Lead Opinion
In this interlocutory appeal, we consider whether an employee-who was injured while working and received workers' compensation benefits-may bring claims for disability discrimination against his employer under the Minnesota Human Rights Act. Appellant Keith Daniel, a firefighter for the Minneapolis Fire Department ("Department"), sued respondent City of Minneapolis ("City"), alleging that, while he was working for the Department, the City discriminated against him by failing to accommodate his disability and retaliating against him for seeking an accommodation.
The City moved for summary judgment, arguing that Daniel's claims are barred by the exclusivity provision in the Minnesota Workers' Compensation Act. The district court denied summary judgment, the court of appeals reversed, and we granted Daniel's petition for review.
To give effect to the plain language of the workers' compensation act and the human rights act, we hold that an employee can pursue claims under each act because each act provides a distinct cause of action that redresses a discrete type of injury to an employee. The human rights act holds employers liable for discrimination, a public harm that violates a person's civil rights and self-worth; the act affords broad relief, including equitable, сompensatory, punitive, and public remedies for unlawful workplace discrimination. By contrast, the workers' compensation act holds employers liable for work-related, personal injuries; it requires employers to pay monetary compensation to employees to help *642injured employees recover physically and financially. Therefore, for the reasons explained below, we overrule our decision in Karst v. F.C. Hayer Co. ,
FACTS
Because this case appears before us on the City's motion for summary judgment, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to Daniel, and resolve all doubts and factual inferences against the City. See Rochester City Lines, Co. v. City of Rochester ,
While performing rescue duties in August 2014, Daniel injured his right ankle. After this injury, Daniel's doctor gave him a prescription for supportive "tennis shoes with arch support + high rescue boot high ankle" to reduce pain and improve ankle stability.
Daniel filed a claim petition for workers' compensation benefits to pay for the cost of the shoes and inserts prescribed by his doctor, as well as for lost wages. As part of the claim process, a doctor conducted an independent medical examination for the City. The doctor concluded that Daniel's ankle issues were "aggravated by his ... need to walk on uneven surfaces wearing heeled shoes at work." He recommended that Daniel wear flat shoes but opined that Daniel could work full time without restrictions. The City accepted liability for Daniel's workers' compensation claim in January 2015.
After a captain told Daniel that he could wear black tennis shoes in the station house, Daniel purchased black tennis shoes and fitted them with special inserts. The City compensated Daniel for the black tennis shoes, orthotic inserts, supportive rescue boots, and lost wages. Daniel then wore the tennis shoes at the station house for about 6 to 8 weeks, until May 2015, when the Deputy Chief told him that he could no longer wear them because they did not comply with the Department's policy for station shoes.
Daniel asserts that wearing the tennis shoes "did not re-aggravate his ankle injury," but after he revertеd to wearing station shoes, his ankle started to "swell" again and "exacerbated his pain." Two months after being told that he could not wear his prescribed tennis shoes, Daniel reinjured his ankle and soon thereafter seriously injured his shoulder when he lost his footing climbing down from a fire truck.
The Department placed Daniel on light-duty status after the shoulder injury. While working on light-duty status, the Department did not allow Daniel to wear his prescribed tennis shoes. Because Daniel claimed that not being able to wear the prescribed shoes made the light-duty job fall outside of his physical restrictions, the Department placed him on leave. The Department told him that he could return to work if his work restrictions allowed him to wear shoes that complied with the Department's footwear policy.
*643While on injury leave, Daniel and the Department engaged in "numerous" meetings to discuss a shoe that would comply with the Department's uniform policy and Daniel's footwear prescription; they never agreed on an acceptable shoe. The Department informed Daniel that if he wished to receive workers' compensation benefits for his injury and continue his employment, he would have to comply with the Department's uniform guidelines.
