09/25/2025
A victory in front of a Judge followed by another victory in front of the Labor and Review Commission!
Wisconsin Workers’ Compensation Victory: From Trial to LIRC Appeal to Settlement
At Axis Legal, we know that standing up for injured workers isn’t a one-day job. Most cases aren’t won quickly. They are built step by step, often in the face of aggressive defense tactics, unfavorable medical opinions, and even surveillance videos. One of our recent cases shows exactly how this process plays out, and why persistence matters.
We fought for our client from the trial level all the way through an appeal at the Labor & Industry Review Commission (LIRC), and finally reached a settlement that not only made up for what he had already lost, but also protected him if he needs surgery in the future.
The Injury
Our client worked in Harley-Davidson’s audit department. The job required constant, repetitive motion — taking parts off of a rack, twisting and turning them to look for paint flaws, and placing them back. Each shift could mean inspecting hundreds of parts.
On the date of injury, he spent nearly ten hours on the audit line. At about one o’clock in the afternoon he felt a sudden burning in his neck that he had never experienced before. He finished the shift, but the pain was severe enough that he sought treatment the next day. His report said it plainly:
“I have been placed in Audit 20+ hours over the last 4 shifts and I don’t know if I pinched a nerve or what but base of my neck on the spine is numb.”
Doctors initially diagnosed a cervical strain, and imaging later showed a disc bulge at C5-6.
The Defense
The employer and its insurer did not accept responsibility. Their defense came in three parts:
They claimed this was simply degenerative disc disease, not a work injury.
They hired an independent medical examiner who said the job was too light to cause harm.
And they put our client under heavy surveillance, filming him carrying coolers, boxes, and even participating in youth football practices, hoping to argue he wasn’t truly injured.
The Trial
The case went before an administrative law judge. We put forward our client’s testimony and the treating physician’s opinion. The treating doctor explained that the injury was caused by “extensive repetitive movements of the neck” that either directly caused or aggravated his underlying condition.
The judge recognized that while the movements weren’t extreme in isolation, the problem was the repetition — flexing the neck 20–60 degrees, rotating 45 degrees, and doing it over and over again for up to 300 parts a shift.
The defense leaned heavily on its surveillance videos. We addressed that head on in closing argument:
“The surveillance doesn’t erase what happened at work. Injuries don’t disappear because someone manages to get through daily life with pain. The medical records, the timeline, and his consistent testimony all show this was a work-related injury.”
The judge ruled in our client’s favor.
The Appeal
The employer then filed a petition for review with the Labor & Industry Review Commission (LIRC). That process is very different from trial. No new testimony is taken. The Commission reviews the trial transcript, all the exhibits, and the written briefs from both sides.
Here’s how it works:
The losing party files its brief explaining why the judge supposedly got it wrong.
The other side responds, pointing back to the record and the law.
The petitioner may file a short reply.
The three commissioners then review the case and issue a written decision.
The employer’s brief attacked the treating doctor’s opinion, saying she never considered the frequency, magnitude, or duration of the job tasks. They again pointed to surveillance.
Our response brief explained why the ALJ’s decision was supported by the record: the testimony, the medical timeline, and the doctor’s consistent opinion all showed the audit job was the trigger. We reminded the Commission that this was not a long-term “occupational disease” case — it was an acute injury that occurred over consecutive shifts of repetitive work.
After reviewing everything, the Commission agreed with the judge and affirmed the trial victory.
The Settlement
Winning at trial and again at LIRC put us in a strong position. But the case wasn’t over. Our client still needed a resolution that would protect him moving forward. His doctors indicated that surgery was a real possibility.
Any settlement had to take that into account. In negotiations we made clear that the deal couldn’t just cover past medical bills and wage loss — it needed to address the future risk of major surgery. Ultimately, we reached a settlement that did exactly that.
Lessons from This Case
There are several takeaways from this case for anyone dealing with a Wisconsin workers’ compensation claim:
Details matter. Describing the injury in plain terms (“after 10 hours of repetitive twisting, burning pain started at 1 PM”) made the cause clear.
The defense will fight. Surveillance, hired doctors, and arguments about degeneration are routine.
Trial isn’t always the end. Employers often appeal. You need someone ready to write strong briefs and defend the record.
Repetition counts. Even if motions aren’t extreme, doing them hundreds of times a shift is enough to cause injury.
Look ahead. Settlements should protect not only the past but also what the future may hold, including surgeries and ongoing care.
Conclusion
This case took time, effort, and persistence. From a 10-hour audit shift that caused sudden burning neck pain, through hours of surveillance footage, through cross-examining the defense’s IME, through written briefing at LIRC, and finally into settlement talks — we stayed focused on one thing: our client’s recovery.
At Axis Legal, we remain centered on your recovery, no matter how long or difficult the fight may be.