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Wrongful Death Claims After a Fatal 18-Wheeler Wreck in Louisiana: Which Family Members Can Sue and What They Can Recover

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this content does not create an attorney-client relationship with Ikerd Law Firm. If you lost a family member in an 18-wheeler accident in Louisiana or Texas, consult a licensed attorney about the specific facts of your situation.

Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.


Key Takeaways

  • Louisiana law, under La. C.C. art. 2315.2 creates a strict hierarchy of eligible wrongful death claimants. Only certain family members can sue, and the order matters. A surviving spouse and children may file together as the first class.
  • A survival action, under La. C.C. art. 2315.1, is a separate claim that belongs to the deceased person’s estate. It is distinct from the wrongful death claim and compensates different losses.
  • For accident-related wrongful death claims: As of August 1, 2025, the prescriptive period for wrongful death and survival actions in Louisiana is one year from the date of death or two years from the date of the injury, whichever is longer. For accidents before August 1, 2025, the one-year-from-death rule governs. In Texas, the deadline is two years from the date of death.
  • Trucking companies are frequently liable for driver negligence under respondeat superior, and violations of Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration regulations can establish the breach of the standard of care.
  • Chad Ikerd is admitted in Louisiana and Texas at both the state and federal levels, which matters in 18-wheeler cases that cross the state line.

The Two Claims After a Fatal 18-Wheeler Wreck: Wrongful Death and Survival Action

When a family loses someone in an 18-wheeler crash, grief and legal questions arrive at the same time.

Before a family can make any decision, they need to understand two things: there are usually two separate legal claims that arise from a fatal crash, and they are not the same.

Each claim compensates a different loss, and each may belong to a different person.

Claim Type Who Brings It What It Compensates Governing Statute
Wrongful Death Surviving family members, in the order the law sets. Their personal loss: grief, lost financial support, loss of the relationship. La. C.C. art. 2315.2
Survival Action Estate, through the same family hierarchy. Deceased person’s own damages: pain, suffering, medical bills, and lost wages before death. La. C.C. art. 2315.1
  • A wrongful death claim belongs to the surviving family members. It compensates their own losses that flow from the death itself, including the grief they carry, the loss of the relationship they will never get back, and the financial support the deceased person would have provided over a lifetime.
  • A survival action is different. It is the claim the deceased person would have had if they had lived. The law allows that claim to survive the person who held it. A survival action compensates what the deceased endured in the time between the collision and death: physical pain, conscious suffering, medical bills incurred during that window, and wages lost before death.

In most fatal trucking cases, both claims proceed at the same time, against the same defendants, in the same lawsuit. The distinction still matters. The damages are calculated separately, and the evidence that supports each one is different.

A survival action often turns on whether the deceased was conscious after the impact and for how long, a painful question for any family but one the law asks.


Who Can File a Wrongful Death Claim in Louisiana

This is the question most families type into a search bar at midnight. The answer in Louisiana is precise, and it is not the same as the answer in Texas.

Louisiana does not let any relative who is grieving file a wrongful death claim. La. C.C. art. 2315.2 sets a strict order of classes, and only the highest class with a living member may sue:

  • Class 1: The surviving spouse and the children of the deceased. They are the first class and may file together. Children include biological and legally adopted children.
  • Class 2: The surviving parents of the deceased. Parents may file only if there is no surviving spouse and no child.
  • Class 3: The surviving siblings of the deceased. Siblings may file only if there is no surviving spouse, child, or parent.
  • Class 4: The surviving grandparents of the deceased. Grandparents may file only if there is no member of any higher class.

The rule about the highest available class is where families are often surprised. If the deceased left a spouse and children, the deceased person’s parents cannot bring a Louisiana wrongful death claim, no matter how close they were. The existence of a Class 1 member closes the door for Class 2.

Texas works differently. The table below shows how the two states compare:

Beneficiary Class Louisiana Texas
Surviving spouse Yes, Class 1 Yes, eligible
Children (biological and adopted) Yes, Class 1 Yes, eligible
Parents Yes, Class 2 (only if no Class 1 exists) Yes, eligible; may sue even if a spouse or child also exists.
Siblings Yes, Class 3 (only if no Class 1 or 2 exists) No, not eligible
Grandparents Yes, Class 4 (only if no Class 1, 2, or 3 exists) No, not eligible

Texas wrongful death law, found at Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §§ 71.001 through 71.012, is not a hierarchy. The surviving spouse, the children, and the parents of the deceased are all eligible beneficiaries, and any of them may sue, whether or not the others do.

This difference is one reason that the state where the crash happened, and the law that applies to it, has to be settled early.


