Injured by Cargo Falling
From a Truck? We Can Help.
Cargo spill accidents on Louisiana interstates cause serious injuries and wrongful deaths every year — and they are almost always preventable. Federal securement regulations exist for a reason. When companies ignore them, our attorneys make them pay.
Cargo Spill Accidents: When Federal Securement Rules Are Ignored
The FMCSA’s cargo securement regulations — found in 49 CFR Part 393 — set detailed, mandatory standards for how commercial truck loads must be tied down, blocked, chained, and braced. These rules exist because an improperly secured load on a highway represents a lethal hazard to every vehicle within range.
When cargo shifts mid-transit and destabilizes a truck, or when debris falls from a flatbed into the path of following traffic, the consequences can include severe collisions, multi-car pileups, and catastrophic injuries. Our Baton Rouge cargo spill accident attorneys have handled these cases along I-10, I-12, US-190, and the industrial corridors near the Port of Baton Rouge. We know exactly how to establish liability — and against whom.
What Causes Cargo Spill Accidents?
Violation of FMCSA Securement Standards
Federal regulations specify the number and strength of tie-downs required for different load types, the use of blocking and bracing materials, and weight distribution requirements. When a loading crew fails to follow these standards — or a carrier allows overloaded trucks onto the road — FMCSA violations form the legal foundation of your claim.
Improper Cargo Loading
A load that is not evenly distributed can cause the truck to handle unpredictably, especially in turns and during emergency braking. Uneven loads may shift when the driver maneuvers, leading to rollovers or causing cargo to breach containment systems.
Defective Securing Equipment
Damaged or inadequate straps, chains, tarps, or cargo nets that fail during transit create the same hazard as no restraint at all. Carriers have a duty to inspect securing equipment before every trip and replace it when it shows wear.
Overloaded and Overweight Trucks
Overloaded trucks are harder to control, take longer to stop, and create greater hazards when cargo shifts. Louisiana and federal weight limits exist for road safety — violations expose the carrier to liability for every injury that results.
Tanker and Hazmat Spills
When a tanker truck carrying fuel, chemicals, or other hazardous materials spills its contents — whether from a collision or a securement failure — the resulting hazard extends beyond the crash itself to include fire, explosion, chemical exposure, and environmental contamination. These cases may involve state environmental agencies and federal hazmat regulations in addition to standard trucking law.
Who Is Liable for a Cargo Spill Accident?
The Cargo Loading Company
The company responsible for loading the cargo bears direct liability when improper securement causes an accident. This entity may be separate from the motor carrier — a warehouse, a freight broker’s contractor, or a third-party logistics provider.
The Motor Carrier
Even when a third party loaded the cargo, the motor carrier retains ultimate responsibility for ensuring compliance with FMCSA securement standards before the truck moves. Carriers who fail to inspect or correct improperly secured loads face significant liability.
The Shipper
In some cases, the company that commissioned the shipment may also bear liability — particularly if it provided incorrect information about cargo weight, required non-standard loading that created the hazard, or pressured the carrier to violate weight limits.
The Truck Driver
Drivers are required by federal law to inspect their cargo before departure and after the first 50 miles of every trip, and again after every duty status change. A driver who knowingly drives with an improperly secured load bears personal liability alongside the carrier.
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Our Advantage in Cargo Spill Accident Litigation
FMCSA Securement Expertise
We know every provision of 49 CFR Part 393 and use specific regulatory violations to build airtight liability arguments.
Multi-Party Investigation
We identify every responsible party — loader, carrier, driver, shipper — and pursue all available insurance simultaneously.
Rapid Scene Investigation
Physical evidence from the crash scene — debris patterns, skid marks, cargo remnants — disappears fast. We move immediately.
No Upfront Cost
Contingency fee only. We advance all expenses and collect nothing unless we win your case.
Trial-Ready Posture
Our reputation for going to trial consistently produces higher pre-trial settlements for our clients.
Proven Louisiana Results
Over $50 million recovered for truck accident victims across Louisiana, including cargo spill cases.
Cargo Spill Accident FAQ
What if I drove into cargo that fell off a truck and I didn’t see it in time?
What federal regulations govern cargo securement?
Can I recover compensation for a cargo spill accident if the truck drove away?
Who do I sue if the cargo was loaded by a separate company from the truck owner?
Cargo Spills Are Never Accidents.
They’re Negligence. Let’s Prove It.
Our Baton Rouge cargo spill attorneys know how to build winning cases against carriers and loading companies. Free consultation — no obligation. Call any time.
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