Daniel then sued the City in December 2015, asserting claims under the Minnesota Human Rights Act, Minn. Stat. §§ 363A.01 -.44 (2018), and the Minnesota Workers' Compensation Act,
One month after he sued the City, Daniel completed a functional-capacity examination for the City. The examination revealed that he was "not able to reach shoulder level with his left arm" and that "he could only carry 40 pounds seldom and only 20 pounds over his head seldom." These examination results prompted the City to seek early retirement benefits for Daniel.
Daniel accepted the early retirement benefits in March 2016, ending his employment with the City. In a deposition, he stated that he could have had surgery for his shoulder injury and not retired early, but he agreed to early retirement because he was told that even if he had the surgery, "the fire department did not have a position for [him] to wear tennis shoes."
In June 2016, Daniel settled his workers' compensation claims for about $125,000. The settlement agreement identified and covered specific work-related, physical injuries that Daniel sustained between 2001 and 2015, including his ankle injuries.
The City moved for summary judgment on the remaining claims 2 months later, arguing in part that the exclusivity provision of the workers' compensation act bars Daniel's claims under the human rights act. Daniel also moved for summary judgment. The district court denied both motions, concluding that (1) the claims under the human rights act were not barred because the workers' compensation act does not provide a remedy for the discrimination claims that Daniel alleged under that act, and (2) factual disputes precluded summary judgment on Daniel's claims.
The City filed an interlocutory appeal,
ANALYSIS
We consider whether the district court has subject-matter jurisdiction over Daniel's claims under the human rights act. McGowan v. Our Savior's Lutheran Church ,
In general, "unless a statute provides that its remedy is exclusive," a party may bring claims that arise out of the same set of facts under different statutes. Abraham v. Cty. of Hennepin ,
We previously considered the relationship between these two exclusivity provisions in Karst v. F.C. Hayer Company . There, an employee who had received workers' compensation benefits for work-related injuries brought a discrimination claim under the human rights act for the employer's refusal to rehire him.
In reaching this conclusion, we rejectеd the employee's argument that he could bring claims under the human rights act because discrimination was an injury "separate and distinct" from the loss of employment.
Instead of focusing on the "exact nature and cause of these injuries," and whether the injury from disability discrimination fell within the coverage of the workers' compensation act, we considered whether that act provided the employee a "remedy" for the employer's refusal to rehire the injured employee. Id . After determining that a remedy existed under the workers' compensation act, we noted that when that act applies, we have been unwilling to extend existing "narrow" exceptions to its exclusivity clause absent clear legislative intent.
Turning next to the human rights act, we acknowledged the Legislature's policy declaration to " 'secure for persons in this state, freedom from discrimination ... [i]n *645employment because of ... disability.' "
We further determined that because the two acts were substantially amended in the same legislative session, we could not resolve the conflict that existed between each act's exclusivity provision by looking at which one was enacted last.
Here, the parties dispute whether Karst is good law and whether this case is distinguishable from Karst . The City argues that we must follow Karst under the doctrine of stare decisis because the Legislature has not amended either act in response to Karst . Reasoning that this case is indistinguishable from Karst , the City asserts that Daniel's claims under the human rights act are barred by the workers' compensation act.
Daniel urges us to overrule Karst and hold that the two exclusivity provisions do not conflict. He contends that he can pursue his claims under the human rights act because they relatе to discrimination, an injury that is separate and distinct from a workplace injury that may precede the discrimination. Alternatively, even if we continue to adhere to Karst , Daniel argues that his claims are distinguishable because Karst is limited to claims for an employer's refusal to rehire a disabled employee and does not apply to claims for an employer's discrimination against an employee during an "ongoing working relationship."
In considering whether to reaffirm our decision in Karst , we recognize that we do not overturn past precedent lightly. We are "extremely reluctant to overrule our precedent under principles of stare decisis and require a compelling reason before overruling a prior decision." Cargill, Inc. v. Ace Am. Ins. Co. ,
*646Johnson v. Chi., Burlington & Quincy R.R. Co. ,
We begin with well-established principles of statutory interpretation because Karst , and this case, rest on the language of the exclusivity provisions in two different statutes. We interpret statutes de novo, Burt v. Rackner, Inc. ,
The exclusivity provision under the workers' compensation act states that an employer's liability under the act displaces "any other liability ... on account of such injury ."
