Section 5005 Of Chapter 2. Compromise And Release From California Labor Code >> Division 4. >> Part 3. >> Chapter 2.
5005
. In any case involving a claim of occupational disease or
cumulative injury, as set forth in Section 5500.5, the employee and
any employer, or any insurance carrier for any employer, may enter
into a compromise and release agreement settling either all or any
part of the employee's claim, including a part of his claim against
any employer. Such compromise and release agreement, upon approval by
the appeals board or a referee, shall be a total release as to such
employer or insurance carrier for the portion or portions of the
claim released, but shall not constitute a bar to a recovery from any
one or all of the remaining employers or insurance carriers for the
periods of exposure not so released.
In any case where a compromise and release agreement of a portion
of a claim has been made and approved, the employee may elect to
proceed as provided in Section 5500.5 against any one or more of the
remaining employers, or against an employer for that portion of his
exposure not so released; in any such proceeding after election
following compromise and release, that portion of liability
attributable to the portion or portions of the exposure so released
shall be assessed and deducted from the liability of the remaining
defendant or defendants, but any such defendant shall receive no
credit for any moneys paid by way of compromise and release in excess
of the liability actually assessed against the released employments
and the employee shall not receive any further benefits from the
released employments for any liability assessed to them above what
was paid by way of compromise and release.
In approving a compromise and release agreement under this
section, the appeals board or referee shall determine the adequacy of
the compromise and release agreement as it shall then reflect the
potential liability of the released exposure after apportionment, but
need not make a final actual determination of the potential
liability of the employer or employers for that portion of the
exposure being released.