Opelousas Injury Lawyers

Opelousas injury lawyers at Morris & Dewett. How Louisiana tort law, the 51% fault bar, and the 27th JDC in St. Landry Parish affect your claim.

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Opelousas Injury Claims: Where They Are Filed and How They Work

Opelousas is the seat of St. Landry Parish, set on the I-49 and US-190 corridor north of Lafayette in the heart of Acadiana. The third-oldest city in Louisiana, it is a cultural hub known for zydeco music and a downtown that still anchors parish commerce and government. If your injury claim does not settle, the parish courthouse here is where the case will be tried.

Louisiana is a civil law state, and that distinction shapes how a negligence claim is built. Claims here run on the duty-risk analysis of La. C.C. Art. 2315, not the common law framework used in most other states. You must establish duty, the scope of the risk, breach, causation, and damages, each on the evidence.

Civil injury suits for Opelousas are filed in the 27th Judicial District Court at the St. Landry Parish courthouse in downtown Opelousas. The Twenty-Seventh Judicial District serves St. Landry Parish alone, so the parish line is also the courthouse line. Crashes that occur south in Lafayette Parish are filed in the 15th Judicial District Court instead, and the choice of forum follows where the injury happened.

Serving Opelousas

Served from our Lake Charles office.

4865 Ihles Road
Lake Charles, LA 70605

337-242-3138

Open 24/7 for injured Opelousas residents

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What Types of Cases We Handle in St. Landry Parish

Morris & Dewett represents clients in St. Landry Parish and the surrounding Acadiana parishes in cases involving:

Wrongful death claims for St. Landry Parish families proceed under La. C.C. Art. 2315.2, which lets surviving spouses, children, and other named relatives recover for their own losses. Defective-product claims run under the Louisiana Products Liability Act, La. R.S. 9:2800.52, which sets the exclusive theories against a manufacturer.

Most Opelousas injury cases stay in state court at the 27th JDC. Federal court in the Western District of Louisiana takes jurisdiction when the parties are citizens of different states and the amount in dispute exceeds $75,000, or when a federal statute controls. Morris & Dewett handles cases in both the Twenty-Seventh Judicial District Court and the Western District, depending on the facts of the claim.

The corridors that move St. Landry Parish traffic also generate its crash volume. I-49 runs north to south along the parish’s western edge, carrying freight between Lafayette and Alexandria past the Opelousas interchanges. US-190 crosses east to west through the city and links Opelousas to Baton Rouge and the eastern parishes. Surface routes such as Creswell Lane and the Landry Street commercial strip carry the dense local and intersection traffic through the urban core. Each corridor presents a different injury profile, from high-speed interstate truck collisions on I-49 to lower-speed intersection crashes on the city streets.

The parish economy widens the range of injury contexts. Healthcare anchors local employment through Opelousas General Health System, and agriculture, food processing, and the festival and tourism trade tied to the city’s zydeco heritage add seasonal and commercial-premises activity. Trucking and warehouse operations move along the I-49 corridor, and energy-services work reaches into the parish from the surrounding Acadiana oilfield. When a third party’s negligence causes a workplace injury, La. R.S. 23:1101 preserves the right to pursue a civil claim against that party in addition to workers compensation benefits.

Proving Negligence in Louisiana

To recover, you must prove the defendant was negligent. Louisiana’s duty-risk analysis requires five elements, and each must be established with evidence.

Duty. The defendant owed you a legal duty of care. Drivers owe a duty to others on the road. Property owners owe a duty to lawful visitors.

Scope of the risk. Your injury fell within the range of harm the duty was meant to guard against.

Breach. The defendant failed to meet the duty. Running a red light on Landry Street is a breach. Leaving a wet floor unmarked in a Creswell Lane store is a breach.

Causation. The breach caused your injury. The connection between the conduct and the harm must be shown.

Damages. You suffered actual harm. Without measurable injury or loss, there is no compensable claim.

