When workers die in preventable workplace accidents, surviving families face devastating grief compounded by sudden loss of income. Workplace accident wrongful death claims provide families legal remedies beyond workers’ compensation, allowing recovery of full damages from third parties whose negligence caused their loved one’s death. Louisiana’s industrial, construction, maritime, and oil and gas sectors create dangerous work environments that kill workers whose families depend on their income and support.
At Smiley Injury Law, our New Orleans wrongful death lawyers help families who lost loved ones in fatal work accidents pursue maximum compensation from all responsible parties. Understanding how workplace wrongful death claims work—including the relationship between workers’ compensation and third-party liability—helps families identify all available legal remedies.
What Is Workplace Accident Wrongful Death?
Workplace accident wrongful death occurs when a worker dies due to injuries sustained in a work-related incident caused by negligence, unsafe conditions, defective equipment, or other preventable hazards, giving surviving family members rights to workers’ compensation death benefits and potentially additional wrongful death claims against third parties. While workers’ compensation provides limited death benefits regardless of fault, third-party wrongful death claims allow families to recover full damages—including pain and suffering and lost companionship—from parties other than the employer whose negligence contributed to the fatal accident.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported 5,283 fatal work injuries in the United States in 2023. Louisiana’s heavy industrial economy—including oil and gas, maritime, construction, and manufacturing—creates particularly hazardous work environments. When employers, equipment manufacturers, property owners, or other parties fail to maintain safe conditions, workers die and families suffer preventable losses.
Understanding the distinction between workers’ compensation and third-party wrongful death claims is essential. Workers’ compensation provides death benefits but limits recovery and excludes non-economic damages. Third-party claims against negligent parties other than employers allow full wrongful death compensation including pain and suffering, loss of companionship, and other damages workers’ compensation doesn’t cover.
Common Causes of Fatal Workplace Accidents
Workplace fatalities result from various hazards across Louisiana’s industrial sectors. Understanding common causes helps identify liable parties and gather appropriate evidence.
Construction Accidents
Construction sites present numerous fatal hazards. OSHA identifies the “Fatal Four” causes of construction deaths:
OSHA data shows fatal falls investigated by federal OSHA decreased from 234 to 189 in fiscal year 2024, but falls remain the leading cause of construction worker deaths.
Industrial and Manufacturing Accidents
Industrial workplaces cause fatal injuries through:
Oil and Gas Industry Deaths
Louisiana’s oil and gas industry creates unique fatal hazards:
Maritime and Offshore Deaths
Maritime workers face dangers governed by federal law:
Maritime wrongful death claims may fall under the Jones Act and general maritime law rather than Louisiana state law.
Trench and Excavation Deaths
Trench collapses represent particularly preventable fatalities. OSHA reports trench collapse deaths declined nearly 70% since 2022 following intensive enforcement, dropping from 39 deaths in 2022 to 12 in 2024. However, unprotected trenches continue to kill workers when employers ignore safety requirements.
Transportation and Vehicle Accidents
Work-related vehicle accidents include:
Who Can Be Held Liable for Workplace Deaths?
Third-party wrongful death claims target parties other than the deceased’s employer.
Equipment and Machinery Manufacturers
When defective equipment causes workplace deaths, manufacturers face strict product liability claims. Defective design, manufacturing defects, and inadequate warnings all create manufacturer liability. Common examples include:
Property Owners
Property owners who aren’t the deceased’s employer may face premises liability for dangerous conditions on their property. This commonly applies to:
General Contractors and Subcontractors
On construction sites with multiple contractors, parties other than the deceased’s direct employer may face liability for:
Safety Equipment Manufacturers
Companies that manufacture personal protective equipment, fall protection, and other safety gear face liability when their products fail to protect workers as intended.
Maintenance and Service Providers
Companies responsible for maintaining equipment, vehicles, or facilities may face liability when inadequate maintenance causes worker deaths.
Contact a New Orleans Product Liability Wrongful Death Lawyer Today
If you’ve lost a loved one due to a defective product in New Orleans or anywhere in Louisiana, Smiley Injury Law can help your family pursue justice and compensation from manufacturers, distributors, and retailers. Our experienced wrongful death attorneys understand Louisiana’s strict product liability framework, work with qualified engineering and design experts, and build compelling cases that hold product makers accountable for deadly defects.
Contact Smiley Injury Law today for a free, confidential consultation:
📍 201 St Charles Ave, Ste 2500, New Orleans, LA 70170
All calls are confidential. You pay nothing unless we win your case.
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