We have previously interpreted the language "such injury" by looking at the scope of an employer's liability under section 176.021, subdivision 1. See Kaluza v. Home Ins. Co. ,
The plain language of section 176.021 limits the meaning of "injury" in the exclusivity provision to "personal injury." Specifically, section 176.021, subdivision 1, states: "Every employer is liable for compensation according to the provisions of this chapter and is liable to pay compensation in every case of personal injury ... of an employee arising out of and in the course of employment without regard to the question of negligence." (Emphasis added.)
"Personal injury" encompasses both a "mental impairment," including "a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder,"
The dissent takes a different approach, focusing on the words "on account *647of" in the phrase "on account of such injury." This phrase, read as a whole, means that an employer's workers' compensation liability is exclusive of "any other liability" only if the injury itself falls within the coverage provisions of the workers' compensation act.
In Karst , however, we focused on whether the workers' compensation act provided a remedy to the employee for the injury claimed, and considered the "exact nature and cause" of the injury to be irrelevant.
Employer liability under the workers' compensation act turns on the exact nature and cause of the injury because the workers' compensation scheme was meant to replace the tort system of fault-based adjudication for workplace injury claims, with a system of strict liability that ensured that injured workers would receive expedient relief. See Lunderberg v. Bierman ,
*648Here, the workers' compensation act functioned as the Legislature intended. Regardless of the City's fault for Daniel's ankle injury, the City accepted liability under the workers' compensation act and compensated him because his ankle injury was a "physical injury" that arose out of and during the course of his employment with the Department. See
Daniel's claimed injury under the human rights act, on the other hand, is different from the physical injury that he sustained at work. He claims a distinct injury arising from the City's later response to his disability, an alleged deliberate failure to accommodate his disability by refusing to allow him to wear his doctor-prescribed tennis shoes. His claims arise under the human rights act's disability-accommodation requirement, which makes it unlawful for an employer to fail "to make reasonable accommodation to the known disability of a qualified disabled person" unless the employer can demonstrate that the accommodation would impose an "undue hardship" on the employer. Minn. Stat. § 363A.08, subd. 6(a).
Unlike the workers' compensation act, the human rights act is a civil rights law that protects employees from unlawful employment discrimination.
Here, Daniel asserts that the City's alleged discriminatory response to his disability not only prevented him from working, but violated his civil rights by harming his dignity and self-respect as a disabled employee. These human rights act claims focus solely on the employer's allegedly intentional conduct in responding to Daniel's disability and the alleged injuries that flow from that response. They fit easily within the human rights act. Employers cannot, based on an employee's membership in a protected class, discharge an employee or discriminate against an employee regarding the terms, conditions, or privileges of employment. Minn. Stat. § 363A.08, subd. 2(3). Just as an employer cannot discriminate on the basis of race or gender, an employer cannot refuse to make reasonable accommodations "to the known disability of a qualified disabled person," unless doing so would be an undue hardship to that employer.
*649Id ., subd. 6(a). If an employer commits an unfair employment practice against a disabled employee, that employer has, by law, discriminated against that employee in violation of the act, and the employee can sue the employer for that discrimination.
As we recognized in Karst , the definition of a "qualified disabled person" under the human rights act "does not exclude people disabled as a result of work-related physical injuries."
More importantly, the damage to Daniel's individual dignity, as well as the loss of a fair employment opportunity because of the alleged failure to accommodate his physical disability, are alleged injuries distinct from the ankle injury suffered by Daniel many months before the dispute over accommodation arose. Cf. Reese v. Sears, Roebuck & Co. ,
Under the dissent's view, Daniel has no recourse for the City's alleged violation of the human rights act because his disability arose from a compensable workplace injury. This view conflates two distinct injuries, a work-related physical injury and the injury resulting from disability discrimination. According to the dissent, Daniel's recourse to the civil rights laws depends upon where , when , and how his disabling injury occurred, rather than upon the separate conduct of the City in allegedly failing to accommodate his disability.