What Damages Wrongful Death Claimants Can Recover

A wrongful death claim is meant to put a value on losses that resist being measured. The table below breaks down the full damages picture across both the wrongful death claim and the survival action:

Damage Type Category Who Recovers It
Lost income and financial support Economic Wrongful death claimants
Value of household and caregiving services Economic Wrongful death claimants
Medical and funeral expenses Economic Wrongful death claimants
Lost inheritance Economic Wrongful death claimants
Loss of love, affection, and companionship Non-economic Wrongful death claimants
Loss of consortium Non-economic Surviving spouse
Grief and mental anguish Non-economic Wrongful death claimants
Pain and suffering before death Survival action Estate
Medical bills from accident to death Survival action Estate
Wages lost from accident to death Survival action Estate

The economic side of a claim turns on how losses like future income and household services are calculated, which we walk through in our guide to the types of recoverable damages in Louisiana, and the non-economic side is shaped by how Louisiana courts value Louisiana wrongful death damages such as grief and loss of companionship.

The survival action recovers a different set of damages, and they belong to the deceased, not the family.

When a person survives a crash for hours or days before passing, the survival action can carry substantial value, and it is calculated entirely apart from the family’s wrongful death losses.


The Trucking Company’s Liability: Why the Employer Often Pays

Wrongful Death Claims After a Fatal 18-Wheeler Wreck in LouisianaFamilies often assume the lawsuit is against the driver. In a fatal 18-wheeler case, the more important defendant is usually the company behind the truck.

Under La. C.C. art. 2320, an employer is liable for the harmful acts of its employees committed within the course and scope of their employment. This means the trucking company, not just the individual driver, is a defendant.

The principle is called respondeat superior, and when a driver causes a fatal crash while doing the job they were hired to do, the company that hired them shares the legal responsibility.

Trucking companies often attempt to avoid this liability by classifying drivers as independent contractors rather than employees.

The label on a contract does not end the inquiry. Courts look at the real relationship, including how much control the company exercised over the driver’s work, before deciding whether vicarious liability attaches.

There are also direct claims against the company itself, separate from the driver’s fault. A carrier can be independently liable for:

  • Negligent hiring: putting an unfit driver on the road
  • Negligent training or supervision: failing to train the driver adequately
  • Negligent retention: keeping a dangerous driver after warning signs emerged
  • Negligent entrustment: handing a commercial vehicle to someone who should not have been behind the wheel

Federal law sets a floor on the commercial insurance carriers are required to carry. Under 49 C.F.R. § 387.9:

Cargo Type Minimum Insurance Required
General freight (non-hazardous) $750,000
Oil $1,000,000
Hazardous materials $5,000,000

These are federal minimums. Many carriers maintain substantially higher coverage. Because individual drivers rarely have enough assets to satisfy a judgment, the family’s recovery often depends on holding the trucking company responsible. By using federal trucking regulations to prove the company was negligent, we can access the larger insurance policies they carry to ensure that full justice and compensation is achieved.

Evidence in trucking cases disappears fast. Black box data can be overwritten in days. If you lost someone in an 18-wheeler crash in Louisiana or Texas, call the Ikerd Law Firm at (337) 366-8994 today. Chad Ikerd is admitted to practice law in both states.


FMCSA Violations and Their Role in Wrongful Death Cases

Damaged in heavy car accident vehicles after collision on city street crash site at night. Road safety and insurance concept.Commercial trucks are governed by a federal rulebook that ordinary drivers never have to think about. That rulebook is where many fatal-crash cases are won or lost.

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration sets binding rules across four areas that are commonly at issue in fatal truck crash cases:

  • Hours-of-service limits: how many consecutive hours a driver may operate before mandatory rest
  • Drug and alcohol testing: pre-employment, random, and post-accident testing requirements
  • Vehicle maintenance and inspection standards: required pre-trip inspections and maintenance records
  • Driver qualification requirements: licensing, medical certification, and training standards a driver must meet

Each of these is a potential point of failure. Courts in Louisiana and Texas can treat violations of FMCSA regulations as evidence of negligence and, in many circumstances, as negligence per se, establishing the breach of duty without additional expert testimony. This is determined on a case-by-case basis, judge by judge.

When that happens, the family does not have to prove from scratch that the conduct was unreasonable. The regulation already defined the standard, and the violation shows it was not met.

According to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s Large Truck and Bus Crash Facts, 5,472 people were killed in crashes involving large trucks in 2023 alone.

Proving a violation depends on evidence that does not survive long without legal intervention.

