Construction accidents can result in severe injuries, substantial medical bills, and lost income that disrupts your entire life. At Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd, we understand the complexities surrounding construction site injuries and the financial pressures you face during recovery. Our legal team in Arlington, Washington, is dedicated to helping construction workers and their families pursue fair compensation for their injuries. We handle cases involving falls, equipment malfunctions, unsafe working conditions, and employer negligence. With years of experience navigating construction injury claims, we fight to hold responsible parties accountable.
Construction accidents often involve multiple liable parties, complex safety regulations, and powerful insurance companies determined to minimize payouts. Having qualified legal representation levels the playing field significantly. Our attorneys understand construction industry standards, OSHA regulations, and the tactics insurers use to deny or reduce claims. We gather critical evidence including accident reports, witness statements, and safety records that support your case. Beyond immediate medical expenses, we pursue compensation for ongoing treatment, lost wages, pain and suffering, and permanent disability. Our representation demonstrates serious intent to insurers, often resulting in better settlement offers and protecting your rights throughout the entire process.
Construction accident claims involve proving that negligence or unsafe conditions directly caused your injury. This requires establishing that responsible parties failed to meet legal safety standards, whether through inadequate training, missing equipment, improper maintenance, or ignoring known hazards. Washington law allows injured workers to pursue third-party claims beyond workers’ compensation in many situations. Unlike workers’ compensation, third-party claims can include pain and suffering damages. Our attorneys identify all potentially liable parties, including general contractors, subcontractors, equipment manufacturers, and site supervisors. We analyze safety records, training documentation, and prior incidents to establish a pattern of negligence.
Negligence occurs when someone fails to exercise reasonable care, resulting in injury to another person. In construction cases, this might involve failing to provide proper safety equipment, inadequate training, or ignoring known hazards. Proving negligence requires demonstrating that a duty of care existed, that duty was breached, and that breach directly caused your injury and resulting damages.
A third-party claim is a lawsuit against someone other than your employer, typically a contractor, equipment manufacturer, or property owner. While workers’ compensation provides limited benefits, third-party claims allow recovery for pain and suffering and other damages. These claims are separate from workers’ compensation and can result in significantly higher compensation.
Premises liability holds property owners responsible for injuries occurring on their property due to unsafe conditions or negligent maintenance. Construction site owners must maintain reasonably safe conditions and warn of known hazards. If inadequate safety measures or failure to remedy dangerous conditions contributed to your accident, premises liability may apply.
Damages are monetary awards intended to compensate you for losses caused by your injury. Economic damages cover quantifiable losses like medical bills and lost wages. Non-economic damages address pain, suffering, and reduced quality of life. Punitive damages may apply when negligence was particularly reckless or intentional.
If you’re able, take photos of the accident scene, unsafe conditions, and your injuries immediately after the incident occurs. Capture images of missing safety equipment, poor lighting, unsecured materials, or defective machinery that contributed to your accident. These photographs become crucial evidence before the site is cleaned up or conditions are remedied.
Seek immediate medical evaluation even if injuries seem minor, as some construction injuries develop complications over time. Keep detailed records of all medical appointments, treatments, medications, and prescriptions related to your injury. Request copies of medical reports, imaging studies, and physician notes to support your claim’s documentation.
Report the accident to your employer and the OSHA office for proper documentation and investigation. Ensure the incident appears in the workplace injury log and request a copy of your accident report. Official reports create important evidence showing the incident was serious enough to warrant governmental attention.
When construction accidents result in permanent disability, ongoing medical treatment, or substantially reduced earning capacity, you need comprehensive legal representation to maximize recovery. These cases require detailed economic analysis, rehabilitation assessments, and vocational expert testimony to accurately project lifetime damages. Our attorneys build persuasive cases demonstrating the full long-term financial impact of your injuries.
Construction accidents often involve multiple responsible parties, including general contractors, subcontractors, equipment manufacturers, and site supervisors, each potentially liable for different aspects of the accident. Identifying all liable parties and determining their respective liability requires thorough investigation and legal analysis. We systematically pursue claims against each responsible party to ensure comprehensive compensation.