The dissent's approach would immunize workplace discrimination, otherwise unlawful under the human rights act, simply because an employee's disability arose from a workplace injury. This approach would also leave a class of disabled employees without a remedy at the same time that others who have injuriеs or disabilities that are not work-related are fully protected from discrimination by employers. This result strikes us as both anomalous and wrong.
*650Critically, nothing in the language of the human rights act demonstrates that the Legislature intended an employee's civil right to be free from discrimination to hinge on where , when , or how the disability arose. Rather, the statute simply prohibits an employer from discriminating "against a person with respect to ... conditions ... of employment" because of that person's disability. Minn. Stat. § 363A.08, subd. 2(3). This prohibition includes an employer's failure to "make [a] reasonable accommodation to the known disability of a qualified disabled person."
The broad remedies provided by the human rights act, including monetary damages, equitable relief, and civil penalties, further show that the personal and societal injuries caused by discrimination are different in nature and scope from the physical and mental work injuries that are compensable under the workers' compensation act. See Minn. Stat. § 363A.29, subds. 3-5 (setting forth available relief). The statute explicitly extends its anti-discrimination protections broadly to ensure that every person receives equal treatment without regard to race, color, creed, religion, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, familial status, age, disability, or public-assistance-beneficiary status. Minn. Stat. § 363A.08, subd. 2. This remedial scheme stands in sharp contrast to the more circumscribed statutory compensation provided by the workers' compensation act for personal injuries suffered at the workplace. See, e.g. ,
Accordingly, reading the plain language of each statute, we conclude that the Legislature intended claims under the two exclusive acts to coexist. The human rights act exists to protect an employee's civil rights; it provides the exclusive remedy for discrimination injuries caused by any employer conduct that the statute defines as "unfair." Minn. Stat. § 363A.04. The workers' compensation act, by contrast, provides the exclusive remedy for financial and medical losses arising from a work-related "personal injury."
This conclusion harmonizes the legislative intent behind each act. We have recognized that the "overriding purpose" of the human rights act is "to free society from the evil of discrimination that threatens the rights and privileges of the inhabitants of this state and menaces the institutions and foundations of democracy." Wirig v. Kinney Shoe Corp. ,
The holding of Karst is inconsistent with the plain language of the workers' compensation act and the human rights act, and the legislative policies reflected in those acts. We therefore overrule it. Failing to take this step would thwart the Legislature's intent to protect the civil rights of disabled employees under the human rights act. In addition, nothing in the plain language of either act compels us to conclude that the Legislature intended the workers' compensation act to foreclose an employee's separate cause of action under the human rights act for unlawful discrimination that violates an employee's civil rights.
In addition to our conclusion based on a comprehensive reading of the plain language of the statutes, a careful review of Karst shows that the grounds for its holding are weak. Our opinion acknowledged the plain language of the workers' compensation act and the human rights act, but did not identify any ambiguity in the language of either provision. Nor did the opinion explain how we could elevate the plain language of the workers' compensation act over the human rights act when the Legislature has long commanded that "[w]hen the words of a law in their application to an existing situation are clear and free from all ambiguity, the letter of the law shall not be disregarded."
The development of anti-discrimination law, which has advanced considerably since Karst , also leads us to conclude that Karst must be overruled. Since we decided Karst in 1989, disability-discrimination law has significantly developed. In 1990, Congress passed the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Accordingly, Minnesota employers subject to the federal act are already exposed to the "seeds" of disability-discrimination claims that the dissent discusses. The Americans with Disabilities Act, however, does not apply to certain employers. Compare
Finally, our decision today comports with the decisions of many other state supreme courts-most issued after Karst -that have concluded that emрloyment-discrimination claims are not barred by the exclusivity provision of state workers' compensation laws.
