Ladders are some of the most frequently used and dangerous equipment on New York construction sites. Workers rely on them daily to access elevated areas, and when a ladder fails, the consequences are immediate and serious.
Subin Law represents construction workers seriously injured in ladder accidents in New York. These cases require a legal team that understands the physical realities of job site work and the legal regime governing liability when a ladder failure causes harm.
How Ladder Accidents Happen
Ladder accidents on construction sites rarely result from worker error. They stem from equipment failures, improper setup, inadequate maintenance, and missing safety measures. Common causes include defective or damaged ladder parts, ladders placed on unstable surfaces, ladders not secured at the top or base, and workers directed to use ladders unsuitable for the task.
These risks are foreseeable. The law requires property owners, general contractors, and site managers to control them.
Legal Responsibility
New York law places significant responsibility on those who own and control construction sites to ensure workers have safe access to elevated work areas. When a ladder failure causes injury, the legal question focuses on who controlled the site and equipment, what safety measures were required, and where the breakdown occurred.
That responsibility is not simply passed to subcontractors or workers on the ground. When unmet, the law looks to those who controlled the conditions causing the injury.
How These Cases Are Built
Ladder accident claims require early investigation. The ladder, the surface it rested on, and conditions at the time must be documented before equipment is removed and conditions change.
Construction sites move quickly after an incident. Evidence of the cause can disappear within days. Every case at Subin Law is built for trial from the start, with investigation beginning immediately upon retention.
What These Cases Involve
Ladder accidents cause fractures, traumatic brain injury, spinal damage, and permanent physical limitations affecting a worker’s ability to return to the job. Behind each outcome is a worker who went to a job site and did not come home the same way.
Workers’ compensation may provide initial coverage. When contractors, property owners, or equipment manufacturers are responsible for the conditions causing the injury, additional civil claims may allow recovery beyond what workers’ compensation provides. cases so each receives focused attention and a strategy built around its specific facts. Consultations are free and confidential. No attorney fees are charged unless compensation is recovered.
Contact Subin Law to discuss your case.