The bus operator, the carrier company, the government, or a vehicle manufacturer may all have exposure depending on what happened and what type of bus was involved.
Morris & Dewett has handled these cases in Rapides Parish and across Louisiana.
Bus Accident Liability in Louisiana: Why Type of Bus Matters
common carriers
Businesses that offer transportation to the general public for a fee. Louisiana law holds them to a higher standard of care than ordinary drivers under La. C.C. Art. 2315.
Not all bus accidents are the same legal case. Louisiana law treats bus operators as common carriers, which means they carry a higher duty of care than ordinary motorists. That baseline applies to all bus types. But the specific rules, deadlines, and defendants vary significantly based on who operated the bus.
There are four main bus categories in the Alexandria area. School buses fall under Louisiana School Bus Authority (LSBA) regulations. Charter and tour buses are governed by the Louisiana Public Service Commission (LPSC) and, for interstate routes, by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA). Municipal transit buses like those operated by CATS (Central Area Transit System) are government entities subject to entirely different claim rules. Intercity carriers like Greyhound operate under federal FMCSA authority.
respondeat superior
Latin for “let the master answer.” A legal rule holding employers liable for negligent acts their employees commit during the course of employment.
Liability can extend beyond the driver. The carrier company is liable for its employee’s actions under respondeat superior. If a mechanical defect caused the crash, the vehicle or component manufacturer may be liable under product liability theory. If a road defect contributed, the government entity responsible for that road may share fault. In Alexandria, all of these claims are filed in Rapides Parish, in the 9th Judicial District Court. Identifying every responsible party before the deadline matters because missing one can leave money on the table.
Morris & Dewett starts every bus case with a full defendant map, not just the obvious one.
Serving Alexandria
Served from our Lake Charles office -- serving all of Rapides Parish.
4865 Ihles Road
Lake Charles, LA 70605
Open 24/7 for injured Alexandria residents
Get directions →What Happens When a Government Bus Hits You in Alexandria?
If a CATS municipal bus was involved in your accident, the legal path is more demanding than a standard private claim. CATS operates under a government contract arrangement. Claims against it fall under La. R.S. 13:5107, which requires written notice to the public entity within 90 days of the incident. That is 90 calendar days. Not business days. Not after you finish treatment.
This notice requirement is not a formality. Failure to provide timely written notice permanently bars your claim. There is no exception for not knowing about the requirement. The Louisiana Governmental Claims Act (La. R.S. 13:5101) governs these claims, and it also caps damages against state entities at $500,000 per occurrence. That cap applies regardless of injury severity.
After the 90-day notice is properly filed, the one-year prescriptive period runs from the date of that notice. The 90-day window is short. If a CATS bus was involved, contact an attorney immediately.
Morris & Dewett has handled claims against Louisiana governmental entities and knows the filing requirements.
School Bus Accidents in Rapides Parish
School bus accidents involve a distinct defendant: the Rapides Parish School Board. The school board is a government entity, which means the same 90-day written notice requirement under La. R.S. 13:5107 applies before any lawsuit can be filed.
School buses in Louisiana are regulated by the Louisiana School Bus Authority under La. R.S. 17:161 et seq. Those regulations govern driver screening, vehicle maintenance standards, route supervision, and training. When a school bus crash occurs, the school board’s maintenance logs, driver qualification records, and route supervision documents are all subject to discovery. A pattern of deferred maintenance or a driver with a disqualifying history creates a direct path to school board negligence.
Child passengers in school bus accidents have no assumption of risk. The school board owes them the full duty of care as a common carrier, and any negligence that causes injury creates liability. Because child injury cases often involve long-term damages, including educational impacts and future earning capacity, the damages calculation is typically more complex than an adult case.
If your child was injured in a school bus accident in Rapides Parish, the 90-day notice clock starts on the date of the accident. Catastrophic injuries in school bus accidents require particular attention to long-term damages documentation.
Charter, Tour, and Intercity Bus Liability
Private charter buses, tour buses, and intercity carriers like Greyhound operate under different rules than government buses, but they carry their own set of legal requirements. Companies operating buses in interstate commerce must comply with FMCSA regulations. Those regulations govern driver qualification, hours of service, drug and alcohol testing, vehicle maintenance, and insurance minimums.
