Legal rule explainer · Updated 2026-05-22
Louisiana comparative negligence — how fault is divided
How Louisiana courts allocate fault between you and the trucking company — and what that means for what you can actually recover at the end of a case.
What this means for Louisiana cases
Louisiana follows pure comparative negligence (La. Civ. Code Art. 2323). Plaintiff can recover even if 99% at fault, with damages reduced by share.
Recovery examples — $100,000 case in Louisiana
Suppose a jury would award you $100,000 if you were 0% at fault. Here's what you'd actually collect under Louisiana's rule at different fault levels:
| Your fault | Award | You collect |
|---|---|---|
| 0% | $100,000 | $100,000 |
| 10% | $100,000 | $90,000 |
| 25% | $100,000 | $75,000 |
| 49% | $100,000 | $51,000 |
| 50% | $100,000 | $50,000 |
| 51% | $100,000 | $49,000 |
| 75% | $100,000 | $25,000 |
| 99% | $100,000 | $1,000 |
Under pure comparative — the most plaintiff-favorable rule — you collect SOMETHING at every fault level, even 99%. Just reduced by your share.
How fault gets attributed
Two big mechanics determine your fault percentage:
- Jury verdict. If the case goes to trial, the jury decides fault as a percentage allocation. The judge then applies the Louisiana comparative rule to the verdict amount.
- Settlement negotiation. Insurance adjusters and your attorney negotiate based on what they each predict a jury would do. Fault-percentage debate is often the biggest negotiation lever.
In trucking cases, fault often involves federal regulations (FMCSA hours-of-service rules, driver qualification files, vehicle maintenance records). Truck drivers are held to a higher standard of care than passenger-vehicle drivers, which usually favors plaintiffs.
What to do to protect against fault attribution
- Don't give recorded statements to the trucking company's insurance. They're trained to extract leading-question answers that can be quoted to attribute fault.
- Get the police report quickly. Officers' opinions on fault aren't binding but they're influential. If the officer's narrative is wrong, your attorney needs time to gather contrary evidence.
- Preserve dashcam footage. Your own dashcam (if you have one), nearby business cameras, doorbell cameras. Get your attorney to send preservation letters within days of the crash.
- Get witness statements early. Witnesses' memories fade in weeks. Your attorney's investigator should interview witnesses while their recall is fresh.
- Don't apologize. "I'm sorry" — even a reflexive "I'm sorry this happened to us both" — can be attributed as fault admission.
Other states with pure comparative
The same pure comparative negligence rule applies in these states we cover:
- California · 2-year SOL · No cap
- Arizona · 2-year SOL · No cap
- New York · 3-year SOL · No cap
- Missouri · 5-year SOL · No cap
- Washington · 3-year SOL · No cap
- Alaska · 2-year SOL · No cap
- Kentucky · 1-year SOL · No cap
- Mississippi · 3-year SOL · ⚠ Damages capped
- New Mexico · 3-year SOL · No cap
- Rhode Island · 3-year SOL · No cap
Related Louisiana guides
Information current as of May 2026. NOT legal advice for your specific situation. See our disclaimer.