Hawaii Revised Statutes
386. Workers' Compensation Law
386-3 Injuries covered.

§386-3 Injuries covered. (a) If an employee suffers personal injury either by accident arising out of and in the course of the employment or by disease proximately caused by or resulting from the nature of the employment, the employee's employer or the special compensation fund shall pay compensation to the employee or the employee's dependents as provided in this chapter.
Accident arising out of and in the course of the employment includes the wilful act of a third person directed against an employee because of the employee's employment.
(b) No compensation shall be allowed for an injury incurred by an employee by the employee's wilful intention to injure oneself or another by actively engaging in any unprovoked non-work related physical altercation other than in self-defense, or by the employee's intoxication.
(c) A claim for mental stress resulting solely from disciplinary action taken in good faith by the employer shall not be allowed; provided that if a collective bargaining agreement or other employment agreement specifies a different standard than good faith for disciplinary actions, the standards set in the collective bargaining agreement or other employment agreement shall be applied in lieu of the good faith standard. For purposes of this subsection, the standards set in the collective bargaining agreement or other employment agreement shall be applied in any proceeding before the department, the appellate board, and the appellate courts. [L 1963, c 116, pt of §1; Supp, §97-3; HRS §386-3; gen ch 1985; am L 1995, c 234, §6; am L 1998, c 224, §2]
Cross References
Police officers injured while off-duty covered, see §52D-15.
Attorney General Opinions
Where employee at work is injured and dies as a result of an assault by a third party, compensation should be awarded notwithstanding the assault may have arisen from personal matters. Att. Gen. Op. 73-4.
Law Journals and Reviews
Suicide was compensable injury by disease caused by the employment. Haw. Supp, 4 HBJ, no. 3, at 24 (1966).
Death by heart attack was not compensable because there was no causal relationship between work and death. Haw. Supp, 5 HBJ, no. 1, at 38 (1967).
Japanese Corporate Warriors in Pursuit of a Legal Remedy: The Story of Karoshi, or "Death from Overwork" in Japan. 21 UH L. Rev. 169 (1999).
Mitchell v. State and HRS §386-3: Workers' Compensation Reform in the State of Hawai €˜i. 21 UH L. Rev. 807 (1999).
Hawai €˜i's Workers' Compensation Scheme: An Employer's License to Kill? 29 UH L. Rev. 211 (2006).
Case Notes
Course of employment. 66 F. Supp. 875 (1946); 34 H. 221 (1937).
Employee suffered work-related injury when employee sustained a psychogenic disability due to employee's employment. 714 F. Supp. 1108 (1989).
"Out of" and "in the course of". 24 H. 324 (1918).
Covers workers under nonmaritime contract of employment injured aboard ship. 26 H. 737 (1923).
"By accident", "arising out of", and "course of employment". 26 H. 785 (1923); 37 H. 556 (1947); 38 H. 384 (1949); 40 H. 660 (1955).
Causal connection. 33 H. 576 (1935).
Cancer. 34 H. 717 (1938).
On death from cerebral hemorrhage as arising out of employment. 43 H. 94 (1959).
Reasonable evidence of disease proximately caused. 43 H. 337 (1959).
Where employee is injured on a business trip, employee's personal activities preceding the business activity are immaterial. 52 H. 242, 473 P.2d 561 (1970).
Mental disabilities arising out of employment are compensable. 53 H. 32, 487 P.2d 278 (1971).
Injury occurring off the premises during a coffee break is compensable if it occurred in course of reasonable and necessary activity incident to such break. 54 H. 66, 502 P.2d 1399 (1972).
Influenza is a compensable injury. 59 H. 551, 584 P.2d 119 (1978).
"Work connection" test to decide whether heart attack arose out of and in course of employment. 63 H. 642, 636 P.2d 721 (1981).
Claimant's act of returning to claimant's employer's premises for the sole purpose of retrieving a piece of cake for claimant's personal enjoyment bore no relation to an incident or condition of claimant's employment; accordingly, there was no causal connection between claimant's injury and any incident or condition of that employment. 77 H. 100, 881 P.2d 1246 (1994).
Employee's psychological stress injury not compensable as injury was direct consequence of disciplinary action imposed on employee for altering time cards and this prohibited conduct exceeded bounds of employment duties. 80 H. 120, 906 P.2d 127 (1995).
Employee's injury suffered in crossing public street between employer's office and parking lot not in course of employment as parking lot not part of employer's "premises"; employer's office lease merely allowed employees to enter into independent parking stall rental contract with building management. 80 H. 150, 907 P.2d 101 (1995).
Injury did not arise in the course of employment where assault on claimant, though occurring on employer's premises, emanated from personal dispute over auto accident. 80 H. 442, 911 P.2d 77 (1996).
Where teacher-claimant allegedly administered corporal punishment in violation of work-rule prohibiting such conduct, claimant nevertheless sustained compensable stress-related injury from subsequent discipline as claimant was acting within course of employment at time of alleged misconduct. 85 H. 250, 942 P.2d 514 (1997).
An employee's injury caused by a disease is compensable as an "injury by disease", pursuant to this section, when the disease (1) is caused by conditions that are characteristic of or peculiar to the particular trade, occupation, or employment, (2) results from employee's actual exposure to such working conditions, and (3) is due to causes in excess of the ordinary hazards of employment in general. 94 H. 70, 9 P.3d 382 (2000).
In order to identify the "date of injury" required by the department of labor and industrial relations in connection with the filing of a workers' compensation claim under §386-82, a claimant in a case arising under the "injury-by-disease" prong of this section may rely upon the last day of employment as the "date of disability", but this "date of disability" may also be the date of diagnosis of the disabling condition. 94 H. 70, 9 P.3d 382 (2000).
Under the doctrine of substantial deviation, employee was precluded from compensability for injuries received when trying to return employer's vehicle to employer's baseyard over seven hours after normal workday ended where employee left the scope of employment to embark on a purely personal and unauthorized journey to correct a sewer line problem on girlfriend's property halfway around the island, and had dinner, a few beers and a nap at the girlfriend's house. 100 H. 285, 59 P.3d 920 (2002).
Although employee was not physically injured while taking promotion test, psychological injuries employee sustained caused by employee's dissatisfaction with the process for ranking individuals and the overall grievance and promotion process was compensable; injury that stemmed from that promotion process was incidental to the employment and resulted from an activity that served an important interest of the employer. 100 H. 481, 60 P.3d 882 (2002).
Employee's injury not compensable where employee's injury occurred on public sidewalk outside of employer's business premises, did not occur during a lunch or recreation period, did not occur as an incident of employee's employment, employer did not expressly or impliedly bring after-hours drinking party within employee's orbit of employment and party did not benefit employer in any way. 87 H. 492 (App.), 960 P.2d 162 (1998).
An intentional tort committed by a co-employee acting in the course and scope of his or her employment may be considered an "accident", as defined in this section, if the intentional act was directed against the employee because of the employee's employment; and a co-employee may be considered a "third person" as used in subsection (a). 128 H. 173 (App.), 284 P.3d 946 (2012).
Cited: 2 F. Supp. 2d 1295 (1998); 24 H. 731, 733 (1919).
Employee who sought compensation for the aggravation of employee's asthma resulting from exposure to vog at work was entitled to compensation. 131 H. 545, 319 P.3d 464 (2014).

