Board-Certified Specialist | Protecting Against Wrongful Termination | Serious & Willful Claims

YEARS OF EXPERIENCE
RECOVERED FOR CLIENTS
California law provides strong protections for injured workers. It’s illegal for your employer to fire you, demote you, discriminate against you, or retaliate in any way simply because you filed a workers’ compensation claim or suffered a work injury.
Yet it happens every day. Injured workers are fired while recovering, denied modified work opportunities, passed over for promotions, or subjected to hostile work environments—all because they dared to exercise their legal rights.
You don’t have to accept this.
At the Law Office of Joseph T. Todoroff, we aggressively protect the employment rights of injured workers. As a Board-Certified Specialist in Workers’ Compensation Law, Joseph understands both the workers’ compensation system and employment law protections that shield injured workers from retaliation.
If you’ve been fired, demoted, or discriminated against for filing a workers’ comp claim, you may be entitled to significant additional compensation—including reinstatement, back pay, and penalties up to $10,000 or more.
California Labor Code Section 132a makes it illegal for employers to:
Simply because you:
These protections apply even if:
The protection is absolute. Your employer cannot use your workers’ compensation claim or injury as a motivating factor in any adverse employment action.
What is a 132a Claim? A claim under California Labor Code Section 132a for wrongful termination or discrimination based on your work injury or workers’ compensation claim.
Common Wrongful Termination Scenarios:
Fired While on Temporary Disability You’re recovering from your work injury, receiving temporary disability benefits, and your employer terminates your employment claiming “position eliminated” or “downsizing.”
Fired Shortly After Filing Claim You file a workers’ compensation claim on Monday. By Friday, you’re terminated for alleged “performance issues” that were never documented before.
Fired When You Can’t Return to Full Duty Your doctor releases you to modified work within restrictions, but your employer terminates you claiming they can’t accommodate restrictions or “need someone who can do the full job.”
Constructive Discharge Your employer makes working conditions so intolerable after your injury that you’re forced to quit. This is treated as wrongful termination.
What You Can Recover in 132a Claims:
Reinstatement
Back Pay
Additional Compensation
Attorney Fees and Costs
Example: Worker earning $60,000/year is fired while on workers’ comp. Case takes 18 months to resolve. Recovery: $90,000 back pay + $10,000 penalty + reinstatement + attorney fees = $100,000+ paid by employer.
When your doctor releases you to return to work with restrictions (modified duty, light duty), your employer must consider whether they can accommodate those restrictions.
Employer Refuses to Provide Modified Work Your doctor releases you to light duty. Your employer has light duty work available but refuses to offer it, claiming “we don’t have anything” or “we don’t do light duty.”
Employer Offers Unrealistic Modified Work Your employer offers “modified” work that actually violates your medical restrictions—expecting you to fail so they can terminate you.
Employer Eliminates Your Position While you’re recovering, your employer eliminates your position and claims there’s nothing available when you’re ready to return.
Modified Work as Harassment Employer gives you demeaning, humiliating, or make-work assignments designed to force you to quit.
Denied Promotions or Raises You’re passed over for promotions or denied raises you would have received if not for your injury.
Demoted or Transferred You’re moved to less desirable position, shift, or location after filing workers’ comp claim.
Hostile Work Environment Coworkers or supervisors harass you about your injury, make jokes, question legitimacy of claim, or create hostile atmosphere.
Negative Performance Reviews After injury, you suddenly receive poor performance reviews despite no change in actual performance.
Excluded from Meetings or Communications You’re left out of important meetings, communications, or decisions after returning from injury.
Reduced Hours or Responsibilities Your hours are cut or responsibilities reduced in retaliation for workers’ comp claim.
If your employer’s serious and willful misconduct caused or contributed to your injury, you may be entitled to a 50% increase in your permanent disability benefits plus additional compensation.
Definition: Serious and willful misconduct means your employer:
OSHA Violations
Removal of Safety Equipment
Known Hazards Not Corrected
Failure to Provide Required Safety Equipment
50% Increase in Permanent Disability Benefits If your permanent disability is $100,000, serious and willful adds $50,000 = $150,000 total
Additional Penalties Up to $5,000 (or more in egregious cases)
Attorney Fees Employer pays your attorney fees
Example: Construction worker suffers serious injury due to employer’s failure to provide required fall protection despite multiple OSHA warnings. Permanent disability award: $120,000. With serious and willful 50% increase: $180,000.
This is a high bar, but when met, the additional compensation can be substantial.
Employer Claims No Work Available You’re released to full duty, but employer claims your position was eliminated or no work is available.
Disputes Over Medical Restrictions Employer disputes your doctor’s restrictions, claims restrictions are too limiting, or pressures you to return to full duty before medically cleared.
