Injured in an Industrial Accident? Speak With a Workplace Injury Attorney.
Serious industrial injuries can leave workers facing medical bills, lost income, long-term pain, and uncertainty about their legal rights. Our attorneys review workplace accident cases involving unsafe worksites, machinery failures, toxic exposure, contractors, and third-party negligence.
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Serious industrial accident claims require serious legal representation.
Factories · Plants · Warehouses · Refineries · Industrial sites
Types of Industrial Accident Claims
Toxic Chemical Exposure →
Workers exposed to hazardous substances, solvents, asbestos, or industrial gases may have claims that extend beyond workers' compensation.
Machinery Failures →
Where defective or poorly maintained machinery causes injury, the manufacturer or maintenance contractor may bear legal responsibility.
Defective Tools and Equipment →
Products that fail to work safely and cause injury can give rise to product liability claims against manufacturers or distributors.
Struck by Machinery or Vehicles →
Being struck by moving equipment, forklifts, or industrial vehicles on site can cause severe injuries with multiple liable parties.
Falls from Height →
Falls at industrial sites — from platforms, scaffolding, roofs, or loading bays — may involve claims against site owners or general contractors.
Explosions and Fires →
Plant, refinery, and factory explosions can cause catastrophic injuries. Multiple parties may bear responsibility for the conditions that caused the event.
Crush Injuries and Amputations →
Crush injuries and traumatic amputations caused by industrial machinery are among the most serious categories of workplace injury.
Electrocution →
Electrical injuries on industrial sites often involve faulty equipment, unsafe wiring, or inadequate safety procedures.
Wrongful Death →
Where an industrial accident causes death, surviving family members may have legal rights under state wrongful death laws.
Workers' Compensation
Workers' compensation is an insurance system that provides medical benefits and partial wage replacement to employees injured at work, typically without needing to prove fault.
However, workers' compensation may not cover the full range of losses an injured worker faces — and in most states, it prevents workers from suing their employer directly.
The system was designed as a trade-off: faster benefits in exchange for limited employer liability. That trade-off does not apply to claims against third parties.
Third-Party Liability Claims
Many industrial accidents involve more than one company. A contractor may have created a hazard. A machinery manufacturer may have supplied defective equipment. A property owner may have failed to maintain safe conditions.
Where another party's negligence contributed to your injury, a third-party claim may be available alongside — or separately from — any workers' compensation claim.
Third-party claims can allow recovery for a broader range of losses than workers' compensation alone.
Industry-Specific Accident Claims
Injury-Specific Claim Guides
Understand Your Claim
Who May Be Legally Responsible?
In industrial accident cases, legal responsibility may extend beyond the immediate employer. Other companies, contractors, or manufacturers may have contributed to the conditions that caused the injury.
Equipment manufacturers
Where defective machinery, tools, or safety equipment contributed to the injury
Maintenance contractors
Where poor maintenance of machinery or the worksite created dangerous conditions
Site owners and premises operators
Where the condition of the premises contributed to the accident
General contractors
Where a general contractor had responsibility for site safety
Subcontractors
Where a subcontractor's work or conduct contributed to the incident
Trucking and logistics companies
Where industrial vehicle operators or their employers were involved
Chemical suppliers
Where a supplier provided inadequately labelled or unsafe chemicals
Safety contractors
Where a company responsible for safety systems or training failed in its duties
Other negligent third parties
Other companies or individuals whose negligence may have contributed
Whether any of these parties may be legally responsible depends on the specific facts of each case. An attorney can investigate what happened and identify all potentially liable parties.
Types of Compensation That May Be Available
The types of compensation available depend on the specific facts of each case, the applicable state law, and who is found legally responsible. An attorney can review your situation and explain what may apply.
We do not promise any particular outcome. Every case is different and prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.
Medical care and treatment costs
Including emergency care, surgery, hospitalisation, and specialist treatment
Lost wages and income
Earnings lost during recovery or absence from work
Reduced earning capacity
Where an injury affects future ability to work or earn at the same level
Pain and suffering
Where available under applicable state law
Future medical care
Ongoing treatment, rehabilitation, and long-term care where required
Disability
Permanent or partial disability damages where applicable
Disfigurement
Where the injury has caused lasting physical disfigurement
Wrongful death damages
Available to qualifying family members where an industrial accident caused death
Evidence That Can Strengthen an Industrial Accident Claim
Preserving evidence promptly after an industrial accident can be important to a claim. Some types of evidence — particularly workplace records and equipment data — can be lost or destroyed over time.
An attorney can advise on what evidence to gather and, where necessary, take steps to preserve it before it is no longer available.
Accident or incident report
Filed with your employer at the time of the accident
Photographs and video
Of the scene, equipment, injuries, and any visible hazards
Witness information
Names and contact details of anyone who saw what happened
OSHA investigation reports
If OSHA investigated the incident, these records may be available
Medical records
Emergency treatment, diagnosis, and all ongoing medical documentation
Equipment maintenance records
Service history for any machinery involved in the accident
Safety training records
Whether appropriate training was provided and documented
Employer and contractor details
Identity and insurance details for all companies involved on site
Communications and correspondence
Any written records about hazards raised before the accident
How We Approach Industrial Accident Cases
Attorney-Led Review
Your case is reviewed by qualified attorneys, not a call centre. We assess the facts before giving you a view on what legal routes may be available.
Confidential Enquiry
Everything you share with us is treated as confidential. Speaking to an attorney about your situation carries no risk and no obligation.
Clear Communication
We explain what is happening with your case in plain English. You will not be kept in the dark or passed between departments.
Litigation-Ready Approach
Industrial accident cases can involve complex liability across multiple defendants. We approach every case prepared to investigate and, where necessary, to litigate.
Time Limits Apply
Industrial accident claims are subject to statutes of limitations that vary by state. Speaking with an attorney promptly helps protect your ability to bring a claim.
Fee Arrangements Explained
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Industrial Accident Claims — Frequently Asked Questions
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