Structure Hawaii Revised Statutes

Hawaii Revised Statutes

Title 21. Labor and Industrial Relations

386. Workers' Compensation Law

386-1 Definitions.

386-2 Definitions relating to family relationships.

386-3 Injuries covered.

386-3.5 Negotiation for benefit coverage. (a) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, any employer may determine the benefits and coverage of a policy required under this chapter through collective bargaining with an appropriate bargain...

386-4 Voluntary coverage.

386-5 Exclusiveness of right to compensation; exception.

386-6 Territorial applicability.

386-7 Interstate and foreign commerce and maritime employment.

386-8 Liability of third person.

386-8.5 Limits of third party liability.

386-9 Contracting out forbidden.

386-10 Out of state employers.

386-21 Medical care, services, and supplies.

386-21.1 Medical care, services, and supplies for controverted claims. In the event of a controverted claim, the injured employee's private health care plan shall pay for or provide medical care, services, and supplies in accordance with the private...

386-21.2 Treatment plans.

386-21.5 Publication of fees by prepaid health care plan contractors.

386-21.7 Prescription drugs; pharmaceuticals.

386-21.9 Medical care, services, and supplies for firefighters suffering from cancer. If a claim for leukemia, multiple myeloma, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, or cancer of the lung, brain, stomach, esophagus, intestines, rectum, kidney, bladder, prostate, or...

386-22 Artificial member and other aids.

386-23 Services of attendant.

386-23.5 Services of attendant, allowance adjustments.

386-23.6 Weekly benefit adjustments for recipients of services of attendants.

386-24 Medical rehabilitation.

386-25 Vocational rehabilitation.

386-26 Guidelines on frequency of treatment and reasonable utilization of health care and services.

386-27 Qualification and duties of health care providers.

386-28 Opioid therapy; qualifying injured employees; informed consent process.

386-29 Qualifying injured employees; initial concurrent prescriptions; opioids and benzodiazepines.