An attorney sends a litigation hold letter within days of taking the case, placing the carrier on formal notice that destroying evidence is unlawful. The records that must be preserved immediately include:

  • The truck’s onboard recorder (black box), which can be overwritten in days
  • Electronic logging device records
  • The driver qualification file
  • Vehicle maintenance logs
  • Post-accident drug and alcohol test results

Preserving that trucking evidence is the most important early step a family can take, and it is the core reason to hire an 18-wheeler accident attorney in Louisiana or Texas quickly.


How Much Time You Have to File in Louisiana and Texas

The deadline is the part of this article a grieving family cannot afford to skim. Missing it forfeits the case permanently, no matter how clear the trucking company’s fault is.

These deadlines are absolute. If you miss them, you permanently lose the right to sue, regardless of how strong your case is. Waiting is also dangerous for reasons beyond the calendar: evidence is destroyed, witnesses’ memories fade, and trucking companies move quickly to document the crash in self-serving ways.

Under Louisiana law, you generally have one year from the date of death or two years from the date of injury, whichever is longer, to file, but deadlines vary based on your specific circumstances. Consult an attorney immediately to protect your rights.

Filing Deadlines by State and Accident Date

State / Scenario Governing Law Deadline
Louisiana accidents on or after August 1, 2025

Current rule
La. C.C. art. 2315.2

(amended)
1 year from death

OR 2 years from the date of injury, whichever is longer.
Louisiana accidents before August 1, 2025

Prior rule
La. C.C. art. 2315.2

(prior rule)
1 year

From the date of death or injury.
Texas Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §§ 71.001–71.012 2 years

From the date of death or injury.

The same amended periods apply to the survival action under La. C.C. art. 2315.1. Because the deadline depends on the date of the crash, the first thing to confirm is when the accident happened.

Comparative Fault: How the Deceased Person’s Fault Affects Recovery in Louisiana

Accident Date Fault Rule Effect on Family’s Recovery
Before January 1, 2026

Prior rule
Pure comparative fault Recovery allowed even if the deceased was partly at fault; reduced proportionately.
January 1, 2026, or later

Current rule
Modified comparative fault

(Act 15 of 2025)
Recovery barred if the deceased was 51 percent or more at fault.

Punitive Damages: Louisiana vs. Texas

State Punitive Damages Available? Key Provision
Louisiana No, with one narrow exception. La. C.C. art. 2315.4: punitive damages available only if the driver was operating under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
Texas Yes, with clear and convincing evidence of gross negligence. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 41.003: capped at 2x economic damages plus up to $750,000 in non-economic damages, or $200,000 minimum.

You Lost Someone to a Truck Crash. We Can Help.

Losing someone in a fatal trucking crash leaves a family with grief first and questions second, and the questions do not wait. Who can file? How long is there to do it? Whether the trucking company’s adjuster, who is already calling, is on anyone’s side. The adjuster is not, and the clock is already running.

Call the Ikerd Law Firm at (337) 366-8994 or visit our contact page.


Frequently Asked Questions

Who can file a wrongful death lawsuit in Louisiana after a trucking accident?

A: Under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2315.2, the right to sue belongs first to the surviving spouse and children, who may file together. If none survive, it passes to the deceased’s parents, then siblings, then grandparents. Only the highest available class may file. A lower class cannot sue if a higher class exists.

What is the difference between a wrongful death claim and a survival action in Louisiana?

A: A wrongful death claim compensates surviving family members for their own losses, including grief, financial dependence, and loss of companionship. A survival action compensates for what the deceased suffered before death, such as pain, medical bills, and lost wages between the accident and death. Both claims may arise from the same accident and be filed together.

How long do you have to file a wrongful death claim in Louisiana after an 18-wheeler accident?

A: As of August 1, 2025, Louisiana Civil Code Article 2315.2 gives families one year from the date of death or two years from the date of injury, whichever is longer. For accidents before that date, the prior one-year-from-death rule governs. Texas allows two years from death. These deadlines are strict, so consult an attorney immediately.

What damages can family members recover in a Louisiana 18-wheeler wrongful death case?

A: Wrongful death claimants may recover for the deceased person’s lost income and financial support, the value of household and caregiving services, funeral and burial expenses, and non-economic damages, including grief, loss of love and affection, and loss of companionship. The survival action separately recovers the deceased person’s own pre-death pain, suffering, and medical expenses.

Can I file a wrongful death claim in Texas if the accident happened near the state line?

A: If the accident occurred in Texas, Texas law governs and provides a two-year statute of limitations with its own beneficiary rules. If it occurred in Louisiana, Louisiana law applies. When crashes happen near state lines or involve Texas-registered carriers, venue and choice-of-law questions matter. Chad Ikerd is admitted in both Louisiana and Texas.


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