Negligence Per Se

When a defendant violated a safety statute and that violation caused your injury, the violation can establish duty and breach without separate proof. Traffic violations are the common example: a driver who ran a signal and struck you supplies the duty and breach, and the focus shifts to causation and damages.

Government and Premises Claims

Some Opelousas injuries involve a government defendant rather than a private one. If the City of Opelousas, the St. Landry Parish government, or LaDOTD contributed to your injury through a road defect, a dangerous condition, or a government vehicle, the same two-year prescription applies and no pre-suit notice of claim is required. The procedural difference comes after filing: under La. R.S. 13:5107(D), service of citation on the government defendant must be requested within 90 days of filing the suit, or the claim may be dismissed without prejudice as to that defendant.

Louisiana’s Comparative Fault Law and the 51% Bar

Louisiana follows comparative fault, the rule that divides responsibility when more than one party contributed to an accident.

For causes of action arising on or after January 1, 2026, the state applies a modified comparative fault system under La. C.C. Art. 2323, enacted by Act 15 of the 2025 Regular Session (HB 431). If you are 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. If you are 50% or less at fault, your damages are reduced by your percentage of fault.

In practice: say you were 20% at fault and your total damages are $100,000. You recover $80,000. At 51% fault, you recover zero.

That one-percentage-point line between 50% and 51% separates partial recovery from no recovery. Insurance carriers now have a direct financial incentive to argue you were more than half at fault, because pushing your share past 50% does not just shrink the payout, it eliminates it. Documentation, early investigation, and evidence preservation carry more weight in an Opelousas case because of this rule.

For injuries before January 1, 2026, pure comparative fault applies, and your damages are reduced by your fault percentage no matter how high it is.

Representative Results

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes; each case is decided on its own facts. See our full case results.

Louisiana Tort Reform: What Changed and When

Louisiana’s personal injury law changed substantially between 2024 and 2026. Here is what directly affects St. Landry Parish claims.

Filing deadline. For injuries on or after July 1, 2024, you have two years to file suit (La. C.C. Art. 3493.1), enacted by Act 423 of the 2024 session. This replaced the one-year deadline in place since 1825. Product liability claims keep the one-year prescriptive period. Injuries before July 1, 2024 remain governed by the one-year rule. A prescriptive period is the legal filing deadline, and a St. Landry Parish suit filed after it runs is usually dismissed even when liability is strong.

No Pay, No Play. Since August 1, 2025, a driver who carried no automobile insurance at the time of a crash cannot recover the first $100,000 in bodily injury damages or the first $100,000 in property damage, even if the crash was not their fault (La. R.S. 32:866).

Causation standard. For injuries on or after May 28, 2025, the absence of prior similar symptoms no longer creates a presumption that the accident caused the injury (La. Code Evid. Art. 306.1). Medical or expert testimony is now required on causation, so prompt and documented treatment matters more than before.

Medical expense recovery. For causes of action on or after January 1, 2026, recovery of past medical expenses is limited to amounts actually paid by your health insurer or Medicare plus your out-of-pocket costs (La. R.S. 9:2800.27).

Seat belt evidence. Since January 1, 2021, failure to wear a seat belt is admissible in civil cases and can support a comparative fault argument.

These changes apply prospectively. The law that governs your claim depends on when your injury occurred.

Damages You May Recover

If negligence is established, two main categories of damages are available.

Economic damages are measurable financial losses backed by bills, pay records, and repair estimates.

  • Past and future medical costs
  • Rehabilitation costs
  • Lost wages and income
  • Lost earning capacity
  • Property damage

Non-economic damages compensate for human harm that carries no fixed bill.

  • Pain and suffering
  • Mental anguish
  • Emotional distress
  • Loss of enjoyment of life
  • Loss of consortium and companionship

Punitive damages are a separate category aimed at punishment, not compensation. In Louisiana they apply only in narrow circumstances, such as DWI crashes and certain other statutory cases, and are not available in ordinary negligence claims.

