Construction accidents in Port Angeles can result in devastating injuries that affect your ability to work and enjoy life. When someone’s negligence causes you harm on a job site, you deserve compensation for medical expenses, lost wages, and pain and suffering. Greene and Lloyd understands the complexities of construction injury claims and works diligently to hold responsible parties accountable. Our firm has represented numerous injured workers throughout Clallam County, helping them navigate the legal process and secure the recovery they deserve.
Construction accident claims involve multiple parties including contractors, subcontractors, equipment manufacturers, and site owners, each potentially liable for your injuries. Without legal representation, insurance companies often minimize settlements, leaving you to cover ongoing medical care and lost income yourself. A skilled attorney levels the playing field by gathering evidence, consulting with medical and industry professionals, and negotiating from a position of strength. Greene and Lloyd ensures your rights are protected while pursuing fair compensation for all your damages, including present and future medical needs.
Construction accidents occur under specific legal frameworks that differ from typical personal injury cases. Washington State recognizes both workers’ compensation claims and third-party liability actions, depending on your employment status and the circumstances of your injury. OSHA regulations establish safety standards that, when violated, create liability for property owners and contractors. Falls from heights, equipment failures, electrocution, and struck-by incidents are common construction accident types. Understanding which legal remedies apply to your situation determines the compensation you can recover.
Negligence occurs when someone fails to exercise reasonable care, resulting in harm to another person. In construction contexts, this includes failure to maintain safe working conditions, provide proper equipment, or follow industry safety standards. Proving negligence requires demonstrating that a duty existed, it was breached, and that breach directly caused your injuries.
Third-party liability refers to claims against parties other than your direct employer, such as equipment manufacturers, property owners, or subcontractors. These claims allow recovery beyond workers’ compensation benefits when a non-employer party’s negligence caused your injury. Construction sites typically involve multiple contractors and vendors, each potentially liable for failing to maintain safe conditions.
Premises liability holds property owners and managers responsible for maintaining safe conditions and warning of known hazards. Construction sites, due to their inherent dangers, require property owners to ensure contractors follow safety protocols and address hazardous conditions. Failure to do so creates liability when injuries result.
Comparative fault is Washington’s system for assigning responsibility when multiple parties contribute to an accident. Even if you bear partial responsibility, you can still recover damages, with your award reduced by your percentage of fault. This principle ensures fair compensation even in complex construction accident cases.
Immediately photograph the accident scene, hazardous conditions, and your injuries if possible. Obtain contact information from all witnesses present and note the names of supervisors and safety personnel. Preserve any defective equipment or materials, and document your medical treatment from day one to establish the injury’s severity.
Notify your employer and file a workers’ compensation claim as required by law to protect your eligibility for benefits. Report the accident to OSHA if it involves serious injury, as this creates an official record of the incident. Consult with an attorney before giving detailed statements to insurance adjusters.
Keep all medical records, bills, and correspondence related to your injury for your legal claim. Request that your physician document how the injury affects your work capacity and future earning potential. Save all communications with employers, insurance companies, and other parties involved in the accident.
Construction accidents resulting in permanent disability, disfigurement, or chronic pain require aggressive legal action to secure lifetime compensation. These injuries demand detailed economic analysis of lost earning capacity and future medical needs. Full representation ensures all damages are calculated and pursued against all liable parties.
Construction sites involve general contractors, subcontractors, equipment manufacturers, and property owners, each potentially liable for your injuries. Comprehensive investigation identifies all responsible parties and determines their individual liability. Full representation maximizes recovery by pursuing claims against everyone who contributed to the accident.
Some construction injuries heal completely within weeks or months with minimal long-term effects. If medical costs are modest and lost wages are limited, workers’ compensation may provide adequate coverage. However, even minor injuries benefit from legal review to identify potential third-party claims.
Injuries with one clearly liable party may resolve more quickly than complex multi-party claims. If the responsible party’s insurance is adequately funded and liability is obvious, settlement negotiations may proceed smoothly. Even so, legal guidance ensures your settlement fairly covers all damages.
Falls from scaffolding, ladders, or unprotected edges cause severe injuries that often require comprehensive legal action. Liability typically involves failure to provide adequate fall protection, maintain equipment, or warn of hazards.
Defective equipment or inadequate equipment operation can cause serious crush or impact injuries. Manufacturers, operators, and site supervisors may all bear responsibility for such incidents.
Electrical hazards on construction sites result from improper wiring, wet conditions, or contact with power lines. Electrical contractors and site managers face liability for failure to identify and control these dangerous conditions.
Greene and Lloyd combines deep knowledge of construction industry standards with proven litigation skills to maximize your recovery. We understand how construction accidents happen, who bears responsibility, and how to build cases that persuade insurers and juries alike. Our firm invests in thorough investigation, consulting with safety professionals and medical experts to strengthen your claim. We handle every detail of your case, from filing deadlines to settlement negotiations, allowing you to focus on recovery.
As Port Angeles residents, we understand Clallam County’s construction industry and local legal landscape. We maintain strong relationships with medical providers, vocational experts, and reconstruction specialists who enhance our investigations. Our track record of successful construction accident settlements demonstrates our ability to achieve results. We work on a contingency basis, meaning you pay no fees unless we recover compensation for you, ensuring our interests align with yours.
Yes, Washington law allows injured workers to pursue claims against third parties whose negligence contributed to construction accidents. While workers’ compensation provides baseline coverage, third-party liability claims can recover additional damages for pain and suffering, permanent disability, and other losses. This distinction is crucial because it often doubles or triples the total compensation available. Greene and Lloyd evaluates both avenues to maximize your recovery from all responsible parties. Construction accidents frequently involve multiple defendants whose negligence created hazardous conditions. Property owners, general contractors, subcontractors, and equipment manufacturers can all face liability when their actions or inactions contributed to your injury. The key is proving they owed you a duty of care, breached that duty, and directly caused your injuries.
