When construction site accidents cause serious injuries, Metairie workers and their families deserve experienced legal representation. Smiley Injury Law represents construction accident victims, fighting negligent contractors, property owners, and equipment manufacturers for full compensation. Our construction accident attorneys handle falls from heights, scaffolding collapses, crane accidents, electrocutions, machinery injuries, and struck-by incidents throughout Metairie—securing maximum recovery for your medical expenses, lost wages, and suffering while protecting your workers’ compensation benefits.
Construction accident law holds multiple parties accountable when dangerous worksite conditions cause injuries. In Metairie, injured construction workers have legal rights extending beyond workers’ compensation—often including third-party claims against general contractors, subcontractors, equipment manufacturers, property owners, and other entities whose negligence contributed to your accident.
Metairie’s construction industry involves inherently dangerous work including working at heights, operating heavy equipment, electrical installations, demolition, and exposure to hazardous materials. Despite comprehensive safety regulations from OSHA and Louisiana state authorities, construction sites remain among the most dangerous workplaces, producing thousands of serious injuries and fatalities annually.
Our construction accident attorneys at Smiley Injury Law investigate every aspect of your case, from site safety conditions and OSHA violations to equipment defects and contractor negligence. We work with safety experts, engineers, accident reconstruction specialists, and medical professionals who can testify about how safety failures caused your injuries and why multiple parties share responsibility.
Time matters in construction accident cases. Metairie’s two-year prescription period for personal injury claims means you must act quickly. Additionally, crucial evidence like accident scene conditions, equipment involved, safety records, and witness statements must be preserved immediately before construction continues and evidence disappears.
Falls from ladders, scaffolds, roofs, structural steel, and other elevated surfaces represent the leading cause of construction fatalities and catastrophic injuries. Workers falling even short distances can suffer traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, multiple fractures, internal injuries, and death.
OSHA requires fall protection for any work above six feet, including guardrails, safety nets, or personal fall arrest systems. Contractors who fail to provide adequate fall protection, allow workers on unstable scaffolding, or permit work without proper harnesses face liability when falls occur.
Our fall accident cases examine whether contractors provided required fall protection, properly erected and maintained scaffolding, trained workers on fall hazards, and implemented comprehensive fall prevention programs. We hold all responsible parties accountable including general contractors, scaffolding companies, and property owners who created dangerous elevated work conditions.
Scaffolding collapses, platform failures, and falling from improperly constructed scaffolding cause devastating injuries. Defective scaffolding components, improper assembly, inadequate bracing, overloading, and missing guardrails all contribute to scaffolding accidents that could have been prevented through proper construction and inspection.
OSHA’s scaffolding standards require competent persons to supervise scaffolding erection, daily inspections before use, proper planking and decking, secure guardrails, and load capacity adherence. Violations of these requirements demonstrate negligence when scaffolding accidents occur.
Smiley Injury Law’s scaffolding accident cases investigate who erected the scaffolding, whether it was properly designed and assembled, if required inspections occurred, and whether the scaffolding met OSHA standards. We pursue claims against scaffolding rental companies, general contractors, subcontractors, and manufacturers of defective scaffolding components.
Construction cranes, forklifts, excavators, bulldozers, and other heavy equipment cause catastrophic injuries when they malfunction, tip over, strike workers, or drop loads. Crane collapses, boom failures, load drops, and workers struck by moving equipment produce some of construction’s most serious injuries and fatalities.
Crane operations require certified operators, proper load calculations, adequate ground support, clear communication, and establishment of safety zones preventing workers from entering crane swing radiuses or beneath suspended loads. Equipment maintenance, inspection, and proper operation prove essential to preventing accidents.
Our heavy equipment accident attorneys investigate operator qualifications, equipment maintenance records, load charts, site conditions, and whether contractors followed manufacturer specifications and OSHA crane standards. We pursue claims against equipment operators, crane companies, general contractors, and equipment manufacturers when defects contribute to accidents.
Contact with energized electrical sources causes severe burns, cardiac arrest, neurological damage, and death. Construction workers face electrocution risks from overhead power lines, underground utilities, temporary electrical systems, defective tools, and improper grounding.