There is no statutory cap on damages in general personal injury cases in Louisiana. Medical malpractice cases carry a separate $500,000 cap under La. R.S. 40:1231.2, which does not apply to car accidents, truck accidents, premises liability, or other general tort claims.

Uninsured and Underinsured Motorist Coverage

Approximately 12% of Louisiana drivers carry no automobile insurance, according to Insurance Research Council data, roughly one in eight on St. Landry Parish roads. Uninsured motorist (UM) coverage is the part of your own policy that pays when the at-fault driver has none. Underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage activates when the at-fault driver’s insurance is not enough to cover your damages.

Louisiana requires insurers to offer UM coverage, and you can reject it in writing. Many drivers have rejected it without understanding what they gave up.

If an uninsured driver injured you, review your own policy before concluding there is no recovery. The fastest practical step is to pull the declarations page for every policy in your household, then confirm in writing whether UM/UIM was accepted and at what limits. That documentation helps your lawyer find available coverage before bills and lost wages push you toward an early low settlement.

Common Injuries

Physical injuries in these cases range from soft tissue damage to catastrophic harm. Common injuries include:

Not every injury shows at the scene. Concussion, internal bleeding, and disc injuries can develop over days, so prompt medical evaluation matters regardless of how you feel immediately after a crash.

Psychological injuries are recognized under Louisiana law. Anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and adjustment disorder can follow a serious accident and require diagnosis and documentation from a licensed mental health professional to support a claim.

Your Opelousas Injury Attorneys

Founding partners Trey Morris and Justin Dewett lead every Opelousas injury case Morris & Dewett takes.

What to Do After an Accident in Opelousas

1. Get medical attention

  • Seek evaluation even if you do not believe you were seriously hurt.
  • Records from the date of the accident are important evidence.
  • Attend all follow-up appointments and follow your doctor’s instructions.

Prompt treatment protects your health and creates dated records that tie the accident to your injuries. Gaps in treatment are among the first things an insurer uses to challenge a claim. Opelousas General Health System operates the emergency department serving the city; for the most severe trauma, patients are often transferred to a Level I or Level II center in Lafayette equipped for traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury, severe burns, and multiple fractures.

2. Report the incident

  • In a car accident, call the police.
  • In a workplace injury, notify your supervisor in writing.
  • A formal report documents that the accident occurred.

A police report is among the first documents your attorney will request. It establishes that the accident happened, identifies the at-fault driver, records any citations, and captures the responding officer’s assessment. The Louisiana State Police work crashes on the interstates and state highways through St. Landry Parish, including I-49 and US-190; city streets such as Landry Street and Creswell Lane fall to the Opelousas Police Department, and unincorporated parish roads to the St. Landry Parish Sheriff’s Office.

3. Gather evidence

  • Photograph the scene, your injuries, and the property damage if you are able.
  • Collect witness names and contact information.

4. Consult an attorney before speaking to the other side’s insurer

  • Adjusters may contact you quickly after a crash.
  • Their goal is to resolve the claim for as little as possible.
  • A recorded statement given before you understand your injuries can be used against you.
  • An attorney can advise you before that conversation happens.

5. Track deadlines and preserve documents

  • Save towing invoices, pharmacy receipts, mileage logs, and every insurer letter or email in one place.
  • Ask your providers for complete records and itemized billing, not just visit summaries.
  • Early organization helps your lawyer value damages and avoid preventable deadline mistakes.

Why the 27th Judicial District Matters for Your Case

St. Landry Parish civil injury cases that go to trial are heard in the 27th Judicial District Court at the parish courthouse in Opelousas. A civil jury seats 12 people, and 9 of the 12 must agree to return a verdict.

