Construction Injury Lawyer
Construction workers face unique hazards — falls from height, struck-by incidents, electrocution, and trench collapses. These injuries are often catastrophic and involve multiple responsible parties. A certified specialist knows how to pursue every avenue of compensation.
Why Construction Workers Need Specialized Legal Representation
Construction consistently ranks as the most dangerous industry in California. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, construction workers suffer fatal injuries at a rate nearly three times the national average across all industries. In California alone, hundreds of construction workers die on the job each year, and tens of thousands sustain injuries ranging from broken bones to traumatic brain injuries and spinal cord damage.
What makes construction injury claims uniquely complex is the web of parties involved on any given job site. Unlike a typical workplace where one employer controls the premises, a construction site may involve a general contractor, multiple subcontractors, property owners, equipment rental companies, material suppliers, and architects or engineers. Each of these parties may bear some responsibility for unsafe conditions, and each may carry separate insurance policies. A board-certified specialist understands how to identify every liable party and pursue every available avenue of compensation simultaneously.
Construction workers also face a distinct legal landscape. Standard workers’ compensation benefits may only scratch the surface of what an injured construction worker deserves. Serious and willful misconduct penalties under Labor Code §4553, third-party civil lawsuits, and uninsured employer claims through the UEBTF can dramatically increase recovery. Without an attorney who understands these overlapping systems, construction workers routinely leave significant compensation on the table.
OSHA’s Fatal Four: The Deadliest Construction Hazards
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration identifies four hazard categories responsible for the majority of construction fatalities nationwide. Known as the “Fatal Four,” these are: falls from elevation, struck-by incidents, electrocution, and caught-in/between accidents. Understanding which category your injury falls into is critical because it shapes both the workers’ compensation claim strategy and any potential third-party litigation.
Falls from elevation remain the single leading cause of death in construction. This includes falls from scaffolding, ladders, roofs, aerial lifts, and unprotected floor openings. Cal/OSHA Title 8, Section 1669 requires fall protection at heights of 7.5 feet or more in general construction, and Section 1670 mandates specific guardrail, safety net, or personal fall arrest systems. When an employer fails to provide compliant fall protection, that violation is strong evidence of serious and willful misconduct under LC §4553.
Struck-by injuries involve workers being hit by falling objects, swinging loads, vehicles, or rolling equipment. Trench collapses, which kill dozens of workers nationally each year, fall into the caught-in/between category. Cal/OSHA Title 8, Section 1541 requires shoring, shielding, or sloping for excavations deeper than five feet. Electrocution deaths often involve contact with overhead power lines during crane operations or improperly grounded temporary electrical systems. Section 2946 of Title 8 mandates minimum clearance distances from energized conductors.
Cal/OSHA Title 8: California’s Enhanced Safety Standards
California does not rely solely on federal OSHA standards. Cal/OSHA administers its own state plan under Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations, which in many areas imposes stricter requirements than federal OSHA. For construction injury claims, Cal/OSHA violations are powerful evidence because they establish a clear, codified duty that the employer breached.
Key Cal/OSHA construction safety orders include Article 24 (scaffolding), Article 25 (personnel hoists and elevators), Article 29 (erection and demolition), and Subchapter 4, Article 6 (excavation and trenching). Section 1712 requires employers to have a site-specific safety plan for high-hazard activities. Section 3203 mandates a written Injury and Illness Prevention Program (IIPP) that specifically addresses identified construction hazards on the job site.
When Cal/OSHA issues citations after a construction accident, those citations become admissible evidence in workers’ compensation proceedings. A citation classified as “Serious” means the employer knew or should have known about the hazard and it created a realistic possibility of death or serious harm. A “Willful” citation means the employer intentionally violated a known standard. Both classifications directly support a serious and willful misconduct petition under LC §4553, which increases the injured worker’s compensation by 50%.
Serious and Willful Misconduct: The 50% Penalty Enhancement
Labor Code §4553 provides that when an employer’s serious and willful misconduct causes or contributes to a worker’s injury, the compensation otherwise recoverable is increased by one-half (50%). This is one of the most powerful tools available to construction injury victims, yet it is underutilized because many attorneys lack the expertise to prove the statutory elements.