For relatively minor injuries with obvious negligence and sufficient insurance coverage, straightforward settlement negotiations may resolve your claim efficiently. If medical expenses are modest and recovery is complete without long-term effects, a streamlined approach might achieve fair compensation. However, even seemingly simple cases benefit from professional evaluation to ensure you’re not undervalued.
When liability is uncontested and the responsible party has adequate insurance coverage, direct negotiation may reach a settlement more quickly than litigation. Some cases resolve without extensive investigation or expert testimony when the defendant acknowledges fault and insurance limits are sufficient. Our team still ensures all available compensation is pursued even in straightforward scenarios.
Falls from ladders, scaffolding, roofs, and elevated work areas represent common construction injuries that often result from inadequate safety measures, faulty equipment, or insufficient fall protection. We pursue claims against contractors and property owners who fail to provide proper guardrails, safety nets, or harnesses.
Injuries from power tools, heavy machinery, cranes, and defective equipment frequently occur due to inadequate training, missing guards, or equipment failures. We investigate whether proper maintenance occurred and identify equipment manufacturers liable for design defects.
Electrical hazards and exposure to toxic materials cause serious construction injuries that often result from inadequate safety protocols or failure to provide proper protective equipment. We document violations of electrical safety codes and hazardous material handling requirements.
At Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd, we bring decades of combined experience handling personal injury cases throughout Snohomish County, including construction accident claims. Our attorneys understand the specific hazards, regulations, and liability issues unique to construction work in Washington. We maintain extensive resources including investigative professionals, medical consultants, and expert witnesses who strengthen your case. We communicate regularly, explaining legal options in plain language so you understand your claim’s progress. Our commitment extends beyond legal representation—we advocate for your recovery and financial stability.
We operate on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay nothing unless we recover compensation for you. This aligns our interests with yours and removes financial barriers to pursuing your claim. We handle all investigation, negotiation, and litigation work while you focus on healing. Our team’s track record demonstrates our ability to negotiate substantial settlements and win cases at trial. We’re not afraid to challenge powerful contractors and their insurers to ensure you receive full compensation for your injuries.
Yes, Washington law allows injured construction workers to pursue third-party claims against parties other than their employer while simultaneously receiving workers’ compensation benefits. Workers’ compensation covers medical expenses and a portion of lost wages, but third-party claims allow you to recover additional damages including pain and suffering, which workers’ compensation does not cover. Third-party defendants often include general contractors, subcontractors, equipment manufacturers, and property owners whose negligence contributed to your injury. The key distinction is that workers’ compensation is an insurance system providing limited benefits regardless of fault, while third-party claims require proving negligence but offer more comprehensive compensation. You don’t have to choose between the two—you can pursue both remedies simultaneously. Our attorneys handle all aspects of third-party claims, ensuring you maximize total recovery from all available sources.
Construction accident damages typically include economic damages such as past and future medical expenses, rehabilitation costs, assistive devices, home modifications, lost wages, and diminished earning capacity if your injuries prevent you from working at your previous level. We calculate these concrete financial losses by reviewing medical bills, work records, and expert projections of future treatment needs. Non-economic damages address your pain, suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and permanent scarring or disfigurement. Additional damages may include loss of consortium compensation to your spouse for lost companionship and support. In cases involving particularly reckless or intentional negligence, courts may award punitive damages intended to punish the defendant and deter similar conduct. Our attorneys carefully evaluate all applicable damages categories to ensure your claim reflects your full losses.
Washington state’s statute of limitations generally allows three years from the date of injury to file a construction accident lawsuit. However, this deadline is critical, and various circumstances may shorten or extend it in specific situations. If you miss the statute of limitations, you lose your right to pursue the claim entirely, which makes prompt action essential. Workers’ compensation claims have different notice requirements, typically requiring notification within one year of the accident or discovery of the injury. We recommend contacting our office as soon as possible after your injury to protect your rights. Early consultation allows us to begin investigation while evidence is fresh and witnesses’ memories are clear. Delaying too long risks losing critical evidence and potentially missing the filing deadline entirely.