Each of these decisions by other state supreme courts identified discrimination as a distinct injury that is remedied by the state's anti-discrimination act. See 9 Larson, supra , §§ 100.03[1], 104.05[5] (stating that, as a national "trend," "state antidiscrimination laws ... have been held immune *653to exclusivity based upon the belief that state legislatures did not intend workers' compensation systems to subvert the important social policies embodied in civil rights laws"). The workers' compensation acts in these states have operated alongside state anti-discrimination acts, some for decades.
We observe, as other courts have, that although the injuries for which claims arise under each act are separate and distinct, the damages for a discrimination claim and payments for a workers' compensation injury could overlap in some cases. See, e.g. , Byers ,
To the extent that claims brought under the human rights act and the workers' compensation act give rise to duplicative liability, we agree that the employee cannot receive "double recovery for the same harm." Wirig ,
In sum, Daniel's claims under the human rights act are not barred by the exclusive-remedy provision of the workers' compensation statute. Because Daniel's alleged injury under the human rights act arose not from his original ankle injury but from his employer's alleged discriminatory response to that injury, his injury is not a covered injury under the workers' compensation act. The two statutory schemes address distinct injuries. As a result, we conclude that no conflict exists between the exclusivity provisions of the workers' compensation act and the human rights act and we therefore overrule Karst 's conclusion tо the contrary. Accordingly, we hold that the district court has subject-matter jurisdiction over Daniel's claims under the human rights act.
*654CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the decision of the court of appeals and remand the case to the district court for further proceedings on the merits of Daniel's claims under the human rights act.
Reversed and remanded.
Dissenting, Anderson, J., Gildea, C.J.
DISSENT
Notes
The City describes "station shoes" as shoes that are worn "all day, every day, unless [they] need a specific shoe for a specific thing, like a technical rescue boot for a technical rescue, or a fire boot for [a] fire run." The station-shoe procedure requires that station shoes be "plain toe, black leather boots" that do "not interfere with response time."
Daniel further asserts that the City violated the workers' compensation act because the Department threatened to terminate his workers' compensation benefits if he complied with his doctor's prescription. See
The district court stayed the case pending the appeal.
Issues regarding whether Daniel is a "qualified disabled person" and whether he established а prima facie case of disability discrimination under the human rights act are not before us. See Minn. Stat. § 363A.03, subd. 36.
Notably, this sole decision, Schachtner v. Dep't of Indus., Labor & Human Relations ,
The City cites to Minnesota state and federal court decisions to support its argument. See Neumann v. AT & T Commc'ns. ,
Subdivision 16 also states that a "personal injury" includes "[p]hysical stimulus resulting in mental injury and mental stimulus resulting in physical injury...."
The dissent's focus on the meaning of the phrase "on account of" is misplaced for a separate reason. Determining whether liability arises "on account of" a compensable workplace injury does not help to resolve the question raised here: whether "such injury" includes the injury caused by an employer's prohibited discriminatory conduct. Accordingly, our inquiry focuses on the meaning of "such injury."
Under section 176.82, subdivision 2, employees, through a civil action independent of workers' compensation benefits, can also be compensated for up to 1 year of lost wages if an employer discontinues an injured employee's employment without reasonable cause "when employment is available within the employee's physical limitations."
The Legislature first enacted the human rights act in 1955 (over 40 years after enacting the workers' compensation act). Act of April 19, 1955, ch. 516,
We note that the rationale of Karst could conceivably preclude other types of claims for physical injuries or mental impairments resulting from the stress of workplace discrimination. See
Moreover, even if we had identified an ambiguity, Karst 's reliance on the legislative history of the human rights act was unsound. Karst concluded that the "legislature did not intend to authorize virtually every injured worker who is not rehired to bring a disability discrimination action."
We note that the human rights act provides a limited exemption for employers with fewer than 15 employees from the responsibility to comply with the reasonable-accommodation requirement. Minn. Stat. § 363A.08, subd. 6(a). The act does not, however, exempt any employer from the general prohibition against disability discrimination. Minn. Stat. § 363A.08, subd. 2 ; see also Minn. Stat. § 363A.03, subd. 16 (defining "employer" as "a person who has one or more employees").