The St. Landry Parish jury pool is drawn from the parish population, a different community than the Lafayette Parish pool to the south or the Acadia Parish pool to the west. The demographics, community context, and local knowledge jurors bring differ across parishes, and an attorney who understands the St. Landry Parish pool has a practical advantage in deciding how to frame a case. The 27th JDC also carries its own local rules, case management procedures, and judicial assignments, which come from working in that courthouse rather than from a statute book.

Why Choose Morris & Dewett

Morris & Dewett Injury Lawyers handles personal injury cases in Opelousas, St. Landry Parish, and throughout Acadiana and Louisiana. The firm’s attorneys have practiced in Louisiana courts throughout their careers.

The firm is a member of the Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum, a national organization that recognizes trial attorneys for significant case results. View our case results to weigh the track record for yourself.

Morris & Dewett represents personal injury clients on a contingency fee basis. There is no attorney fee unless the firm recovers compensation for you. The fee percentage is agreed in writing at the outset, and court costs are advanced by the firm and deducted from the recovery. The initial consultation is free. If you want to talk through your case, contact us.

What clients say

  • ★★★★★

    I hired Morris and Dewett back in November of 2025.

    They helped me get through my hard times of being off work, stress, and worry. Anytime I had a question I could call and they always had an answer. Very nice and professtional people. Thank you Morris and Dewett for making this an easy process for me and my family.

    jonathan ChandlerShreveport Office · Jun. 27, 2026
  • ★★★★★

    Morris and Dewett and their team of attorneys and staff go above and beyond.

    They always were there to support me and answer all my questions after a shoulder injury that included multiple surgeries. They are caring and compassionate and that goes a long way! Highly recommended!

    Carolyn LawsonMinden Office · Jun. 26, 2026
  • ★★★★★

    Thanks Morris and Dewett for the excellent work you have done on my behalf.

    I want to personally thank Sarah for her kindness.

    Lydell ScottCovington Office · Jun. 18, 2026
  • ★★★★★

    Morris & Dewett does things the right way!

    They put their clients first in measurable and impactful ways.

    Brooke BirkeyRuston Office · Jun. 11, 2026
  • ★★★★★

    First time being injured and needing a lawyer they where very helpful.

    They answered my questions Id have very well. Highly recommend them.

    Sarah StarlingLake Charles Office · Jun. 5, 2026
  • ★★★★★

    Wonderful experience with Morris and DeWitt, everyone was articulate and punctual, and open to all my questions about the process.

    My case couldn't have been handled by a better team! Caity Nerren, Jessica Christian, and Meghan Nolen were all fantastic and helped every step of the way. Thanks again for all of your hard work.

    Taylor ThorneShreveport Office · Jun. 20, 2026

Reviews reflect individual client experiences. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.

How to Request Records in St. Landry Parish

The hospitals, police agencies, and courts that serve an Opelousas injury claim are mapped in the sections above, beside the steps where you need them. This is how to pull the documents those agencies hold.

Accident reports. The Opelousas Police Department handles reports for crashes on city streets; allow a few business days after the crash. The Louisiana State Police, which work crashes on I-49, US-190, and other state highways, post reports at crashreports.dps.la.gov, typically 10 to 15 business days after the crash. For unincorporated parish roads, the St. Landry Parish Sheriff’s Office records division handles the request. If you are unsure which agency responded, your attorney can obtain the report once you provide the date, location, and names of the parties.

Court filings. Civil suits are filed with the 27th Judicial District Court for St. Landry Parish at the parish courthouse in Opelousas; civil filings run through the St. Landry Parish Clerk of Court. Crashes in Lafayette Parish file instead at the 15th Judicial District Court in Lafayette.

