Practice area 05
Personal Injury
What we handle
- Motor vehicle accidents — auto, truck, motorcycle
- Premises liability — slip and fall, negligent security
- Workplace injuries (third-party claims)
- Product liability
- Wrongful death
- Insurance negotiation and bad faith claims
How we approach personal injury
Personal injury claims are time-sensitive. Evidence disappears. Witnesses become unavailable. Insurance adjusters begin working the file immediately after an incident. Our first priority is securing the record — scene documentation, medical records, event data recorders — before that evidence is lost.
We evaluate every case on damages, liability, and collectability. We do not take cases where the math does not work for the client. When we do take a case, we prepare it for trial regardless of whether we expect it to settle, because the preparation is exactly what drives favorable settlement value.
Our personal injury clients pay nothing unless we recover. We advance all litigation costs. That alignment means we are motivated by the same outcome you are.
Example matters
Situation
A client sustained a serious knee injury in a commercial parking lot fall. The property owner's insurer offered a nominal settlement within two weeks of the incident.
Outcome
After retaining an orthopedic expert and documenting the client's two-year recovery and work absence, we obtained a jury verdict for $2.4M — the full premises liability result in our case results.
All case descriptions are anonymized. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Each matter depends on its specific facts and applicable law.
Related results
$2.4M jury verdict
Premises liability matter
Common questions
- How long do I have to file a personal injury lawsuit in Texas?
- Generally two years from the date of injury. There are exceptions for discovery of injuries, claims against government entities (180-day notice requirement), and cases involving minors. Do not wait to consult with an attorney.
- What if I was partially at fault for the accident?
- Texas follows modified comparative fault. You may still recover as long as your share of fault is 50% or less. Your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. We evaluate the specific facts before advising on viability.
- How much is my case worth?
- Value depends on medical expenses, future care costs, lost income, lost earning capacity, and non-economic damages — pain, suffering, loss of enjoyment of life. We do not give estimates before reviewing your medical records and understanding the full scope of your injury.