386-31 Total disability.

386-32 Partial disability.

386-33 Subsequent injuries that would increase disability.

386-34 Payment after death.

386-35 Benefit adjustment.

386-41 Entitlement to and rate of compensation.

386-42 Dependents.

386-43 Duration of dependents' weekly benefits.

386-44 Effect of erroneous payment; insanity of beneficiary.

386-51 Computation of average weekly wages.

386-51.5 Limited liability in concurrent employment.

386-52 Credit for voluntary payments and supplies in kind.

386-53 Nonweekly periodic payments.

386-54 Commutation of periodic payments.

386-55 Trustee in case of lump sum payments.

386-56 Payment from the special compensation fund in case of default.

386-57 Legal status of right to compensation and compensation payments.

386-71 Duties and powers of the director in general.

386-71.5 Rehabilitation unit.

386-71.6 Workers' compensation benefits facilitator unit. (a) There is established within the department of labor and industrial relations the workers' compensation benefits facilitator unit. All professional and clerical employees of the unit shall...

386-72 Rulemaking powers.

386-73 Original jurisdiction over controversies.

386-73.5 Proceedings to determine employment and coverage.

386-74 to 386-77 REPEALED.

386-78 Compromise.

386-79 Medical examination by employer's physician.

386-80 Examination by impartial physician.

386-81 Notice of injury; waiver.

386-82 Claim for compensation; limitation of time.

386-83 When claim within specified time is unnecessary or waived.

386-84 Limitation of time with respect to minors and mentally incompetent.

386-85 Presumptions.

386-86 Proceedings upon claim; hearings.

386-87 Appeals to appellate board.

386-87.1 Standing to intervene in appeals.

386-88 Judicial review.

386-89 Reopening of cases; continuing jurisdiction of director.

386-90 Conforming prior decisions on appeal.

386-91 Enforcement of decisions awarding compensation; judgment rendered thereon.

386-92 Default in payments of compensation, penalty.

386-93 Costs.

386-94 Attorneys, physicians, other health care providers, and other fees

386-95 Reports of injuries, other reports, penalty.

386-96 Reports of physicians, surgeons, and hospitals.

386-97 Inspections.

386-97.5 Penalties. (a) Any person who, after twenty-one days written notice and the opportunity to be heard by the director, is found to have violated any provision of this chapter or rule adopted thereunder for which no penalty is otherwise provide...

386-98 Fraud violations and penalties.

386-99 Posting of information.

386-100 Deductible option for medical benefits in insurance policy.

386-121 Security for payment of compensation; misdemeanor.

386-122 Notice of insurance.

386-123 Failure to give security for compensation; penalty; injunction.

386-124 The insurance contract.

386-124.5 Insurer's requirements; failure to maintain claims service office; penalty; injunction.

386-125 Knowledge of employer imputed to insurance carrier.

386-126 Insolvency of employer not to release insurance carrier.

386-127 Cancellation of insurance contracts.

386-128 Insurance by the State, counties, and municipalities.

386-129 Employees not to pay for insurance; penalty.

386-141 REPEALED.

386-142 Employment rights of injured employees.

386-151 Special compensation fund established and maintained.

386-152 Levy and charges to finance special compensation fund.

386-153 Levy on insurers of employers insured under section 386-121(a)(1).

386-154 Charge against employers not insured under section 386-121(a)(1).

386-154.5 Special assessments.

386-155 Expenses.

386-161 Who entitled to compensation.

386-162 Terms defined.

386-163 Administration.

386-164 Appropriation.

386-171 Volunteer personnel, medical, etc., expenses.

386-172 Administration and procedure.

386-173 Time for giving notice, etc.

386-174 Appropriation.

386-181 Generally.

386-191 Scope.

386-192 Definitions.

386-193 Authority to act as workers' compensation self-insurance group.

386-194 Qualifications for initial approval and continued authority to act as a workers' compensation self-insurance group.

386-195 Certificate of approval; termination.

386-196 Examinations.

386-197 Board of trustees; membership, powers, duties, and prohibitions.

386-198 Group membership; termination, liability.

386-199 Service companies.

386-200 Licensing of producer

386-201 Financial statements and other reports.

386-202 Misrepresentation prohibited.

386-203 Investments.

386-204 Rates and reporting of rates.

386-205 Refunds.

386-206 Premium payment; reserves.

386-207 Deficits and insolvencies.

386-208 Guaranty mechanism.

386-209 Monetary penalties.

386-210 Cease and desist orders.

386-211 Revocation of certificate of approval.

386-212 Notice and hearing.

386-213 Rules.

386-214 Severability.