The FMCSA requires commercial buses transporting passengers to carry a minimum of $5 million in liability insurance. That coverage exists because bus accidents involving multiple passengers can produce multiple severe injury claims simultaneously. Tour and charter buses frequently travel I-49 through Alexandria on routes between Shreveport and New Orleans. When crashes happen on that corridor, they often involve passengers from multiple parishes or states, which can add federal jurisdiction questions.
HOS
Hours of Service. Federal rules limiting commercial drivers to 11 driving hours within a 14-hour on-duty window, with a mandatory 30-minute break after 8 hours.
HOS violations are a common negligence factor in charter bus crashes. Driver qualification files, HOS logs, and drug testing records are discoverable from the carrier. If the carrier used a third-party logistics company to arrange the trip, that company may share liability.
Beyond the carrier, the bus manufacturer may be liable if a tire blowout, brake failure, or structural defect caused or contributed to the crash. This is a separate product liability claim that runs alongside the negligence claim against the carrier. Commercial vehicle cases often involve this same multi-defendant structure.
Morris & Dewett uses the FMCSA Safety Measurement System (SMS) lookup as a standard first step in commercial bus cases. That record shows prior violations, out-of-service orders, and inspection history. A carrier with a pattern of HOS violations and deferred maintenance is a different defendant than a carrier with a clean record.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes; each case is decided on its own facts. See our full case results.
What to Do After an Alexandria Bus Accident
At the Scene
Get medical evaluation immediately. Internal injuries, traumatic brain injuries, and spinal injuries can present with delayed symptoms. An initial assessment protects your health. It also creates a medical record that connects your injuries to the accident. Delayed medical treatment gives insurance adjusters an argument that your injuries weren’t serious or weren’t caused by the crash.
Document the scene if you can. Photographs of vehicle positions, road conditions, the bus number, and visible injuries are valuable. Write down the bus operator’s name, badge number, or employee ID. Get the names and contact information of eyewitnesses before they leave. Witness accounts often become the deciding factor when liability is disputed, and witnesses are harder to locate days or weeks later.
Do not give a recorded statement to any insurance adjuster before you have spoken to an attorney. Adjusters ask questions designed to capture admissions about fault or to minimize injury severity. You have no legal obligation to give a recorded statement to anyone other than law enforcement.
Preserving Evidence After the Crash
Spoliation
The destruction or alteration of evidence after a party has notice of pending litigation. Courts can instruct juries to assume the destroyed evidence was unfavorable to the party that destroyed it.
Bus crashes produce specific categories of evidence that have short shelf lives. A Spoliation letter sent within 24 hours of engagement locks down evidence before normal retention schedules allow it to be deleted.
ELD
Electronic Logging Device. A device that automatically records driving time. Required for most commercial carriers since 2019. ELD data documents hours behind the wheel before a crash.
The bus’s event data recorder (black box) captures pre-crash speed, braking input, steering, and throttle position. Driver logs, whether paper or electronic through an ELD, document hours of service compliance. Bus maintenance records and inspection reports show whether the carrier met its maintenance obligations. Surveillance footage from the bus itself, from nearby businesses, and from traffic cameras degrades or gets overwritten on cycles ranging from 24 hours to 30 days.
Medical records from Rapides Regional Medical Center or other trauma facilities document injury severity and connect it temporally to the accident. The police report from the Alexandria Police Department or Louisiana State Police establishes scene facts and any citations issued. The FMCSA tracks bus crash data for Louisiana through its safety query tools; a carrier’s prior safety record is publicly available and can establish a negligence pattern before discovery even opens.
Morris & Dewett sends spoliation preservation letters within 24 hours of engagement on commercial vehicle cases, demanding bus data recorders, driver logs, maintenance records, training files, and surveillance footage before anyone has a chance to follow a normal deletion schedule.
Your Alexandria Injury Attorneys
Founding partners Trey Morris and Justin Dewett lead every Alexandria injury case Morris & Dewett takes.