Driving records. Driving and vehicle-registration records come from the Louisiana OMV ExpressLane portal. A defendant’s prior violation history can be relevant evidence in some cases.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long do I have to file a personal injury lawsuit in Opelousas?
For injuries occurring on or after July 1, 2024, you have two years from the date of injury to file under La. C.C. Art. 3493.1. For injuries before that date, the prior one-year deadline applies under La. C.C. Art. 3492. Product liability claims keep a one-year prescriptive period regardless of the injury date. Some exceptions extend these deadlines. The discovery rule applies when an injury was not apparent at first. The deadline is tolled for claimants under age 18. Claims against the City of Opelousas, the St. Landry Parish government, or a state agency run on the same two-year prescription, with no pre-suit notice required; once suit is filed, service on the government defendant must be requested within 90 days of filing under La. R.S. 13:5107(D). Because a St. Landry Parish suit that misses prescription is usually dismissed even when liability is clear, the safer course is to consult counsel promptly rather than assume time remains.
What if I was partly at fault for the accident?
For accidents occurring on or after January 1, 2026, Louisiana applies a 51% bar under La. C.C. Art. 2323. If you are 50% or less at fault, you recover your damages reduced by your fault percentage. If you are 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. For accidents before January 1, 2026, pure comparative fault applies and your damages are reduced by your percentage no matter how high it runs. Fault is allocated on the evidence, so partial fault does not automatically end your claim. Early investigation and documentation produce a more accurate account of what happened on the road.
What happens if the driver who hit me had no insurance or too little?
Your own uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage may be your primary source of recovery. Louisiana requires insurers to offer UM coverage, but a driver can reject it in writing, and many people have without realizing it. Pull the declarations page for every policy in your household and confirm whether UM/UIM was accepted and at what limits. If you were in a commercial vehicle, rideshare, or bus, that vehicle's insurer may add coverage. Counsel can identify every available source before treatment bills force an early settlement.
What is the No Pay, No Play rule in Louisiana?
Louisiana's No Pay, No Play law (La. R.S. 32:866) applies to drivers who carried no automobile insurance at the time of a crash. Since August 1, 2025, an uninsured driver cannot recover the first $100,000 in bodily injury damages or the first $100,000 in property damage, even when the other driver was entirely at fault. Maintaining coverage protects both your legal obligations and your right to recover if you are hurt.
My case involves the City of Opelousas or a state road. What changes?
Government claims follow the same two-year prescriptive period as other delicts, and Louisiana requires no pre-suit notice of claim before you sue the City of Opelousas, the St. Landry Parish government, or a state agency such as LaDOTD. What is different is procedural. Once the suit is filed, service of citation on the government defendant must be requested within 90 days of filing under La. R.S. 13:5107(D), or the suit may be dismissed without prejudice as to that defendant. If a road defect, a dangerous condition, or a government vehicle contributed to your injury on an Opelousas street or a state highway such as I-49 or US-190, contact an attorney promptly so the claim is filed and served on time.
Where will my Opelousas injury case be filed and tried?
Civil injury suits for Opelousas and the rest of St. Landry Parish are filed in the 27th Judicial District Court at the parish courthouse in Opelousas. If the case does not settle, a 12-person St. Landry Parish jury decides it, and 9 of the 12 jurors must agree to reach a verdict in a civil case. The St. Landry Parish jury pool is drawn from the parish population, a community distinct from the neighboring Lafayette Parish or Acadia Parish pools. Some cases instead proceed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Louisiana when federal jurisdiction applies.
Does it cost anything to hire Morris & Dewett?
There is no attorney fee unless the firm recovers compensation for you. The fee is a contingency percentage agreed in writing before representation begins. Court costs and case expenses are advanced by the firm and deducted from the recovery if the case succeeds. The initial consultation is free.
What should I bring to my first meeting with a personal injury lawyer?
Bring the core documents that let counsel evaluate liability, damages, and deadlines quickly: the crash or incident report number, photos, witness names, your health insurance card, any medical records you already have, and all insurer correspondence. If a vehicle is involved, bring the declarations page showing your UM/UIM elections and policy limits. You do not need every record before the first meeting. A complete timeline with dates of treatment, missed work, and insurer contact is usually enough for the lawyer to identify immediate next steps and preservation tasks.

Last updated June 18, 2026