See, e.g. , Whitson v. City of Hoover ,
The dissent complains that our decision leaves "much unsaid" about how to resolve double-recovery issues. This question is not one for an advisory opinion, but is one that trial courts are more than capable of answering based on the facts and circumstances in each particular case. See Goodman v. Boeing Co. ,
Dissenting Opinion
The question here is whether workers' compensation liability on the part of respondent City of Minneapolis for appellant Keith Daniel's ankle injuries"is exclusive and in the place of" disability-accommodation liability for the same injuries. Because Daniel's failure-to-accommodate claim is "on account of" the same physical injuries that gave rise to the City's workers' compensation liability, I would hold that the City's workers' compensation liability is exclusive. In concluding otherwise, the court undermines the foundational exclusivity principle on which our workers' compensation system rests, ignores the plain statutory language of the exclusivity provision, and overrules our decision in Karst v. F.C. Hayer Co. ,
I.
I begin with the statutоry text of the exclusivity provision. Statutory interpretation is a question of law, which we review de novo. Webster v. Hennepin County ,
There is no question that the City incurred liability to Daniel under the Minnesota Workers' Compensation Act. "The liability of an employer prescribed by this chapter" is "to pay compensation in every case of personal injury or death of an employee arising out of and in the course of employment without regard to the question of negligence."See
The question is what other liability is displaced by the City's workers' compensation liability. The exclusivity provision of the workers' compensation act, as relevant here, states that "[t]he liability of an employer prescribed by this chapter is exclusive and in the place of any other liability to such employee ... on account of such injury...."
When liability for a compensable injury arises, the workers' compensation act is exclusive. "The workmen's compensation act, insofar as it provides any compensation to an employe accidentally injured in the course of his employment, is exclusive of all other remedies." Breimhorst v. Beckman ,
Of course, the exclusivity provision does not govern an injury that did not arise out of or in the course of employment. See Kaluza v. Home Ins. Co. ,
"On account of" is not defined in chapter 176. "Absent statutory definitions, we often look to dictionary definitions to determine the plain meanings of words." Gilbertson v. Williams Dingmann, LLC ,
II.
We reached this same conclusion in Karst . In that case, the employee sought to recover damages under the Minnesota Human Rights Act because his employer failed to rehire him after he received workers' compensation benefits for a shoulder injury.
First, we asked whether the employee's injury-failing to be rehired-fell within the workers' compensation act. We noted that the employee's failure-to-rehire injury "may be conceptually distinct from his work-related injuries," but the exact nature or cause of the injuries was "immaterial" and "not the issue in this case." Id . The issue wаs "whether the [workers' compensation act] provides a remedy for [the] injuries." Id . The workers' compensation act at the time of Karst's injury awarded him compensation for the employer's failure to rehire him. This remedy, we stated, was "clear evidence that the legislature intended the decision of whether or not to rehire an injured worker and the consequences flowing from that decision to be within the scope of the [Act]." Id . Thus, we concluded, the "liability ... prescribed by this chapter,"
Second, although the human rights act also provided a remedy for a discriminatory failure-to-rehire claim, see Karst ,
III.
Our decision in Karst stands on three principles that are central to the workers' compensation system. First, we have historically viewed exceptions to the exclusive remedy provided by the workers' compensation act narrowly. See, e.g. , Meintsma v. Loram Maint. of Way, Inc. ,
Second, we have repeatedly rejected attempts to divide work-related injuries into personal injuries compensable by workers' compensation and separate consequences of those injuries that are compensable outside of the workers' compensation system. For example, in Frank , an employer negligently caused a bucket of hot tar to spatter on the plaintiff's face, head, neck, and body.
Third, as we did in Karst , we have consistently called upon the Legislature to amend the exclusivity provision if in fact the Legislature intends to allow employees to pursue claims against employers outside the workers' compensation system for work-related injuries. "[C]hange should come about by legislation and not by rule of court," Hyett ,
IV.