Workers’ compensation is a no-fault system providing medical benefits and lost wage replacement regardless of who caused the accident. However, it typically excludes pain and suffering damages and has wage replacement limits. Third-party claims allow you to sue negligent parties outside your employer for additional damages, including pain and suffering, permanent disability, and loss of life enjoyment. Many construction accidents involve both systems—you receive workers’ compensation while simultaneously pursuing third-party recovery. The strategic advantage of third-party claims is their unlimited damage potential. If negligent parties caused your injury, you deserve full compensation for all losses, not just wage replacement. Greene and Lloyd coordinates both claims to ensure you receive maximum recovery from every available source.
Washington’s statute of limitations for personal injury claims is three years from the accident date. However, filing early is crucial because evidence degrades, witnesses relocate, and memories fade over time. Some claims involve additional deadlines for notifying employers or pursuing claims against government entities. Delaying action weakens your case and risks missing critical filing deadlines. Contacting Greene and Lloyd immediately after your construction accident ensures we preserve evidence, interview witnesses while memories are fresh, and meet all legal deadlines. We handle the procedural requirements while you recover, protecting your right to full compensation.
Construction accident damages include all economic and non-economic losses resulting from your injury. Economic damages encompass medical expenses, surgery costs, rehabilitation, ongoing treatment, and lost wages from time away from work. They also include reduced earning capacity if your injury prevents returning to your previous job. Non-economic damages include pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of consortium, and diminished quality of life. Calculating fair damages requires understanding both immediate and long-term impacts of your injury. Greene and Lloyd consults with medical and vocational experts to document how your injury affects current and future earning potential. This comprehensive approach ensures your settlement or judgment covers all genuine losses caused by the construction accident.
Construction site injuries often involve multiple liable parties whose negligence contributed to the accident. General contractors face liability for maintaining safe working conditions and enforcing safety protocols. Property owners must ensure contractors comply with safety regulations and address hazardous conditions. Subcontractors and equipment manufacturers can be liable for their specific negligent actions or defective products. OSHA violations can establish negligence against any contractor who violated safety standards. Identifying all liable parties is crucial because each represents potential recovery. A thorough investigation examines site conditions, equipment maintenance records, safety protocols, and contractor compliance with regulations. Greene and Lloyd pursues claims against everyone whose negligence harmed you, maximizing the total compensation available.
Washington follows a comparative fault system allowing recovery even if you bear partial responsibility for the accident. Your damage award is reduced by your percentage of fault, but you still recover for the defendant’s proportional negligence. For example, if you are 20% at fault and damages total $100,000, you recover $80,000. This system ensures fair compensation even when multiple factors contribute to an accident. Defendants often argue injured workers caused their own accidents to minimize their liability and settlement amounts. Greene and Lloyd defends against these arguments by demonstrating that negligent parties’ failures—not your actions—caused the accident. Our thorough investigation and expert testimony overcome comparative fault defenses.
Greene and Lloyd represents construction accident victims on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay nothing unless we recover compensation. When we succeed, our fee comes from your settlement or judgment, typically one-third of recovered amounts. This arrangement aligns our interests with yours—we only profit when you receive compensation, ensuring maximum effort on your behalf. You also avoid upfront legal costs during recovery. The contingency model eliminates financial barriers to legal representation, allowing injured workers to access skilled advocacy regardless of current financial circumstances. Greene and Lloyd advances all case costs including expert consultations and investigation expenses, billing these costs from your final recovery.
Critical evidence in construction accident cases includes photographs of the accident scene and hazardous conditions, equipment maintenance records and inspection reports, witness statements from coworkers and supervisors, your medical records documenting injury severity, and OSHA inspection reports revealing safety violations. Safety protocols, training records, and evidence of policy violations strengthen claims against contractors. Expert reports on industry standards and causation provide professional support for your case. Early evidence preservation is vital because conditions change, equipment is repaired or discarded, and witnesses move away. Greene and Lloyd immediately investigates accident scenes, interviews witnesses, requests maintenance records, and consults with experts to build comprehensive evidence supporting your claim.
Construction accident case timelines vary based on injury severity, number of parties, and defendants’ willingness to settle. Simple cases with clear liability and single defendants may settle within months. Complex cases involving multiple parties, catastrophic injuries, or disputed liability can require years of investigation and litigation. Most cases resolve through settlement negotiations before trial, though some proceed to jury verdicts. Greene and Lloyd maintains realistic timelines throughout your case, keeping you informed of progress and settlement discussions. We prepare thoroughly for trial when necessary, ensuring maximum leverage in negotiations. Our goal is fair resolution as quickly as possible while never sacrificing compensation to speed the process.
Settlement versus trial decisions depend on the settlement offer’s adequacy compared to potential jury awards, considering both the strength of your case and the time and stress of litigation. Reasonable settlements resolving uncertainty and ensuring guaranteed recovery may be preferable to trial risks. However, if defendants unreasonably refuse fair offers, trial may yield superior results. Greene and Lloyd recommends trial only when potential jury awards substantially exceed settlement amounts. We guide this critical decision based on case facts, evidence strength, and detailed damage calculations. Your preferences matter, and we provide honest counsel about settlement adequacy versus trial prospects. Throughout the process, we maintain trial readiness, ensuring defendants know we will vigorously prosecute your case if necessary.
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