OSHA requires maintaining safe distances from power lines, de-energizing electrical circuits before work, proper lockout/tagout procedures, ground-fault circuit interrupters, and insulated tools. Contractors must identify electrical hazards and implement protective measures before workers begin tasks near electrical sources.
Smiley Injury Law represents electrocution victims in claims against contractors who failed to identify electrical hazards, utility companies that didn’t properly mark underground lines, and manufacturers of defective electrical equipment. We pursue maximum compensation for the devastating injuries electrical accidents cause including severe burns, amputations, cardiac damage, and neurological impairments.
Workers struck by falling tools, materials, vehicles, or equipment suffer traumatic injuries including skull fractures, brain injuries, spinal damage, and crush injuries. Falling objects from heights, vehicles backing up, swinging crane loads, and collapsing materials all create struck-by hazards on construction sites.
OSHA requires hard hats, barricades preventing workers from entering areas where falling object hazards exist, tool tethering at heights, and traffic control procedures for vehicles operating near workers. Site logistics must prevent workers from being caught between equipment and fixed objects.
Our struck-by accident cases examine site safety plans, whether contractors established proper work zones, if adequate warnings were provided, and whether equipment operators maintained proper vigilance. We hold contractors accountable for failing to implement protective measures preventing struck-by incidents.
Trench collapses bury workers in thousands of pounds of soil, causing asphyxiation, crush injuries, and death within minutes. Excavations deeper than five feet require protective systems including sloping, shoring, or trench boxes. Unprotected trenches represent recognized hazards that frequently prove fatal.
OSHA’s excavation standards require competent persons to classify soil, design protective systems, inspect trenches daily, and ensure workers can quickly exit excavations. Contractors who cut corners by working in unprotected trenches face substantial liability when collapses occur.
Smiley Injury Law’s trench collapse cases pursue claims against general contractors, excavation subcontractors, and property owners who pressured contractors to work quickly without proper safety systems. We demonstrate how simple protective measures would have prevented these entirely preventable tragedies.
Workers caught in or between machinery, equipment, collapsing structures, or materials suffer crushing injuries, amputations, and death. Equipment with moving parts, excavation cave-ins, collapsing walls, and workers caught between vehicles and structures all represent caught-in/between hazards.
Machine guarding requirements, proper lockout/tagout procedures, equipment inspections, and site traffic control prevent many caught-in/between accidents. When contractors fail to implement these basic protections, they face liability for resulting catastrophic injuries.
Our caught-in/between accident attorneys investigate equipment safety features, whether proper lockout procedures were followed, site traffic patterns, and contractor safety programs. We pursue compensation from all parties whose negligence contributed to preventable crushing and amputation injuries.
Construction workers face exposure to asbestos, silica dust, lead paint, chemical solvents, concrete additives, and other hazardous substances causing respiratory diseases, chemical burns, poisoning, and cancer. Acute exposures cause immediate injuries while chronic exposures produce diseases appearing years later.
OSHA requires hazard communication programs, material safety data sheets, personal protective equipment, ventilation, and exposure monitoring. Contractors must identify hazardous materials, provide appropriate respirators and protective gear, and train workers on chemical hazards.
Smiley Injury Law represents workers suffering toxic exposures and chemical burns in claims against contractors who failed to provide proper protective equipment, chemical manufacturers who inadequately warned about hazards, and property owners who failed to disclose hazardous material presence requiring specialized handling.
Structural failures during construction, renovation, or demolition cause catastrophic injuries and multiple fatalities. Wall collapses, roof failures, floor collapses, and complete building failures occur when structural engineering is inadequate, temporary supports fail, or demolition proceeds improperly.
Engineers must properly design temporary support systems during construction. Contractors must follow engineering specifications and ensure adequate bracing and shoring. Demolition requires careful planning preventing uncontrolled collapses.
Our structure collapse cases involve complex engineering analysis, reconstruction of construction sequences, and review of structural plans and load calculations. We pursue claims against structural engineers, general contractors, demolition contractors, and property owners whose cost-cutting measures compromised structural safety.
