Construction sites are inherently hazardous environments where injuries can occur despite safety protocols and precautions. When you suffer a construction accident in Lakewood, Washington, understanding your legal rights and available remedies is essential. The Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd represent injured workers and site visitors who have experienced trauma on construction projects. Our legal team works diligently to hold negligent parties accountable and secure fair compensation for your medical expenses, lost wages, and pain and suffering.
Construction accident claims involve significant medical costs and often result in temporary or permanent disability. Legal representation helps you navigate insurance disputes, workers’ compensation limitations, and third-party liability claims simultaneously. Professional legal guidance ensures you don’t accept inadequate settlements while still recovering during your healing process. We manage all communications with insurers and opposing counsel, protecting your rights and maximizing compensation for ongoing treatment, rehabilitation, and lost earning capacity throughout your recovery.
Construction accident claims differ from typical personal injury cases because multiple legal remedies may be available simultaneously. Workers’ compensation typically covers medical bills and a portion of lost wages but restricts your ability to sue your direct employer. However, third-party liability claims allow you to pursue negligent contractors, property owners, equipment manufacturers, or other responsible parties. Understanding which legal avenue applies to your situation is crucial for maximizing recovery and ensuring all sources of compensation are properly pursued.
Third-party liability refers to claims against parties other than your direct employer, such as general contractors, equipment manufacturers, property owners, or subcontractors. These claims allow you to pursue damages beyond workers’ compensation benefits when negligence or unsafe conditions caused your injury on a construction site.
Comparative negligence is a legal principle where damages are reduced based on the percentage of fault attributed to each party involved. Washington follows comparative negligence rules, meaning you can recover even if partially at fault, though your compensation is reduced proportionally by your degree of responsibility.
Premises liability holds property owners responsible for maintaining safe conditions and warning of known hazards on their property. Construction site owners must ensure adequate safety measures, proper equipment maintenance, and necessary warnings to protect workers and visitors from foreseeable harm.
OSHA violations occur when employers fail to comply with Occupational Safety and Health Administration safety standards. Documented OSHA violations provide strong evidence of negligence in construction accident claims and can significantly strengthen your legal case against responsible parties.
Photograph your injuries, the accident scene, equipment involved, and any hazardous conditions immediately after the incident occurs. Take photos from multiple angles and save them securely before workplace personnel remove or repair dangerous equipment. Preserve physical evidence like torn clothing, damaged personal items, and detailed written notes about what happened, who witnessed it, and weather conditions.
Report your construction accident to your supervisor and employer immediately, even for seemingly minor injuries, as this creates official documentation. File a workers’ compensation claim without delay while also consulting an attorney about third-party liability potential. Delayed reporting can complicate your case and may affect your eligibility for certain remedies or compensation.
Collect names, phone numbers, and email addresses from all coworkers and bystanders who witnessed the accident while memories remain fresh. Request their written statements describing what they saw before anyone leaves the site or has time to discuss the incident. Witness testimony becomes increasingly difficult to obtain as time passes and witnesses relocate or may face workplace pressure regarding their statements.
Construction accidents resulting in permanent disability, disfigurement, or chronic pain require comprehensive legal strategy to maximize lifetime compensation. Workers’ compensation benefits alone typically cannot cover lost earning capacity over decades of reduced work ability. Aggressive pursuit of third-party claims becomes essential to secure settlements addressing long-term medical needs and substantially diminished quality of life.
When contractors, equipment manufacturers, property owners, and subcontractors share responsibility, comprehensive investigation and legal strategy become critical. Experienced attorneys identify all potentially liable parties and pursue claims against each through appropriate legal channels simultaneously. This approach prevents losing valuable claims against secondary parties while focusing only on primary defendants.
For minor injuries with clear recovery paths and minimal ongoing treatment requirements, workers’ compensation benefits may provide adequate coverage. When injuries heal completely without long-term complications or permanent limitations, the scope of necessary legal action may be narrower. A focused approach addressing only workers’ compensation claims might adequately resolve these cases without extensive third-party litigation.
