Switch to ADA Accessible Theme Close Menu
+
Call for a Free Consultation
Hablamos Español

Richmond, TX Fractures Lawyer

Broken bones change the rhythm of daily life in ways that are hard to explain to someone who hasn’t lived through one. A fracture in your wrist means you can’t drive. A broken leg can cost you weeks of work. A fractured vertebra can threaten your independence for months or longer. When someone else’s negligence caused that injury, the compensation you pursue has to reflect the real scope of what you’ve lost, not just the emergency room bill. Henrietta Ezeoke Law Firm has spent more than 20 years representing injury victims across the Houston area, including clients from Richmond, TX who are dealing with the serious aftermath of fractures caused by accidents. We handle these cases with the same personal attention we bring to every client we represent.

Why Fracture Claims in Fort Bend County Are More Complicated Than They First Appear

At first glance, a broken bone sounds like a clean-cut injury. There’s an X-ray. There’s a diagnosis. Shouldn’t compensation follow naturally from that? In practice, it rarely works that way. Insurance adjusters are trained to look for reasons to reduce the value of a fracture claim, and they have several angles they routinely pursue.

One of the most common tactics is disputing the cause. If you have any prior history of injury to the same body part, or if there was any delay between the accident and your diagnosis, adjusters will argue the fracture was pre-existing or unrelated to the incident. Another approach is to minimize treatment. They may argue that because you eventually healed, the injury wasn’t serious enough to justify the compensation you’re requesting. They rarely account for the weeks you couldn’t work, the follow-up surgeries some fractures require, or the post-recovery complications like arthritis, nerve damage, or chronic pain that many fracture patients develop over time.

Fort Bend County courts, including the 400th and 434th District Courts that handle civil litigation in this area, apply Texas negligence law with strict attention to evidence and causation. Building a fracture case that holds up in those courts requires more than a medical record. It requires connecting the fracture to the defendant’s conduct in a way that is medically supported, factually documented, and legally framed to counter predictable defenses.

The Types of Accidents That Commonly Cause Fractures in the Richmond Area

Richmond sits at the intersection of several high-traffic corridors, including US-90A, FM 359, and the sections of Highway 36 that run through Fort Bend County. Crashes on these roads are a consistent source of fracture injuries. High-impact collisions frequently cause broken ribs, clavicle fractures, and lower extremity injuries from dashboard contact or deployment of airbags at close range. Truck accidents involving commercial vehicles on these routes tend to produce the most severe fractures because of the mass differential between a commercial truck and a passenger vehicle.

  • Car and truck accidents on US-90A, FM 359, and Highway 36 where impact forces are sufficient to fracture ribs, arms, legs, or vertebrae
  • Slip and fall incidents on commercial or residential property where the fall causes wrist, hip, or ankle fractures, injuries particularly common among older adults
  • Construction site accidents where falls from height, falling objects, or equipment failures cause fractures that qualify as third-party liability claims
  • Bicycle and pedestrian accidents where an unprotected person struck by a vehicle sustains fractures to the collarbone, pelvis, or lower limbs
  • Premises liability events like stairway collapses or inadequate maintenance that result in falls causing broken bones

Each of these accident types carries its own liability framework. A fracture from a fall on someone’s property invokes Texas premises liability standards, which turn on whether the property owner knew or should have known about the dangerous condition. A fracture from a construction accident may involve OSHA violations, equipment manufacturer liability, or contractor negligence separate from any workers’ compensation claim. The accident type determines how the case is built, who the defendants are, and what evidence needs to be gathered.

What Full Compensation for a Fracture Actually Looks Like

Settlement offers extended early in a fracture case almost always undervalue the injury. The reason is simple: the long-term picture isn’t clear yet. A fracture that appears straightforward in the first weeks can develop complications that dramatically change the medical trajectory, and any settlement you accept before that picture is complete closes the door on recovering for those complications.