General contractors bear primary responsibility for overall site safety. They control work schedules, coordinate subcontractors, implement site safety programs, conduct safety meetings, and ensure OSHA compliance. Even when subcontractors perform the actual work, general contractors face liability for failing to maintain safe worksites.
General contractors cannot delegate their safety responsibilities. Courts hold them accountable for subcontractor safety violations occurring under their supervision and control. Their superior position in the construction hierarchy creates duties to protect all workers on their job sites.
We aggressively pursue claims against general contractors who prioritize schedules and budgets over worker safety, fail to enforce safety rules, allow dangerous conditions to persist, or inadequately supervise subcontractors. General contractors’ deep insurance coverage often provides the most substantial source of compensation.
Subcontractors performing specific trades—electrical, plumbing, concrete, steel erection, roofing—owe safety duties to their own employees and other workers their activities might endanger. Negligent subcontractors who create hazards, violate OSHA standards, or use improper techniques face liability when their conduct causes injuries.
Even though workers’ compensation bars injured workers from suing their direct employers, workers can sue other subcontractors whose negligence caused their injuries. For example, an electrical subcontractor’s employee injured by a steel erector’s negligence can sue the steel erection company.
Our construction accident investigations identify all subcontractors whose actions contributed to your accident. We pursue claims against every negligent subcontractor, maximizing your compensation sources beyond workers’ compensation.
Property owners who retain control over premises safety, actively participate in construction activities, or hire contractors they know are unsafe face liability for construction accidents. Owners cannot simply hire contractors and ignore dangerous conditions they observe or should recognize.
Louisiana law imposes duties on property owners to ensure contractors maintain reasonably safe worksites, especially when owners maintain active involvement in construction projects. Owners who pressure contractors to work faster, cut costs, or skip safety measures face substantial liability when accidents result.
Smiley Injury Law pursues property owner liability in construction accident cases, particularly when owners interfered with safety decisions, hired unqualified contractors, or maintained control over dangerous conditions. Property owners often carry substantial liability insurance providing additional compensation sources.
Defective construction equipment including scaffolding, cranes, power tools, safety equipment, and machinery causes injuries when design flaws or manufacturing defects make equipment unreasonably dangerous. Manufacturers face strict liability when product defects cause construction accidents.
Equipment lacking necessary safety guards, defective fall protection equipment, cranes with structural failures, and power tools with electrical defects all warrant product liability claims separate from contractor negligence claims. These cases don’t require proving the manufacturer was negligent—only that the product was defective and caused injury.
Our product liability experience extends to construction equipment cases. We pursue manufacturers of defective equipment and tools, often uncovering prior incidents demonstrating companies knew about defects but failed to warn users or recall dangerous equipment.
Companies renting construction equipment have duties to provide equipment in safe operating condition, perform proper maintenance, inspect equipment before rental, and warn about known hazards. Rental companies that provide defective or poorly maintained equipment face liability when equipment failures cause accidents.
Crane rental companies, scaffolding suppliers, and tool rental businesses cannot simply rent equipment and disclaim all responsibility. They must ensure equipment meets safety standards and functions properly before sending it to construction sites.
We investigate equipment rental agreements, maintenance records, and inspection histories when equipment failures contribute to construction accidents. Rental companies’ insurance provides additional compensation sources beyond contractor coverage.
Utility companies must properly mark underground utility locations before excavation and maintain safe clearances for overhead power lines near construction sites. Failures to accurately locate utilities or adequately warn about electrical hazards cause electrocutions, explosions, and other catastrophic accidents.
Louisiana’s “call before you dig” laws require contractors to request utility location services, but utilities must respond promptly and accurately mark underground lines. When utilities provide inaccurate information or fail to mark lines, they face liability for resulting accidents.
Smiley Injury Law pursues utility company negligence claims when their failures to mark utilities or maintain safe conditions contribute to construction accidents. These claims provide important compensation sources, especially in electrocution and explosion cases.
