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Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Wyoming High Court Finds Free Exercise Claim Improperly Raised In Workers Comp Proceeding
In re Workers Compensation Claim for Howard W. Williams, (WY Sup. Ct., April 21, 2009), involved a claim for workers' compensation death benefits by the wife of a an employee who had refused for religious reasons to allow blood products to be used in treating his injuries from a work-related auto accident. The court held that the constitutional question of whether denial of benefits violated the Jehovah's Witnesses [corrected] husband's free exercise rights was not properly before the court. A constitutional challenge to the statute involved needs to be raised in a separate declaratory judgment action, and cannot be raised in an administrative proceeding which is the source of the ruling being appealed in this case. However, the court reversed the denial of benefits on other grounds. It found that the state failed to show that the husband's refusal of blood products contributed to his death. Chief Justice Voigt dissented on this point, finding sufficient evidence that blood product treatment and immediate surgery were reasonably essential for the husband's recovery.