Injuries Common in Alexandria Bus Accidents
A loaded city bus can weigh up to 40,000 pounds. A charter bus fully loaded with passengers can approach that figure. When a vehicle that size collides with a passenger car, a pedestrian, or a cyclist, the injury disparity is severe. The physics are not comparable to a two-car collision.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI), spinal cord injuries, rib fractures, and lower extremity fractures are the most common serious injuries in Alexandria bus accidents. Internal organ injuries and crush injuries occur in broadside collisions and rollovers. Many bus accident victims sustain injuries they will manage for the rest of their lives.
Loss of Earning Capacity
The difference between what you could have earned over your working lifetime and what you can earn now. Calculated by a vocational expert and converted to present value by an economist.
Comparative Fault
A rule that reduces your recovery by your percentage of fault. In Louisiana, if you are 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing.
Injury severity drives the damages calculation. Economic damages include all past and future medical expenses, lost wages, and Loss of Earning Capacity. Non-economic damages cover pain and suffering and mental anguish. Under La. C.C. Art. 2323 (effective January 1, 2026), Comparative Fault is allocated among all parties. If you are 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. If you are 50% or less at fault, your recovery is reduced proportionally.
MMI
Maximum Medical Improvement. The point at which your treating physician determines your condition has stabilized and further significant change from treatment is not expected.
Accident reconstructionists and medical experts are used to establish causation and document the long-term impact of permanent injuries. These experts connect the crash mechanics to the specific injury pattern and project future treatment needs. Reaching MMI before settling is important because damages cannot be fully calculated until treatment has plateaued. Settling before MMI often produces undervalued claims.
Insurance carriers have their own medical experts who will challenge injury severity and permanence. Morris & Dewett retains medical and engineering experts on serious bus accident cases to build an independent record of causation and long-term impact.
What Compensation Does Louisiana Law Allow After a Bus Accident?
Loss of Consortium
A legal claim available to a spouse for the loss of companionship, affection, and support caused by the injured person’s condition. It is a separate damage category from the injured person’s claims.
Louisiana law allows recovery for two categories of damages: economic and non-economic. Economic damages cover everything with a dollar figure: medical bills (past and future), lost wages, loss of earning capacity, and rehabilitation costs. Non-economic damages cover pain and suffering, mental anguish, and Loss of Consortium.
Punitive damages are available in Louisiana only in limited circumstances: primarily DWI-related accidents and intentional acts. They are not available in standard negligence claims. When a government entity like CATS is a defendant, total damages are capped at $500,000 per occurrence under La. R.S. 13:5106, regardless of the number of injured parties.
The 51% comparative fault bar under La. C.C. Art. 2323 applies to bus accident claims the same as any other personal injury case. Insurance companies defending bus carriers build their strategy around pushing the claimant’s fault percentage above 50%. View our case results for context on the types of recoveries Morris & Dewett has obtained.
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Reviews reflect individual client experiences. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
When Must You File a Bus Accident Claim in Louisiana?
Louisiana changed its personal injury deadline with Act 423, which took effect July 1, 2024. For accidents on or after that date involving private bus carriers, the prescriptive period is two years from the date of injury under La. C.C. Art. 3493.1. For accidents before July 1, 2024, the one-year deadline applies.
Prescriptive Period
Louisiana’s term for statute of limitations. The legal deadline to file a lawsuit. For personal injury, it is two years from the date of injury under La. C.C. Art. 3493.1, effective July 1, 2024.
Prescriptive Period The two-year period is the standard for private carrier cases. It is not the standard for government-entity cases.
For claims against CATS or the Rapides Parish School Board, the 90-day written notice requirement under La. R.S. 13:5107 must be satisfied before any lawsuit can be filed. Missing that 90-day window permanently bars the claim. There is no tolling, no exception, and no late filing option. After proper notice, the standard prescriptive period applies from the notice date. All Alexandria bus accident lawsuits are filed in 9th Judicial District Court, Rapides Parish.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Do I have to send a notice before suing CATS or the city of Alexandria for a bus accident?
- Yes. Claims against CATS or any Louisiana governmental entity require written notice under La. R.S. 13:5107 within 90 days of the accident. The notice must be sent to the public entity before a lawsuit can be filed. Failure to provide timely notice permanently bars the claim. There is no exception based on ignorance of the requirement.