Louisiana law requires most employers to carry workers’ compensation insurance covering workplace injuries. Workers’ compensation provides medical expense coverage, temporary disability payments during recovery, permanent disability benefits, and vocational rehabilitation without requiring proof of employer negligence.
Workers’ compensation is an exclusive remedy against your direct employer—you cannot sue your employer for negligence when workers’ compensation applies. However, workers’ comp benefits are limited, providing only partial wage replacement (typically 66.67% of average wages) and no compensation for pain and suffering.
Our construction accident attorneys ensure you receive all workers’ compensation benefits you’re entitled to while identifying third-party claims that provide additional compensation beyond workers’ comp. This dual approach maximizes your total recovery.
Third-party claims against entities other than your direct employer provide compensation for pain and suffering, full lost wages, and other damages workers’ compensation doesn’t cover. In construction accidents, third parties often include general contractors (when you work for a subcontractor), other subcontractors, equipment manufacturers, property owners, and utility companies.
These third-party lawsuits proceed as regular personal injury claims requiring proof of negligence or product defects. Successful third-party claims often produce compensation many times larger than workers’ compensation benefits alone.
We identify all viable third-party claims arising from your construction accident. Our thorough investigations reveal multiple liable parties whose combined insurance coverage and assets provide maximum compensation for your injuries.
Workers’ compensation insurers have rights to reimbursement from third-party settlements or verdicts for benefits they paid. These liens must be negotiated to ensure you retain appropriate portions of third-party recoveries. Skilled attorneys negotiate workers’ comp lien reductions maximizing your net recovery.
We handle all aspects of coordinating workers’ compensation benefits with third-party claims. We communicate with workers’ comp carriers, negotiate lien reductions, and ensure you receive proper credit for benefits paid when calculating third-party damages.
Some construction workers aren’t covered by workers’ compensation including independent contractors, employees of companies without workers’ comp insurance, and certain small employer employees. Workers without workers’ comp coverage can sue their direct employers for negligence in addition to third-party claims.
If you’re injured on a construction site but aren’t covered by workers’ compensation, you have full rights to sue your employer and all other negligent parties. These cases require proving negligence but provide complete damage recovery without workers’ comp limitations.
Our attorneys determine your workers’ compensation status and pursue all available claims whether through workers’ comp, direct employer lawsuits, or third-party claims. We maximize compensation regardless of your workers’ comp coverage status.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) enforces comprehensive construction safety standards addressing fall protection, scaffolding, electrical safety, excavations, cranes, personal protective equipment, and dozens of other hazard areas. These standards establish minimum safety requirements contractors must follow.
OSHA regulations represent the construction industry’s recognized safety standards. Violations of OSHA standards constitute strong evidence of negligence in construction accident lawsuits. Courts often instruct juries that OSHA violations create presumptions of negligence.
We thoroughly analyze OSHA standards applicable to your accident, identify violations, and present expert testimony explaining how OSHA compliance would have prevented your injuries. OSHA violations strengthen liability proof and increase settlement pressure on defendants.
OSHA investigates serious construction accidents, inspecting worksites, interviewing witnesses, reviewing safety records, and issuing citations for violations discovered. Citation reports detail specific violations, required corrections, and proposed penalties providing valuable evidence in injury lawsuits.
We obtain OSHA investigation files, citation reports, and penalty assessments documenting safety violations contributing to your accident. These official governmental findings of violations carry substantial weight with juries and insurance companies.
While OSHA citations don’t conclusively prove negligence in civil lawsuits, they provide powerful evidence that defendants violated recognized safety standards. Defense attorneys struggle to explain why their clients received OSHA citations if they weren’t actually negligent.
Our trial presentations emphasize OSHA violations, using federal inspectors’ findings to demonstrate defendants knew or should have known about hazards and failed to implement required protections. This evidence often proves decisive in achieving favorable settlements or verdicts.
OSHA identifies four hazard categories—falls, struck-by objects, electrocutions, and caught-in/between accidents—responsible for over 60% of construction worker deaths. These “Fatal Four” hazards are well-known, easily preventable through proper safety measures, and demonstrate negligence when they cause injuries.