Compensation in a fracture case can include the obvious economic costs: emergency care, imaging, orthopedic treatment, surgical hardware if plates or screws were placed, physical therapy, and follow-up appointments. But the full value of a fracture claim also reaches into income lost during recovery, reduced earning capacity if the injury affects your ability to return to your occupation, and non-economic harm that includes pain, disruption to daily activities, and the emotional toll of a serious physical limitation.

Some fractures result in permanent consequences. Femur fractures, certain spinal fractures, and complex fractures near joints can leave lasting limitations. In those situations, a damages calculation that only addresses current costs is inadequate. Future medical expenses, including potential revision surgeries or ongoing pain management, need to be documented and included. We work with medical professionals and, where necessary, financial experts to build a damages picture that captures what the injury will actually cost over time, not just what it has cost so far.

Questions Richmond Fracture Clients Often Ask

How long do I have to file a fracture injury lawsuit in Texas?

Texas gives most personal injury plaintiffs two years from the date of the injury to file a lawsuit. Missing that deadline almost always means losing the right to recover. There are limited exceptions, including cases involving government entities where notice requirements apply much earlier, sometimes within six months of the incident. If your injury was caused by a commercial driver or a government vehicle, those shorter timelines matter immediately.

Should I accept the first settlement offer from the insurance company?

Early settlement offers are almost never the right answer in a fracture case. Insurers extend early offers before your full medical picture is established, which means the offer reflects only a fraction of what the claim is worth. Once you accept a settlement and sign a release, there is no going back regardless of how your condition develops. Having an attorney review any offer before you respond is a basic protection you should not skip.

What if I was partly at fault for the accident that broke my bone?

Texas follows a modified comparative fault rule. As long as your share of fault is 50 percent or less, you can still recover compensation, though it will be reduced by your percentage of fault. If a jury finds you were 20 percent at fault, your recovery is reduced by 20 percent. The insurer will often argue you bear more fault than the facts support, which is one reason legal representation during negotiations matters significantly.

Does it matter what type of fracture I have when assessing case value?

Yes. A clean, non-displaced fracture that heals without complication carries a different damages profile than a comminuted fracture requiring surgery, or a stress fracture that went undetected and worsened over time. The nature of the break, the treatment required, the recovery timeline, and any permanent effects all factor into what the claim is actually worth. Treating all fractures as equivalent would produce inaccurate valuations in both directions.

What if my fracture was not diagnosed immediately after the accident?

Delayed diagnosis is common, particularly with stress fractures, rib fractures, and small bone fractures in the hands and feet. The delay does not eliminate your claim, but it gives the defense an argument that the injury was not caused by the accident. This makes thorough medical documentation and a clear narrative linking your symptoms to the incident more important, not less.

Can I still recover if the driver who hit me did not have enough insurance coverage?

Texas allows injured drivers to pursue uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage through their own policy in situations where the at-fault driver’s coverage is inadequate. Whether that coverage applies, how much is available, and how to pursue it depends on the specific policy language. Other avenues such as third-party liability claims against an employer or vehicle owner may also apply depending on the circumstances of the crash.

Reaching Out to a Fractures Attorney Serving Richmond and Fort Bend County

Fracture injuries deserve legal representation that takes the long view: what this injury has cost you, what it will cost you, and what a fair resolution actually looks like given the full scope of the harm. Henrietta Ezeoke Law Firm represents clients on a contingency basis, which means no legal fees are owed unless compensation is recovered on your behalf. We serve Richmond and the surrounding Fort Bend County communities, bringing more than 20 years of personal injury experience to cases involving broken bones and the serious consequences that follow them. If you want a Richmond fracture attorney who will treat your case with the individual attention it requires, we are ready to have that conversation.

MileMark Media

© 2022 - 2026 Henrietta Ezeoke Law Firm. All rights reserved.
This law firm website and legal marketing are managed by MileMark Media.