When liability clearly rests with a single party and that party maintains adequate insurance coverage, streamlined negotiation may resolve matters efficiently. Clear-cut cases with obvious negligence and comprehensive documentation can sometimes settle without extensive discovery or litigation. However, even seemingly straightforward cases benefit from legal review to ensure no viable claims are overlooked.
Falls from scaffolding, ladders, roofs, or elevated platforms represent the most frequent construction accidents, often resulting in severe or fatal injuries. Failure to provide fall protection equipment, inadequate safety training, or defective equipment frequently creates liability for contractors and equipment manufacturers.
Accidents involving cranes, heavy machinery, vehicles, or falling materials cause catastrophic injuries when operators lack proper training or safety protocols fail. Inadequate warning systems, unmarked hazards, and negligent equipment operation create liability exposure for responsible parties.
Contact with live electrical lines, faulty wiring, or improper grounding causes severe injuries and fatalities on construction sites. Contractors and equipment operators bear responsibility for identifying electrical hazards and implementing protective measures.
The Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd understands the devastating impact construction accidents have on workers and their families. We provide compassionate, dedicated representation while maintaining aggressive pursuit of maximum compensation for your injuries and losses. Our attorneys have spent years developing relationships with medical professionals, accident reconstructionists, and industry witnesses who strengthen your case. We handle every aspect of your claim from initial investigation through trial, ensuring your voice is heard and your rights are protected throughout the legal process.
Our practice focuses on personal injury law with particular depth in construction accident representation throughout Washington State. We work on contingency fees, meaning you pay nothing unless we successfully recover compensation for you. This aligns our interests directly with yours and ensures we pursue only cases where we believe justice and fair recovery are achievable. Contact us today for a free consultation to discuss your construction accident and learn how we can help you secure the compensation you deserve.
Construction accident compensation includes medical expenses for treatment and ongoing rehabilitation, lost wages during recovery, and additional costs for permanent disabilities. You may recover damages for pain and suffering, emotional distress, disfigurement, and diminished quality of life. If the accident resulted in fatality, surviving family members can pursue wrongful death claims covering funeral expenses, lost income, and loss of companionship. The specific compensation available depends on the severity of your injuries, liability determination, and available insurance coverage. Third-party liability claims often provide more substantial compensation than workers’ compensation alone because they include pain and suffering damages and don’t have statutory benefit caps. Punitive damages may be available in cases involving gross negligence or intentional misconduct. Our attorneys carefully evaluate all available compensation sources and pursue claims against every responsible party to maximize your recovery.
Workers’ compensation typically protects your employer from personal injury lawsuits filed by employees, but you’re not limited solely to those benefits. You can pursue third-party liability claims against contractors, subcontractors, equipment manufacturers, property owners, or other non-employer parties whose negligence contributed to your accident. This distinction allows injured workers to obtain broader compensation beyond workers’ compensation’s statutory limits while maintaining coverage through both systems. The key is identifying which parties besides your direct employer bear responsibility for the hazardous conditions or negligent actions that caused your injury. Third-party claims provide access to pain and suffering damages and other compensatory remedies unavailable through workers’ compensation alone. An experienced attorney can help you understand which parties are potentially liable and which legal avenues are available in your specific situation.
Washington law provides a three-year statute of limitations for personal injury claims, including construction accidents, measured from the date of injury. However, you should report your injury and consult an attorney immediately because evidence preservation and witness availability become increasingly difficult as time passes. Some circumstances, such as latent injuries that don’t become apparent until later, may extend the filing deadline, but waiting unnecessarily weakens your case. Workers’ compensation claims have different timing requirements and must generally be reported to your employer immediately and filed within various statutory deadlines. The specific timeline depends on your injury type and circumstances. Consulting an attorney within days of your accident ensures all deadlines are met and evidence is properly preserved for investigation and litigation.