When your accident involves one of OSHA’s Fatal Four, we emphasize that defendants failed to protect you from the most recognized and preventable construction hazards. This framing demonstrates inexcusable negligence deserving substantial compensation.
Construction sites change constantly. Equipment moves, repairs occur, and construction progresses, destroying evidence of accident conditions. Immediate documentation through photographs, videos, measurements, and witness interviews preserves crucial evidence before it disappears forever.
We dispatch investigators to accident scenes quickly, documenting conditions, identifying witnesses, obtaining contact information, and preserving physical evidence. Early investigation proves essential to building strong construction accident cases against defendants who will claim conditions weren’t dangerous.
Construction sites generate extensive documentation including safety plans, daily logs, inspection reports, equipment maintenance records, training certifications, and OSHA 300 logs recording workplace injuries. These documents reveal safety program inadequacies, prior similar incidents, and contractor knowledge of hazards.
We subpoena comprehensive safety records from all contractors involved in your project. These records often reveal pattern-and-practice safety violations, inadequate training, and prior accidents defendants failed to address—evidence strengthening your negligence claims substantially.
Construction accident cases require expert testimony about industry safety standards, OSHA requirements, proper construction practices, accident causation, and how defendants’ conduct fell below acceptable standards. Safety experts, engineers, and accident reconstruction specialists provide opinions juries need to understand technical issues.
We retain leading construction safety experts whose credentials include extensive industry experience, professional certifications, and prior expert testimony. Their opinions withstand cross-examination and effectively communicate to juries why defendants’ conduct was negligent and caused your injuries.
Construction accidents often cause catastrophic injuries requiring extensive medical treatment, multiple surgeries, long-term therapy, and permanent disability accommodations. Comprehensive medical documentation and life care planning prove the full extent of your injuries and future medical needs.
Our legal team works with your treating physicians, rehabilitation specialists, and life care planners who document your injuries, treatment needs, work restrictions, and lifetime care costs. This medical evidence proves damages justifying substantial compensation demands.
Complex construction accidents benefit from professional reconstruction analyzing equipment positions, worker locations, falling object trajectories, structural failure sequences, and accident dynamics. Reconstructionists use physical evidence, photographs, measurements, and engineering principles recreating exactly how accidents occurred.
These reconstructions demonstrate accident preventability, identify specific safety measure failures, and visually communicate accident dynamics to juries through computer animations, diagrams, and scale models making complex accidents understandable.
Construction accident medical expenses often reach hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars for catastrophic injuries requiring emergency treatment, multiple surgeries, extended hospitalizations, rehabilitation, prosthetics, home modifications, and lifetime medical care.
Workers’ compensation covers medical treatment, but third-party claims provide additional compensation ensuring you’re not left financially responsible when workers’ comp benefits eventually terminate. We pursue full compensation for all past and future medical expenses from negligent third parties.
Construction workers earn substantial incomes through hourly wages, overtime, and skilled trade rates. Serious injuries preventing return to construction work cause massive lost earning capacity when workers cannot perform physically demanding jobs.
Workers’ compensation provides only partial wage replacement, typically 66.67% of average wages. Third-party claims recover full lost wages plus future earning capacity losses when injuries prevent returning to previous employment. For young workers facing decades of lost earnings, these damages often exceed millions of dollars.
Construction accident injuries cause severe physical pain from traumatic injuries, painful surgeries, therapy, and permanent disabilities. Crushed limbs, severe burns, spinal injuries, and traumatic brain damage cause ongoing suffering deserving substantial compensation.
Workers’ compensation doesn’t compensate pain and suffering—only third-party claims provide this crucial damage category. Louisiana juries award generous pain and suffering damages in construction accident cases involving serious permanent injuries, often exceeding economic damages.
Permanent disabilities preventing you from working, enjoying hobbies, or living independently warrant substantial compensation beyond economic losses. Visible scarring, amputations, paralysis, and disfigurement cause psychological trauma and social challenges deserving separate compensation.
We present powerful evidence of how permanent disabilities and disfigurement affect every aspect of your daily life, relationships, and self-image. Day-in-the-life videos, psychological evaluations, and family testimony demonstrate these profound losses.
