The Supreme Court of Florida has ruled that workers who are victims of violent assaults on the job can collect workers’ compensation benefits if their work environment made them vulnerable to the attack. This decision centers on Mohammed Bouayad, the general manager of a car rental business located at a hotel near Orlando International Airport.
Background of the Case
Around midnight on June 28, 2019, an unknown assailant shot Bouayad multiple times at close range as he walked along a dimly lit outdoor walkway. At the time, Bouayad was carrying rental agreements and cash from a kiosk to an outside office. He was working the late shift to train new hires after recently firing three employees for theft and drug use.
While Bouayad survived the shooting, his subsequent claim for workers’ compensation benefits sparked a multi-year legal battle with Normandy Insurance Company. The insurer denied the claim, arguing the shooting did not “arise out of” his employment because the shooter’s identity and motive remained unknown, or potentially stemmed from a personal dispute.
Court Decision
A judge of compensation claims initially awarded benefits to Bouayad, finding that his late-night hours, the cash he carried, and the dark walkway “substantially contributed to the risk of an attack.” However, the First District Court of Appeal later overturned that award. The appeals court reasoned that the physical act of walking did not cause the shooting, and blamed the third-party shooter entirely for the injuries.
The Supreme Court rejected the appellate court’s strict logic, calling it an “erroneous interpretation” that improperly forced tort-law principles into a no-fault system. Justice Carlos G. Muñiz, writing for the majority, emphasized that the law focuses on the occupation as a whole rather than an isolated physical task like walking.
“An injury ‘arising out of work performed’ is not synonymous with an injury ‘caused by work performed,’” Muñiz wrote, explaining that the law simply requires a clear nexus or link between the job and the risk.
The high court rephrased the legal question to address whether injuries from third-party assaults are compensable. The court answered with a definitive yes, provided the employee can show their job duties or environment heightened their risk of becoming a victim.
The ruling clarifies that claimants do not need to prove the attacker had a work-related motive, such as a robbery. The court noted that a dangerous or isolated work environment alone can satisfy the legal threshold for occupational causation.
“Workplace assaults are covered where the assault relates to the employment,” the court affirmed, agreeing with a standard long held in Florida legal precedent.
With this decision, the Supreme Court quashed the appellate court’s ruling. The case has been sent back to the First District Court of Appeal to re-evaluate the evidence under the correct, broader legal standard.
Original reporting: Tampa Free Press — read the source article.