The Port of Brownsville is one of Texas’ most active deep-water ports, handling steel, liquid bulk, wind energy components, petroleum products, project cargo, and vessel repair operations. With heavy lift cranes, longshore operations, barge fleeting, and international vessel traffic moving daily through the Brownsville Ship Channel, serious injuries are not uncommon.
If you were injured at the Port of Brownsville—aboard a vessel, on a dock, in a shipyard, or during cargo operations—you need attorneys who understand maritime law, federal jurisdiction, and the operational realities of working waterfront environments.
Why Port of Brownsville Cases Are Legally Complex
Maritime injury claims are not standard Texas personal injury cases. They may involve:
- Jones Act claims for injured seamen
- Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (LHWCA) claims
- Section 905(b) vessel negligence actions
- Unseaworthiness claims
- Limitation of Liability Act proceedings
- Multi-employer liability (stevedores, terminal operators, vessel owners, contractors)
At a port like Brownsville—where international vessels, charterers, terminal operators, and subcontractors overlap—liability is often layered and aggressively defended.
A deckhand crushed during mooring operations.
A longshoreman struck by unsecured steel coils.
A welder burned during hot work aboard a vessel.
A dockworker injured by defective rigging or crane failure.
Each scenario requires precise legal classification before a single pleading is filed.
Jones Act & Seaman Claims at the Port of Brownsville
If you qualify as a “seaman” under federal law, your claim falls under the Jones Act—not Texas negligence law. That means:
- You must prove employer negligence (even slight negligence suffices).
- You are entitled to maintenance and cure.
- You may pursue unseaworthiness claims against the vessel owner.
Determining seaman status is often the first battleground. Vessel operators and employers routinely dispute it.
Longshore & Dockworker Injuries (LHWCA & 905(b))
If you are a longshoreman, crane operator, ship repair worker, or harbor construction worker, your claim may fall under the LHWCA, with potential third-party negligence claims against:
- Vessel owners
- Charterers
- Terminal operators
- Equipment manufacturers
Under § 905(b), vessel owners owe duties defined in Scindia—including the turnover duty, active control duty, and duty to intervene. These cases are highly technical and require maritime litigation experience.
Shipyard, Industrial & Cargo Injuries
The Port of Brownsville supports:
- Shipbreaking and vessel repair
- Steel import/export terminals
- Liquid bulk facilities
- Wind energy component staging
- Heavy equipment transport
Common causes of injury include:
- Crane collapses
- Falling cargo
- Defective rigging
- Slip and fall on oil or hydraulic fluids
- Confined space explosions
- Electrical shock
- Forklift and heavy equipment collisions
Industrial maritime environments demand strict compliance with safety protocols. When corners are cut, workers pay the price.
Why Authority Matters in Maritime Cases
Maritime defendants do not approach these cases casually. They retain admiralty counsel immediately. They investigate causation, vessel status, employment classification, and limitation defenses from day one.
An attorney unfamiliar with:
- Federal admiralty jurisdiction
- Removal and forum strategy
- Maritime contract law
- Charter party agreements
- Indemnity and additional insured issues
- Limitation proceedings
is at a significant disadvantage.
Serious maritime cases require strategic positioning from the outset.
Serving Injured Workers in Brownsville & South Texas
We represent injured maritime workers across:
- Brownsville
- Port Isabel
- Harlingen
- South Padre Island
- Corpus Christi
- Houston Ship Channel
Whether your injury occurred during cargo discharge, vessel transit, mooring operations, or dockside industrial work, early case evaluation is critical to preserve evidence and protect your rights.
Act Quickly – Maritime Deadlines Are Strict
Maritime cases often involve:
- Contractual notice requirements
- Federal filing deadlines
- Maintenance and cure disputes
- Rapid evidence turnover aboard foreign-flag vessels
Delay can severely impact your claim.