Construction workers pride themselves on physical capabilities, skilled craftsmanship, and active lifestyles. Injuries eliminating these activities and fundamentally changing your quality of life warrant significant compensation for lost enjoyment.
Whether you can no longer play with children, pursue hobbies, participate in sports, or simply live without constant pain, these quality of life losses deserve monetary recognition through substantial damage awards.
When contractors demonstrate willful disregard for worker safety, knowing OSHA violations, or reckless conduct, Louisiana law permits punitive damages punishing egregious misconduct. Evidence of repeated violations, ignored safety complaints, or prioritizing profits over worker lives justifies punitive awards.
We aggressively pursue punitive damages when contractors’ conduct exceeds ordinary negligence, demonstrating callous indifference to worker safety warranting punishment beyond compensatory damages.
Construction accident cases require specialized knowledge of OSHA regulations, construction industry practices, equipment operations, engineering principles, and complex multi-party litigation. Our attorneys have successfully handled numerous construction accident claims involving falls, equipment accidents, electrocutions, and other serious construction injuries.
This experience allows us to quickly identify all liable parties, recognize OSHA violations, and build cases proving negligence through industry-specific evidence. We understand construction site operations and what evidence proves contractor negligence most effectively.
Construction accident cases require substantial investment in experts, accident reconstruction, engineering analysis, OSHA regulation research, and years of litigation against well-funded construction companies and insurance carriers. Cases often require advancing $50,000-$150,000 or more in expert witness fees and litigation expenses.
Smiley Injury Law has the financial resources necessary to fully investigate and litigate construction accident cases against major contractors and their insurance companies. We advance all case expenses so you never pay out-of-pocket costs while pursuing maximum compensation.
Over years handling construction accident cases, we’ve developed relationships with leading safety experts, structural engineers, accident reconstructionists, OSHA consultants, and medical specialists who regularly testify in construction litigation. These experts’ credentials and testimony withstand defense scrutiny and effectively communicate complex technical issues to juries.
Our established expert relationships allow us to quickly retain authoritative experts whose opinions insurance companies respect, motivating better settlement offers and providing compelling trial testimony when cases don’t settle.
Construction contractors carry substantial liability insurance, but insurance companies defend claims aggressively, attempting to minimize payouts through blame-shifting, claim denials, and lowball settlement offers. We match their aggressive defense tactics with equally aggressive advocacy protecting your rights.
We never back down from insurance company hardball tactics. Our trial readiness and reputation for courtroom success motivate insurance companies to make serious settlement offers rather than face juries who consistently award substantial damages in construction accident cases.
Despite handling complex litigation, we never forget that construction accidents devastated your life, caused severe injuries, and created financial hardship. You’ll have direct access to your attorney throughout your case, not just paralegals or support staff.
We keep you informed about case developments, promptly return communications, and ensure you understand your options at every stage. Your questions receive immediate attention from attorneys who genuinely care about your recovery and securing the compensation you deserve.
Our construction accident attorneys have secured substantial compensation for Metairie construction workers injured on job sites throughout Metairie. While past results don’t guarantee future outcomes, our track record demonstrates our capability to hold negligent contractors accountable and maximize client compensation.
Insurance companies know our reputation for thorough preparation, aggressive litigation, and trial success. This reputation motivates better settlement offers than less experienced attorneys might achieve, maximizing your compensation whether through settlement or trial verdict.
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Seth Smiley – New Orleans Construction Accident Attorney
If you’ve been injured in a costruction accident in Metairie, you don’t have to face the aftermath alone. Smiley Law Firm is here to provide the guidance, support, and advocacy you need to move forward. We understand what you’re going through, and we’re committed to helping you secure the compensation you deserve.
Call Smiley Law Firm today at (504) 822-2222 to schedule your free case evaluation. Let us help you take the next step toward justice and peace of mind.
201 St Charles Ave Ste 2500
New Orleans LA, 70170
Phone: (504) 822-2222
Hours: M-F, 9AM-5PM
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