Preszler Injury Lawyers
Preszler Injury Lawyers

Can I Receive Accident Benefits if I Lose My Job After a Car Accident?

All automobile insurance policies in the province are required to include the coverage mandated by the Pntario Statutory Accident Benefits Schedule (SABS). If your injuries make it impossible for you to return to work, you may be eligible to collect income replacement benefits.

Case Study: Sabadash v. State Farm, Et Al.

What if you had medical issues that predated your accident, or it took several months for your accident-related injuries to affect your work? A recent case addressed by a three-judge panel of the Ontario Divisional Court, Sabadash v. State Farm, et al., addressed just such a situation. In this particular case, an accident victim challenged his insurerโ€™s denial of income replacement benefits under the SABS, citing his inability to directly connect his losses to the underlying accident.

Here is a brief overview of what happened. The applicant was involved in a car accident that took place in Ontario on March 3, 2011. Prior to the accident, the applicant suffered from a number of physical and mental health impairments, including diabetes, anxiety, and depression. Following the accident, the applicant also reported โ€œissues with his eyes tracking together, loud ringing in his ears, difficulty formulating thoughts, memory issues, dizziness and loss of balanceโ€ โ€” all symptoms consistent with a traumatic brain injury.

At the time of the accident in March 2011, the applicant worked as the manager of a tool supply and repair shop. His employment ended seven months later, according to the applicant, because of his โ€œinability to complete the tasks expected of him.โ€ The applicant maintained this was the direct result of the injuries he sustained in the March car accident. On this basis, he applied for benefits under SABS from his insurance carrier, State Farm.

Automobile insurance companies should provide income replacement benefits to an injured policyholder who โ€œsustains an impairment as the result of an accidentโ€ and, assuming they were employed at the time, is unable to โ€œperform the essential tasksโ€ of their job within 104 weeks (two years) of said accident. State Farm, however, took the position in this case that the applicant could not prove his inability to work was the result of his accident. The applicant did not accept this decision and decided to pursue the appeals process provided for by the Financial Services Regulatory Authority of Ontario (FSRA).

The Arbitratorโ€™s Decision

The first stage in this process is a hearing before an FSRA arbitrator. After a hearing, the arbitrator assigned to this case sided with the applicant. State Farm maintained that the applicant could not prove that the accident was the โ€œbut forโ€ cause of his subsequent loss of income. The but-for test is commonly applied by courts when assessing negligence in personal injury cases. Here, the arbitrator said that was not the appropriate standard for determining โ€œcausation in the statutory accident benefit context.โ€

Instead, the arbitrator said the applicant was entitled to income replacement benefits because a โ€œpreponderance of the evidenceโ€ supported the applicantโ€™s position that the accident โ€œwas a material significant factor well beyond the de minimis range in the causation of [the applicantโ€™s] inability to work.โ€

The Directorโ€™s Delegateโ€™s Decision

Not satisfied with the arbitratorโ€™s ruling, State Farm appealed to the next stage of the FSRA process, which is a review by a Directorโ€™s Delegate. The main thrust of State Farmโ€™s appeal was that the arbitrator applied an incorrect legal standard. That is to say, the but-for test was the standard that should have applied to the plaintiffโ€™s claim, rather than the โ€œmaterial significantโ€ test.

This time, State Farmโ€™s argument prevailed. The Directorโ€™s Delegate held that the applicant needed to show that โ€œthe injury arising from the accident must be enough to directly cause an impairment.โ€ The Directorโ€™s Delegate therefore ordered a new hearing before a new arbitrator, who was instructed to apply this standard.

The Divisional Courtโ€™s Decision

The applicant then sought judicial review of the Directorโ€™s Delegateโ€™s decision with the Divisional Court. In a judgment issued on February 15, 2019, the Court dismissed the appeal. However, the Court did not entirely affirm the Directorโ€™s Delegateโ€™s decision either.

First, the Court said the original arbitrator was wrong to suggest the but-for test did not apply to assessments of statutory accident benefits. In fact, the Ontario Court of Appeal has previously held just the opposite. This supports the position taken by the Directorโ€™s Delegate.

The Directorโ€™s Delegate also held that when assessing claims under the SABS, the applicant must prove that โ€œthe injury arising from the accident must be enough to directly cause an impairment.โ€ The Divisional Court said this language โ€œappears to suggest that the accident in issue must be sufficient in itself to have caused the impairment โ€” that it must be โ€˜the causeโ€™ as opposed to โ€˜a necessary cause.โ€™โ€ This reading of the law is also incorrect, the Divisional Court said. That is to say, the applicant does not need to prove that the โ€œaccident aloneโ€ could have caused his inability to work.

Despite the Directorโ€™s Delegateโ€™s error, the Divisional Court said it would not restore the arbitratorโ€™s original ruling as requested by the applicant. Instead, the Court said it was necessary to conduct a new hearing before a โ€œdifferent arbitrator,โ€ who must apply the correct legal standard from the outset.

Contact Preszler Injury Lawyers Today

Collecting the insurance coverage you are rightfully entitled to should not be a chore. If you believe you should receive income replacement benefits after sustaining injuries in a motor vehicle collision, contact our Ontario accident benefits lawyers today and receive a free initial consultation. To learn more, call 1-800-JUSTICE.

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