Forced to Work Outside Restrictions Employer pressures you to violate medical restrictions or terminates you when you refuse.
Different Pay or Benefits Upon Return You return to work but at lower pay, fewer hours, or reduced benefits compared to before injury.
Isolated or Marginalized After Return You’re treated differently, excluded from team, or given degrading assignments after returning from injury.
When your employer makes working conditions so intolerable that a reasonable person would feel compelled to resign, this is treated as wrongful termination.
Legal Standard: Working conditions must be so intolerable that a reasonable person in your position would have no choice but to resign.
What You Can Recover: Same as wrongful termination—reinstatement or front pay, back pay, penalties, attorney fees.
132a claims and employment discrimination cases require proof that your injury or workers’ comp claim was a motivating factor in the adverse employment action.
Step 1: Immediate Documentation
Step 2: Legal Analysis
Step 3: Strategic Approach
Step 4: Aggressive Advocacy
Step 5: Maximize Recovery
If your work injury prevents you from returning to your previous job, you may be entitled to Supplemental Job Displacement Benefits.
What is SJDB? A voucher worth up to $6,000 for:
Why This Matters: If your injury prevents you from continuing in your occupation, SJDB helps you retrain for new career.
Not if your workers’ compensation claim or injury is a motivating factor. If you’re fired while on workers’ comp, it raises strong presumption of discrimination that your employer must overcome.
At-will employment means you can be fired for any lawful reason—but not for unlawful discrimination. Firing you because of workers’ comp claim violates Labor Code 132a regardless of at-will status.
Yes. Employers often claim pretextual reasons. We examine whether stated reasons are true, whether you were treated differently than other employees, and whether timing and circumstances reveal discriminatory motive.
You can recover reinstatement (or front pay), all back pay and lost benefits, up to $10,000 penalty (or more for continuing discrimination), and attorney fees paid by employer. Total recovery depends on your wages and how long case takes to resolve.
If reinstatement isn’t feasible (company closed, position eliminated, relationship too damaged), you receive “front pay”—compensation for future lost earnings until you find comparable employment.
Possibly. Unemployment and 132a claims are separate. You should apply for unemployment while pursuing your 132a claim. Receiving unemployment doesn’t prevent you from pursuing discrimination case.
Never accept a settlement without consulting an attorney. Employers may offer inadequate amounts hoping you won’t understand your rights. We evaluate whether settlement is fair and negotiate for maximum value.
It varies. Some settle quickly, others require hearings and take 12-18 months. We work efficiently while building strongest possible case.
Releases for workers’ compensation claims or 132a rights may not be enforceable if you didn’t understand what you were signing or weren’t represented by counsel. Contact us immediately.
Giving false negative references to prevent you from finding new work may be additional illegal retaliation. We hold employers accountable for all forms of discrimination.
Negligence is carelessness or failure to exercise reasonable care. Serious and willful requires knowledge of a specific hazard and deliberate decision not to correct it despite knowing it could cause serious injury.
OSHA violations provide strong evidence of serious and willful, but aren’t absolutely required. Any known serious hazard deliberately left uncorrected can qualify.
Possibly. If your employer had safety rules but deliberately failed to enforce them or remove known hazards, serious and willful may still apply.
Evidence includes: prior injuries from same hazard, employee complaints, OSHA citations, safety committee reports, or obvious dangerous conditions that management must have known about.
If your permanent disability is significant (40%+), a 50% increase is substantial. For $100,000 PD award, serious and willful adds $50,000. For $200,000, it adds $100,000. Worth pursuing when evidence supports it.
If you’ve been fired, demoted, harassed, or discriminated against because of your work injury or workers’ compensation claim, you have legal rights and remedies.
We offer a free, no-obligation consultation to review your employment situation.
During your consultation, Joseph will:
You pay nothing for the consultation, and no fees unless we win your case.
You’ve worked hard your entire life. When you’re injured or can’t work due to a disability, you deserve every benefit you’re entitled to under the law. But insurance companies and government agencies don’t make it easy—they’re counting on you to give up or accept less than you deserve.
Don’t let them win.
At the Law Office of Joseph T. Todoroff, we level the playing field. With Board-Certified expertise and a personal commitment to every client, we fight to get you the medical treatment, wage replacement, and disability benefits you need to move forward with your life.
Your consultation is free. You pay nothing unless we win. What do you have to lose?
Office Hours: Monday–Friday, 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM
After-hours appointments available by request
Disclaimer:
The information on this page is for general information purposes only. Nothing on this site should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. Workers’ compensation cases have strict deadlines—contact us immediately to protect your rights.