The Longhorn Law Firm represents Farmington injury victims across San Juan County and the Eleventh Judicial District. Farmington is the commercial center of the Four Corners region and sits adjacent to the Navajo Nation. The combination of heavy oil-and-gas activity in the San Juan Basin, long rural highways, and out-of-region commercial traffic produces a steady caseload of serious crashes and injuries.
The Longhorn Law Firm represents injury victims across Farmington and San Juan County — including car accidents, truck crashes, motorcycle wrecks, slip-and-falls, wrongful death cases, and workplace injuries. See all the case types we handle →
Farmington context.
Major Roadways
US-64, US-550 (running south to Albuquerque), NM-516, and the Bloomfield Highway.
Local Courts
the Eleventh Judicial District Court (103 S. Oliver Dr., Aztec) and the U.S. District Court for the District of New Mexico.
Trauma Care
San Juan Regional Medical Center (the nearest Level I trauma is UNM Hospital in Albuquerque).
Why It Matters Here
Farmington is the commercial center of the Four Corners region and sits adjacent to the Navajo Nation. Heavy oil-and-gas activity in the San Juan Basin, combined with rural highways and long-distance commercial traffic, drives a steady caseload of serious injury and wrongful death cases.
New Mexico applies pure comparative fault — you can recover even at 99% fault, with damages reduced by your share. The state also has a three-year statute of limitations (vs. Texas's two), allows uninsured motorist (UM) "stacking" in many situations, and applies no general damages cap on standard injury claims. See our TX vs NM guide →
Case types we handle in Farmington.
- Car accidents — including high-speed highway crashes and intersection collisions
- Truck accidents — 18-wheelers, oilfield trucks, delivery vehicles
- Motorcycle accidents
- Pedestrian accidents
- Slip and fall
- Dog bites
- Wrongful death
- Workplace injuries — including oilfield and construction
- Catastrophic injuries — TBI, spinal cord, amputation, severe burns
Insurance companies routinely call victims within hours, sounding friendly, asking for a "quick recorded statement," and floating a fast lowball offer before the victim has seen a doctor. Don't give a recorded statement. Don't accept an offer. Read our full guide on insurance company tactics before you say anything.
What your case could be worth.
Damages depend on injuries, available insurance, lost income, and the long-term medical picture. Awards can include past and future medical expenses, lost wages and earning capacity, pain and suffering, mental anguish, and — in cases of gross negligence — punitive damages. We give an honest range during your free consultation.
NM deadlines.
Three years from the date of injury for most personal injury claims (NMSA §37-1-8). Cases against government entities require notice within 90 days under the New Mexico Tort Claims Act — a deadline many victims miss. Get a free case review →