To establish serious and willful misconduct, the injured worker must show that the employer had actual knowledge of a dangerous condition, knew that the condition was likely to cause serious harm, and deliberately failed to take corrective action. Constructive knowledge—what the employer should have known—is not sufficient. The standard requires a quasi-criminal level of intent: the employer must have been aware of the peril and consciously disregarded it.
In construction cases, this standard is met more frequently than most workers realize. Documented Cal/OSHA violations, prior safety complaints, ignored inspection findings, failure to provide required personal protective equipment, removal of guardrails to speed production, and refusal to implement lockout/tagout procedures all constitute evidence of serious and willful misconduct. We investigate every construction injury for S&W potential because the 50% increase applies to the entire permanent disability award—often adding tens of thousands of dollars to the recovery.
Third-Party Liability Claims on Construction Sites
Workers’ compensation is normally the exclusive remedy against your direct employer under LC §3601. But construction sites are multi-party environments, and the exclusive remedy rule does not protect third parties. If a subcontractor’s employee is injured due to the general contractor’s negligence, the employee can file a civil lawsuit against the general contractor for full tort damages, including pain and suffering, emotional distress, and loss of consortium—none of which are available through workers’ comp.
Common third-party defendants in construction injury cases include: general contractors who control site safety, property owners who maintain dangerous premises, equipment manufacturers whose defective products cause injury (strict product liability), engineers or architects whose design defects create hazardous conditions, and equipment rental companies that supply malfunctioning machinery. A scaffolding collapse caused by a defective coupling pin, for example, supports a product liability claim against the manufacturer and potentially a negligence claim against the rental company that failed to inspect the equipment.
Pursuing a third-party claim alongside workers’ compensation requires careful coordination. The workers’ comp carrier has a lien right against any third-party recovery under LC §3856. Navigating lien negotiations, credit offsets, and the interplay between the two systems is essential to maximizing the injured worker’s net recovery. An attorney who handles only one side of the equation will leave value behind.
Uninsured Employers and the UEBTF
Despite California’s mandatory insurance requirement under LC §3700, a troubling number of construction employers operate without workers’ compensation coverage. This is especially prevalent among smaller subcontractors, day-labor operations, and residential renovation contractors. When an uninsured employer’s worker is injured, the worker is not left without recourse.
The Uninsured Employers Benefits Trust Fund (UEBTF), administered by the Division of Workers’ Compensation, pays benefits to workers whose employers illegally failed to carry insurance. UEBTF claims proceed through the same WCAB process but require the injured worker to first obtain a judgment against the employer establishing the right to benefits. The UEBTF then pays the award and pursues the employer for reimbursement.
Additionally, workers injured by uninsured employers may file a civil lawsuit directly against the employer under LC §3706, bypassing the exclusive remedy rule entirely. This means the worker can recover pain and suffering, punitive damages, and other tort remedies that are normally unavailable in workers’ compensation. The uninsured employer also faces criminal prosecution under LC §3700.5, which classifies failure to carry insurance as a misdemeanor punishable by up to one year in county jail and fines up to $100,000.
Specific Construction Hazards We Handle
Our practice covers the full spectrum of construction injuries. Scaffolding collapses and falls from incomplete or defective scaffolding systems remain a leading source of catastrophic injury, often resulting in spinal fractures, traumatic brain injuries, and multiple extremity fractures. Crane and heavy equipment accidents, including tip-overs, load drops, and boom strikes, produce severe crush injuries and amputations.
Trench and excavation collapses are among the most deadly construction accidents. A single cubic yard of soil weighs approximately 3,000 pounds, meaning even a shallow trench collapse can suffocate or crush a worker in minutes. Electrical contact injuries cause severe burns, cardiac arrest, and neurological damage that may not manifest immediately. Repetitive trauma from operating pneumatic tools, concrete work, and heavy lifting causes chronic conditions including carpal tunnel syndrome, rotator cuff tears, and lumbar disc herniations that develop over months or years of cumulative exposure.
Toxic exposure claims on construction sites involve asbestos during demolition and renovation of older buildings, silica dust from concrete cutting and grinding, lead paint during abatement work, and chemical solvents used in coating and finishing operations. These exposures may produce occupational diseases including mesothelioma, silicosis, and occupational asthma that qualify for workers’ compensation benefits under LC §3208.2 as cumulative trauma claims with a one-year statute from the date the worker knew or should have known the condition was work-related.