When a subcontractor’s negligence causes your construction injury, liability depends on the specific circumstances and contractual relationships involved. The general contractor, property owner, and the negligent subcontractor may all bear responsibility for your injuries. Washington courts apply premises liability principles, holding property owners responsible for maintaining safe conditions regardless of which contractor caused the unsafe condition. General contractors also bear responsibility for supervising subcontractors and ensuring compliance with safety standards. Our investigation identifies all liable parties and determines the best strategies for pursuing each claim. Multiple defendants expand your potential recovery sources, and different defendants may have different insurance coverage levels. We pursue claims against every responsible party to maximize your total compensation.
Critical evidence in construction accident cases includes accident scene photographs, incident reports filed with your employer, OSHA investigation reports, witness statements, safety records for the site and equipment, maintenance logs, training documentation, medical records, and expert analysis of how the accident occurred. Immediate scene photographs are particularly valuable because they capture conditions before remediation occurs. We also seek surveillance video if available and obtain records showing prior safety violations or similar incidents. Expert testimony strengthens cases significantly—construction engineers can explain safety standard violations, medical doctors establish causation between the accident and your injuries, and vocational rehabilitation specialists project income losses. The sooner we begin investigation, the more evidence we can gather before it’s lost or destroyed.
Your construction accident claim’s value depends on numerous factors including injury severity, permanence, age, occupation, income level, medical expenses, ability to work, pain and suffering, and liability strength. Minor injuries with complete recovery might settle for thousands of dollars, while permanent disabilities often warrant substantial six-figure settlements. We evaluate comparable cases that have settled or gone to trial to estimate your claim’s realistic value range. The defendant’s financial resources and insurance limits also affect settlement value—claims against well-insured defendants are often valued higher than claims against defendants with minimal coverage. We prepare detailed demand packages quantifying all damages and demonstrating the claim’s strength. Rather than providing a single figure, we discuss realistic settlement ranges and explain the factors affecting your specific claim’s value.
Insurance companies typically offer initial settlement figures well below fair value, hoping injured parties will accept quickly rather than pursue litigation. Never accept the first offer without professional evaluation—doing so likely means accepting far less than your claim is worth. Insurance adjusters’ job is minimizing company payouts, not ensuring fair compensation for injured parties. We compare initial offers against comparable cases and demonstrate why higher settlement figures are justified. Negotiating effectively requires understanding your claim’s strengths, weaknesses, and realistic value. We leverage investigation results, medical documentation, expert opinions, and liability evidence to negotiate aggressively. If settlement discussions stall, we’re prepared to file and litigate your case, which often motivates defendants to increase settlement offers significantly.
Washington follows a comparative negligence system allowing you to recover damages even if you were partially at fault, as long as you were not more than 50% responsible for the accident. Your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault—if you were 20% at fault and recover $100,000, you receive $80,000. This rule protects injured workers from losing entire claims due to minor contributory actions. We argue aggressively to minimize any fault attributed to you while accepting responsibility where appropriate. Defendants often exaggerate your role in causing the accident to reduce settlement value, making strong investigation and evidence presentation critical. Our team challenges unfair fault attributions and demonstrates how defendant negligence was the primary cause of your injury.
Construction accident cases typically resolve within one to three years, depending on injury severity, liability complexity, and whether litigation becomes necessary. Straightforward cases with clear liability and adequate insurance may settle within months. Complex cases involving multiple defendants, serious injuries requiring ongoing treatment, or disputed liability naturally take longer. We manage all procedural requirements, discovery processes, and negotiations to move cases forward efficiently without sacrificing fair compensation. While litigation adds time compared to settlement, some cases require trial to achieve fair results when defendants unreasonably refuse reasonable settlement offers. We keep you informed throughout the process and explain realistic timelines for your specific case.
Immediately after a construction accident, seek medical evaluation for all injuries regardless of apparent severity, as some construction injuries develop serious complications over days or weeks. Report the accident to your employer, supervisor, and the site safety officer, ensuring it’s formally documented. Take photographs of the accident scene, your injuries, and unsafe conditions while evidence is available and fresh. Request contact information from all witnesses who saw the accident occur. Preserve all evidence including the clothing and equipment you wore, defective machinery or tools, and any written communications about the accident. Avoid discussing fault or accepting blame before consulting an attorney, as statements you make can be used against your claim later. Contact our office as soon as possible so we can begin investigation and protect your legal rights.
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