- How long do I have to file a bus accident lawsuit in Louisiana?
- For accidents involving private bus carriers after July 1, 2024, the prescriptive period is two years under La. C.C. Art. 3493.1. For claims against government entities like CATS or the Rapides Parish School Board, you must serve written notice within 90 days of the accident, then file within one year of that notice date. Pre-July 1, 2024 accidents against private carriers carried a one-year deadline under prior law.
- What if I was a passenger on the bus when it crashed?
- Passengers on a bus have the cleanest liability position of anyone in the accident. You were not driving. You had no control over the vehicle. The carrier owed you the highest duty of care as a common carrier under La. C.C. Art. 2315. Your claim runs against the carrier, the driver, and any other negligent party. The 51% comparative fault bar is highly unlikely to affect a passenger claim unless the passenger's own conduct contributed to the crash.
- Can I sue both the bus driver and the company?
- Yes. The bus driver is liable for their own negligence. The carrier company is liable for the driver's actions under respondeat superior, and independently liable if the company's hiring, training, or maintenance practices were negligent. If a vehicle defect contributed, the manufacturer may be added as a defendant. Bus accident cases with multiple defendants require careful coordination to avoid gaps in the claim.
- What is the insurance minimum for commercial buses in Louisiana?
- The FMCSA requires buses transporting 16 or more passengers to carry a minimum of $5 million in liability insurance. This minimum applies to interstate carriers. State-regulated charter and tour buses operating only within Louisiana are subject to Louisiana Public Service Commission minimums, which may differ. CATS, as a government entity, is subject to the $500,000 per-occurrence cap under La. R.S. 13:5106 regardless of its insurance coverage.
- What evidence should I preserve after a bus accident in Alexandria?
- Preserve everything you can access immediately: photographs of the scene, vehicle positions, road conditions, and your injuries. Write down the bus number, operator name, and any eyewitness contact information. Seek medical care and keep all records. Your attorney will send a spoliation letter to the carrier demanding preservation of the bus's event data recorder, driver logs, maintenance records, surveillance footage, and training files. This letter goes out within 24 hours at Morris & Dewett. Do not give a recorded statement to any insurance adjuster before retaining counsel.
- Does the 51% comparative fault rule apply to bus accident claims?
- Yes. Under La. C.C. Art. 2323 effective January 1, 2026, if you are found 51% or more at fault for the accident, you recover nothing. If you are 50% or less at fault, your recovery is reduced by your fault percentage. Bus carriers' insurance teams build their defense around disputing fault allocation.
- What is the difference between suing a private bus company and a government-run bus?
- Suing a private bus company follows the standard two-year prescriptive period under La. C.C. Art. 3493.1. You file suit in Rapides Parish court and pursue the carrier's insurance. Suing a government-run bus like CATS requires 90-day written notice under La. R.S. 13:5107 before any lawsuit can be filed, a one-year prescriptive period after notice, and is subject to a $500,000 damages cap under La. R.S. 13:5106. The notice failure is fatal to the claim, not curable.
- What should I do immediately after a bus accident in Alexandria?
- Seek medical care first. Internal injuries and TBI symptoms can be delayed, and a same-day medical record is important for your claim. Photograph the scene, the bus, and your injuries if you can do so safely. Get eyewitness contact information before people leave. Do not give a recorded statement to any insurance representative. Contact an attorney as soon as possible, particularly if a government-owned bus was involved, because the 90-day notice clock starts immediately.
- How much is my bus accident claim worth in Louisiana?
- The value depends on the nature of your injuries, their permanence, your income and earning capacity, and which defendants are involved. Economic damages cover all medical costs and lost wages. Non-economic damages cover pain and suffering. Government defendants are capped at $500,000. Private carriers with $5 million in minimum insurance coverage have much higher exposure. No attorney can give you a reliable number before your injuries have stabilized at maximum medical improvement (MMI) and all liable parties have been identified. View Morris & Dewett's [case results](/blog/category/results/) for context on the range of recoveries the firm has obtained.
Last updated June 5, 2026

