Elevator shafts run through the heart of high-rise projects and commercial buildings. When a guardrail, lock, or warning sign is missing, a single step can send a worker tumbling multiple stories to the bottom of a dark concrete box. Even on well-managed sites, elevator-related accidents can happen. If your fall occurred while on the job, even if no one seems directly at fault, you are likely eligible for workers’ compensation benefits under South Carolina law.
These accidents often result in life-changing injuries: spine, pelvic, and leg fractures, crush injuries, or death. Recovery can be long and difficult, both physically and financially. The last thing you need is to deal with an insurance company attempting to take advantage of you by fast-tracking and undervaluing your claim.
Since 1968, the workers’ compensation attorneys at Joye Law Firm Injury Lawyers have helped injured workers and their families recover medical benefits and wage replacement. Managing Partner Ken Harrell is a Past President of Injured Workers’ Advocates and serves on the Board of Directors for the Workers’ Compensation Educational Association. Attorney Matt Jackson, Head of our Workers’ Compensation Department, also served as President of Injured Workers’ Advocates and remains an active member, fighting for the rights of injured workers statewide.
If you, a co-worker, or a loved one sustained elevator accident injuries, call us today and learn how a settlement can protect your future. We’ll explain your rights, evaluate your case, and show you how a workers’ comp settlement, and potentially a third-party personal injury claim, can help protect your health and financial future.
How Joye Law Firm Protects Workers Hurt in Elevator Shaft Falls
- Fast benefit checks: We file the paperwork and push the insurance company to start weekly workers’ compensation benefits. This partial wage replacement equates to two-thirds of the injured worker’s average weekly pay, up to the weekly maximum set by the Workers’ Compensation Commission each year.
- Full medical coverage: From emergency surgery to months of physical therapy, we force the employer’s carrier to pay every hospital, doctor, and pharmacy bill.
- Permanent impairment ratings: Our lawyers not only track each body-part rating and calculate the compensation owed under South Carolina schedules, we also fight for long-term medical care, rehabilitation, and psychological care.
- Third-party claims: When an elevator maintenance company, building owner, or general contractor causes the hazard, we bring a separate personal injury case for pain, suffering, and future lost wages. We are also committed to improving workplace safety and work with employers to bring about meaningful change to avoid future injuries.
Case Story: $1 Million Settlement for Three-Story Elevator Shaft Fall
A 28-year-old war-time veteran turned insulation installer opened an unmarked door on the third floor of a large, coastal home under construction. Behind the door was an unfinished shaft with no elevator car, no warning signs, and no barrier. Before he could register what was happening, he plunged three stories onto cinder blocks below, shattering his pelvis and right leg.
- Injuries: Pelvis fracture, tibia fracture, ankle fracture, requiring multiple surgeries
- Workers’ comp claim:
- Weekly partial wage replacement checks
- All medical care covered
- $57,000 Permanent Partial Disability award
- Third-party claim: Joye Law Firm proved the home builder ignored OSHA safety regulations, leading to our client’s devastating fall. After Attorney Melissa Mosier filed a motion for trial, the contractor’s carrier agreed to pay out its full $1 million policy. Part of the settlement agreement required the company to start a new job-site safety plan.
What Are Common Causes of Elevator Shaft Falls?
Unsurprisingly, falls in elevator shafts are among the most dangerous types of accidents that can occur in any residential, commercial, or construction settings. These incidents happen suddenly, but are almost always preventable with proper safety protocols. Below are some of the most common causes of elevator shaft falls:
- Missing or broken shaft doors
- Improper maintenance that leaves the elevator car stuck above or below floor level
- Power outage that strands the elevator between floors
- Removal of barricades during construction
- Inadequate lighting inside the shaft
- Lack of warning signs on higher floors
- Doors that open when no car is present
- Slippery debris at the landing led to a slip and fall into the shaft