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Workplace Accident
Forklift in large wharehouse

$5.5 Million Wisconsin Verdict Against Menards in Eau Claire Forklift Injury Case

An Eau Claire County, Wisconsin jury has returned a $5.5 million personal injury verdict against retailer Menard, Inc. after a temporary forklift operator at the company's Eau Claire distribution facility dropped metal pallets on the head of a 46-year-old truck driver. The jury assigned 100 percent of the fault to Menards and its forklift operator and zero percent to the plaintiff. The award is reportedly the largest forklift injury verdict against Menards in Wisconsin history. Attorney Chris MacGillis of the MacGillis Law Group, LLC tried the case under docket number 22-CV-0521. Case at a Glance Verdict: $5,500,000 Case Type: Workplace Forklift Injury / Premises Liability Court: Eau Claire County Circuit Court, Wisconsin (Case No. 22-CV-0521) Verdict Date: April 24, 2026 Plaintiff: 46-year-old truck driver (name not publicly released) Defendant: Menard, Inc. Plaintiff Attorney: Chris MacGillis, MacGillis Law Group, LLCWhat Happened at the Menards Distribution Center? The plaintiff, a truck driver delivering to the Menards Eau Claire distribution facility, was struck in the head by metal pallets being moved by a temporary worker operating a forklift at the site. The blow caused a severe laceration that required emergency surgery and left the plaintiff with permanent injuries, according to local Wisconsin news coverage and the MacGillis Law Group. According to evidence presented at trial, multiple Menards employees acknowledged that the forklift operator had violated a known safety rule when the pallets were dropped.Why Did the Jury Find 100 Percent Fault Against Menards? The plaintiff's case centered on a documented breakdown in how Menards onboarded and supervised the temporary forklift operator. Trial evidence showed that Menards: Did not properly certify, train, or supervise the temporary worker before authorizing him to operate a forklift Operated in violation of OSHA powered industrial truck standards, which require documented operator training and evaluation before solo operation Had been on notice of prior, similar forklift incidents at other Menards distribution centers and failed to address the underlying safety gaps Attempted at trial to shift blame to the temp staffing agency and to the injured truck driver himself The jury rejected the comparative-fault theory and assigned all liability to Menards and its operator.What Were the Plaintiff's Injuries? The plaintiff sustained a severe head laceration that required emergency surgical repair. According to the firm, he was left with permanent injuries as a result of the incident, which formed the basis of the substantial compensatory award.What This Verdict Signals for Wisconsin Workplace Injury Cases For plaintiff attorneys handling Wisconsin workplace accident cases, the result is a useful data point. The case demonstrates a jury's willingness to hold a large retailer fully responsible when a temporary worker is put on dangerous equipment without OSHA-compliant certification and supervision, and when prior similar incidents can be put in front of the jury as evidence of a known, unaddressed pattern. In a statement released after the verdict, MacGillis said: "These are the types of verdicts that lead to change."Conclusion Verdicts of this size against a regional retailer the size of Menards are relatively rare, particularly on a 100-percent-liability finding with no comparative fault. Major Verdict tracks significant plaintiff verdicts and settlements across all 50 states. Browse the latest results or find a plaintiff attorney with a proven trial record in Wisconsin.Frequently Asked Questions Q: Are companies liable for injuries caused by temporary or staffing-agency workers? Yes, when the host employer controls the work, training, and equipment. Under both common-law agency principles and OSHA's "host employer" guidance, a company that puts a temp worker on machinery without proper certification and supervision can be held directly liable for injuries that result, even if the worker is technically employed by a staffing agency. Q: What does OSHA require for forklift operator training? OSHA's powered industrial truck standard (29 CFR 1910.178(l)) requires that every forklift operator receive formal instruction, hands-on training, and a documented performance evaluation before operating a forklift independently. Refresher training is required after near-misses, observed unsafe operation, or assignment to a different type of equipment. Q: Can prior similar incidents be used as evidence in a Wisconsin personal injury case? In some circumstances, yes. Evidence of prior similar incidents may be admissible to show notice of a hazard and the foreseeability of harm, particularly where the plaintiff alleges the defendant failed to correct a known unsafe condition. Admissibility is governed by Wisconsin's evidence rules and is decided case-by-case by the trial court.

Workplace Accident

$1.75 Million Settlement for Loading Dock Worker Injured at Illinois Home Depot

A loading dock worker at a Home Depot store in the Chicago area secured a $1.75 million settlement after a semi-trailer suddenly dropped at the dock while he was operating a forklift, leaving him with a serious back injury that required surgery and ended his career in physically demanding warehouse work. The settlement was announced by Briskman Briskman & Greenberg Personal Injury & Car Accident Lawyers, the Chicago firm that represented the worker.What Happened at the Loading Dock The worker was in the middle of a routine task loading a trailer owned by a national freight carrier at the Home Depot location when the trailer dropped unexpectedly at the dock. The sudden jolt threw him forward in the forklift cab. He reported immediate and severe lower back pain, and his shift ended there. What followed was years of treatment. According to the firm, the injuries required back surgery and extensive follow-up care. Over time, the worker lost the ability to continue in the physically demanding warehouse positions he had relied on for his livelihood. Loading dock incidents are among the more serious workplace injury scenarios precisely because workers operating forklifts inside or against trailers have no control over whether that trailer is properly secured. A drop of even a few inches under load can generate tremendous force.The Legal Claim Attorney Susan E. Fransen of Briskman Briskman & Greenberg's Joliet, Illinois office handled the case. The claim arose from the trailer drop incident and resolved as a personal injury settlement separate from any workers' compensation claim the worker may have also pursued. Fransen described the challenge of documenting a case built around lost earning capacity and long-term physical limitations: "Our client wanted to keep working and supporting his family. When that became impossible, our task was to document the full scope of what he lost and to pursue a resolution that would help him move forward with dignity and stability." The settlement resolves the worker's personal injury claim. The defendants included the Home Depot location and the national freight carrier that owned the trailer at the time of the incident.Why This Settlement Matters for Illinois Workers Illinois workplace injury cases involving third-party liability where a party other than the employer contributed to the injury can produce significant recoveries beyond what workers' compensation alone provides. When a freight carrier's improperly secured trailer causes a forklift operator's injury, the carrier may share liability alongside the premises owner. For plaintiff attorneys in Illinois handling industrial and warehouse injury cases, this settlement is a useful data point. The facts here a single traumatic incident, documented surgical intervention, permanent career impact reflect the core elements that support substantial third-party personal injury recoveries in loading dock cases. Fransen noted that modern freight and retail operations place increasing physical demands on workers, and that even brief lapses in equipment protocol can result in life-changing injuries. The $1.75 million resolution reflects the long tail of consequences: lost wages, surgical costs, years of follow-up care, and the permanent foreclosure of a career.A Platform Built for Outcomes Like This Verdicts and settlements like this one rarely make statewide headlines, but they represent real results for real workers and they deserve to be seen. Major Verdict is the only platform where plaintiff attorneys can publicly display their trial results and settlements, for free. Create your profile today and let your record speak for itself. If you or someone you know has been seriously injured in a workplace accident, settlements like this one demonstrate what is possible when the full scope of an injury is properly documented and pursued. Find a plaintiff attorney on Major Verdict with experience in workplace and industrial injury cases.


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