Forklifts operate in tight spaces, move heavy loads, and share work areas with workers on foot. When something goes wrong, the consequences are severe. The weight and force leave little margin for error and no doubt about the seriousness of what follows.
Subin Law represents workers and others injured in forklift accidents in New York, including on construction sites, in warehouses, and in industrial facilities. These cases frequently involve more than one responsible party, and identifying each of them is central to building a complete claim.
How Forklift Accidents Happen
Forklifts are designed for settings that are inherently difficult to navigate. They move in reverse with limited visibility, carry loads that shift their center of gravity, and operate in areas where workers on foot are expected to be nearby.
Workers are struck by reversing machines, pinned between forklifts and fixed structures, or hit by loads that become unstable mid-transport. Tip-overs occur when operators brake suddenly or maneuver with elevated loads. Backup alarms fail, brakes go unmaintained, and operators work without proper certification in environments where any of these failures can be catastrophic.
Each of these failure points reflects a decision someone made or failed to make before the incident.
Legal Responsibility in Forklift Cases
Forklift accident claims frequently involve multiple parties with overlapping responsibilities. Operator training and certification requirements, equipment maintenance obligations, and site safety standards all factor into how responsibility is assessed. Where equipment defects contributed to the incident, manufacturer liability may also be relevant.
A detailed review of the facts determines which parties may be responsible and which claims are available beyond workers’ compensation.
Building the Case
Forklift claims require a detailed reconstruction of how the machine was used at the time of the incident and whether required safety measures were in place. This involves reviewing operator conduct, maintenance records, equipment condition, training documentation, and the physical layout of the worksite.
Forklifts are typically returned to service quickly after an incident. Early investigation is essential to document the equipment’s condition, secure witness accounts, and preserve evidence needed to establish what went wrong. Every case at Subin Law is built for trial from the start, so work begins immediately.
What These Cases Involve
Forklift accidents cause crush injuries, fractures, traumatic brain injury, spinal damage, and fatalities. The force involved means that even minor incidents can produce serious long-term consequences.
Insurance carriers often characterize these incidents as routine workplace risks or operator error, without accounting for the systemic failures that create the conditions for them. Building a complete record that tells the full story is central to developing these cases.
Workers’ compensation may provide initial coverage. Where equipment manufacturers, contractors, or property owners bear responsibility under applicable legal standards, additional civil claims may allow recovery for losses beyond what the workers’ compensation system provides.
Subin Law takes a limited number of serious 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.