cannot discontinue temporary total disability (“TTD”) benefits when the employee rejected a job offer from the date-of-injury employer because the Rehabilitation Plan identified the vocational goal as return to work to a “different employer.”
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Minnesota Supreme Court Applies First-Party Bad Faith Statute
April 6, 2017
On April 5, 2017, the Minnesota Supreme Court issued Wilbur v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., applying "proceeds awarded" for purposes of Minnesota's first-party bad faith statute to unambiguously mean the judgment amount entered by the district court on the claim for benefits, an amount which is capped by the insurance policy’s limit.
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Attorney Fee Claims in Minnesota Trucking Cases?
March 24, 2017
Does Minn. Stat. § 227.271 Create a Private Right of Action for Violations of Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations and their Minnesota Analogues? by Jeffrey J. Woltjen and James F. Mewborn
Minnesota Chapter 221 regulates both interstate and intrastate motor carriers operating in Minnesota. The statutes largely adopt the federal motor carrier legislation, known as the Federal Motor Safety Carrier Regulations (“FMCSRs”), codified as 49 C.F.R. §§ 300.01 et seq., which set forth the mandatory safety regulations that motor carriers must follow in the course of transporting persons or property for business purposes.
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