Critical evidence in construction accident cases includes photographs of the accident scene, equipment condition, and safety infrastructure before any repairs or cleanup occur. Witness statements describing what happened, who was present, and any unsafe conditions become invaluable as memories fade. Safety inspection records, training documentation, equipment maintenance logs, and OSHA citations all help establish whether proper safety protocols were followed. Accident reconstruction by engineers, medical testimony documenting injury severity, and expert analysis of industry standards strengthen liability arguments significantly. Documentation of hazardous conditions, communication failures, or known dangers that weren’t properly addressed or communicated helps establish negligence. Our attorneys immediately investigate to preserve all evidence and develop comprehensive documentation supporting your claim.
The Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd represents injured workers on contingency fees, meaning you pay nothing upfront and no attorney fees unless we successfully recover compensation for you. Our fees come from the settlement or verdict we obtain, aligning our interests with yours and ensuring we pursue only cases where recovery is genuinely possible. This arrangement removes financial barriers to obtaining quality legal representation when you’re injured and unable to work. We advance all investigation costs, expert witness fees, and litigation expenses necessary to build your case without requiring payment from you. If we don’t recover compensation for you, you owe no fees or costs. This approach has been specifically developed to help injured workers access justice without financial hardship during their recovery period.
Immediately after a construction accident, prioritize your safety and seek medical attention for any injuries, even those appearing minor. Report the accident to your supervisor and employer right away and file a workers’ compensation claim without delay. Document everything about the incident including the date, time, location, what you were doing, and what happened through written notes while details are fresh. Photograph your injuries, the accident scene, equipment involved, and any hazardous conditions from multiple angles. Collect names and contact information from all witnesses before anyone leaves the site or memories become unclear. Avoid discussing the accident on social media or with anyone except medical professionals and your attorney, as statements can be misused against your interests.
Construction accident cases vary significantly in duration depending on injury severity, liability clarity, and whether settlement negotiations succeed or trial becomes necessary. Simple cases with clear liability and good insurance coverage may resolve within six to twelve months through negotiation. More complex cases involving multiple defendants, serious injuries, or disputed liability typically require one to three years as investigation, discovery, and potential litigation progress. While we work efficiently to resolve your case, rushing settlements before your full medical condition is apparent often results in inadequate compensation. We maintain consistent pressure on responsible parties and insurance companies to reach fair settlements while ensuring you’re not forced to accept premature offers. Your long-term recovery and financial security take priority over speed.
Workers’ compensation provides medical coverage and a portion of lost wages regardless of fault, but restricts your ability to sue your direct employer and excludes pain and suffering damages. These benefits are guaranteed but limited in scope and amount, following statutory schedules. Third-party liability claims allow you to pursue anyone besides your direct employer, including contractors, manufacturers, and property owners, through regular personal injury litigation. Third-party claims provide access to damages for pain and suffering, emotional distress, permanent disability, and diminished quality of life unavailable in workers’ compensation. You can pursue both remedies simultaneously, with workers’ compensation covering medical expenses while third-party claims address broader damages. Understanding both systems allows you to maximize total recovery from all available sources.
Washington follows comparative negligence rules allowing injured parties to recover even if partially at fault for the accident, with compensation reduced proportionally by their percentage of fault. If you were 30% at fault and the defendant was 70% responsible, you could recover 70% of total damages. This principle encourages pursuing claims even in circumstances where your own actions contributed somewhat to the accident. However, if the injured party is determined to be more than 50% at fault, recovery becomes impossible under Washington’s modified comparative negligence rule. Your attorney carefully evaluates all circumstances to develop arguments minimizing your comparative fault percentage while establishing the defendant’s primary responsibility. Thorough investigation and strong legal arguments often overcome initial assertions of significant worker fault.
OSHA regulations establish mandatory safety standards for construction sites that employers must follow to protect workers from hazards and injuries. Violations of OSHA requirements provide strong evidence of negligence, establishing that contractors or employers failed to meet their legal safety obligations. Documentation of OSHA violations discovered during inspections or investigations significantly strengthens personal injury claims. Proven OSHA violations create presumptions of negligence that defendants must overcome, substantially improving your case’s strength and settlement value. Post-accident OSHA investigations often identify specific violations that directly contributed to your injury. Our attorneys obtain and analyze OSHA reports to establish liability and demonstrate systematic failures in workplace safety management.
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