Apart from failing to consider the principles that support our decision in Karst , the court fails to appreciate the troubling consequences of its decision. The court's reasoning undermines workers' compensation exclusivity, implicates double-recovery by employees, and likely will result in a proliferation of failure-to-accommodate litigation over workplace injuries.
Tellingly, the "on account of" language in the statute that guides my reading plays no part in the court's analysis. Rather, the key distinction that drives the analysis of the court is that an ankle injury differs in kind from a human rights violation. The court states that the human rights act "provides a distinct cause of action that redresses a discrete type of injury to an employee." Unlike the workers' compensation act, which provides a remedy for discrete categories of personal injury, the human rights act provides a remedy for an injury to an employee's dignity and self-respect.
Taken at face value, this analysis guts the exclusivity provision. For example, "[t]here is no place in compensation law for damages on account of pain and suffering, however dreadful they may be." 1 Larson, supra , § 1.03[4]. But as we noted nearly a century ago, "[e]very personal injury causes pain and suffering ... [and some personal injuries] must be carried through life to the mental distress of the victim." Hyett ,
The result is not much better if the court's analysis is limited to the facts of this case. Even so limited, the result here implicates more than simply a recovery by Daniel. That is because the workers' compensation act establishes a structure for rehabilitating injured employees that can include accommodations to allow the employee to continue in the job. See
The holding today therefore implicates double-recovery by employees. Almost any work-related injury carries with it the seeds of a failure-to-accommоdate claim, and as just seen, both the human rights act and the workers' compensation act provide a potential remedy. In the past, we have not allowed an injured employee to proceed with claims that duplicate the remedies provided by chapter 176. See, e.g. , McDaniel v. United Hardware Distrib. Co. ,
The inevitable effect of the holding here is an expansion of failure-to-accommodate litigation. But, a key purpose of exclusivity is that employers be "relieved of the prospect of large damage verdicts." See 9 Larson, supra , § 100.01[1] (emphasis added); see also Lunderberg v. Bierman ,
V.
Daniel's failure-to-accommodate claim exists only because he suffered ankle injuries for which he has received compensation under the workers' compensation act. The City's liability under the human rights act is "on account of" Daniel's compensated injuries. Therefore, I would hold that the district court is deprived of jurisdiction over Daniel's failure-to-accommodate claim by reason of
The objectives of Minnesota's human rights act are worthy, and the court identifies valid policy reasons for ensuring that those objectives are widely available to employees. But whether and how those policies should be advanced in the context of a work-related injury is a legislative decision. See Dukowitz v. Hannon Sec. Servs .,
When in Karst we held that the workers' compensation act was exclusive over the human rights act, we ended that decision by observing that "[i]f we have incorrectly defined the legislative intent, the legislature may quickly correct us."
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
The City's insistence on one, but not another, shoe type may not have been a wise course of action in аttempting to deal with this employee's work conditions. But this point does not take Daniel's claim outside the exclusive remedy provided by the workers' compensation act. It is worth noting that the facts here are not close to the hypothetical offered at oral argument where an employer "viciously harasses" and "denigrates" an employee with a limp, which under the cases cited above, could lead to a different exclusivity result. But we need not answer this hypothetical question today.
Contrary to the court's claim, I do not conflate a physical injury with disability discrimination. I admit these injuries are distinct. But the fact that one injury is distinct from another misses the point. The relevant question is whether the injury alleged to fall outside the workers' compensation act is "on account of" a compensable injury. See
My approach therefore does not "immunize" from liability employers who fail to accommodate employees disabled by workplace injuries. Following the plain language of
The court concedes that double-recovery is not permitted but allows an employee to pursue coexisting workers' compensation and failure-to-accommodate claims concurrently. This is in apparent tension with the doctrine of election of remedies: a party must "adopt one of two or more coexisting and inconsistent remedies which the law affords the same set of facts ." Vesta State Bank v. Indep. State Bank of Minn. ,
Dissenting Opinion
I join in the dissent of Justice Anderson.
