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Missouri City & Sugar Land Personal Injury Lawyer > Sienna Amputation Injury Lawyer

Sienna Amputation Injury Lawyer

Losing a limb changes everything. The physical reality is immediate and permanent, but the legal and financial consequences unfold over months and years in ways most injury victims are not prepared for. At Henrietta Ezeoke Law Firm, we represent amputation injury victims in Sienna and the surrounding Fort Bend County area. With more than 20 years of personal injury experience, attorney Henrietta Ezeoke handles Sienna amputation injury cases with the direct involvement and careful preparation these complex claims demand. This is not the kind of case that benefits from a volume firm. It requires an attorney who understands the full scope of what was taken from you.

How Amputations Happen and Who Is Legally Responsible

Traumatic amputations in the Sienna area occur across a range of settings. Construction sites along the Highway 6 and Fort Bend Parkway corridors, commercial vehicle collisions on the Sienna Parkway extension, workplace equipment failures, and serious car accidents on FM 521 are among the most common causes. In some cases, a surgical amputation follows an injury that was allowed to deteriorate because of delayed treatment or medical error. The mechanism matters less than the underlying question: did someone else’s negligence cause or contribute to this outcome?

Liability in amputation cases frequently involves more than one party. An employer who failed to maintain equipment. A trucking company whose driver caused a catastrophic collision. A property owner who allowed a dangerous condition to persist. A manufacturer whose defective product malfunctioned. Identifying every responsible party is not optional. It is the foundation of recovering compensation that actually reflects the full extent of this injury.

What Drives the Value of an Amputation Injury Claim

These cases carry substantial value, but that value has to be built. Insurance companies do not voluntarily account for everything an amputation costs. The damages in a well-prepared claim typically include:

  • The cost of the initial hospitalization, surgery, and acute care following the amputation
  • Prosthetic limb expenses, including fittings, replacements, and technological upgrades over a lifetime
  • Physical and occupational therapy, which for amputees is an ongoing process, not a finite one
  • Lost income and lost earning capacity if the amputation affects the victim’s ability to work in their previous occupation
  • Home modification costs such as accessibility renovations, vehicle adaptations, and assistive equipment
  • Pain, suffering, phantom limb pain, and the documented psychological effects of limb loss

Calculating future damages accurately requires expert input. We work with medical professionals, rehabilitation specialists, vocational consultants, and economists who can substantiate long-term projections in a form that holds up under scrutiny. Insurance adjusters challenge these numbers aggressively. A claim supported by thorough expert analysis is far more difficult to minimize than one that relies on general estimates.

The Insurance Company’s Playbook in Amputation Cases

Insurers approach high-value claims like amputations with a well-developed strategy. The early moves are often the most consequential, and many injury victims make decisions in those first weeks that affect their case significantly.

One common tactic is requesting a recorded statement shortly after the injury, while the victim is still in the hospital or in the fog of early recovery. These statements are used to establish limitations around the claim before the full scope of the injury is even understood. Another is offering a fast settlement that accounts for current medical bills but ignores the decades of future prosthetic costs, lost wages, and medical care that amputation victims actually face.

Texas follows a modified comparative fault rule. If an insurer can establish that the injured person was even partially at fault, the compensation is reduced proportionally. If fault is assigned at more than 50 percent, the injured person recovers nothing. In cases where the facts are disputed, this becomes a lever insurers use to pressure claimants into accepting less. Having an attorney who understands how these arguments are constructed, and how to counter them, changes the dynamic.

Henrietta Ezeoke has spent more than two decades handling claims against insurance companies in Texas. She is familiar with how these cases get managed internally and what it takes to position a claim for a fair outcome, whether that means a negotiated resolution or taking the case to trial.

Questions About Amputation Injury Claims in Sienna

How long do I have to file an amputation injury claim in Texas?

Texas law generally gives injury victims two years from the date of the injury to file a personal injury lawsuit. Missing this deadline almost always results in losing the right to pursue compensation entirely. There are limited exceptions, and some circumstances can shorten the timeline, particularly if a government entity is involved. Do not wait to get legal advice.

What if my amputation was caused by a workplace accident?

Workplace amputations in Texas involve layered legal questions. If your employer subscribes to workers’ compensation, that system limits certain claims against the employer directly. However, third parties, such as equipment manufacturers, contractors, or property owners, may be separately liable. In many workplace amputation cases, a third-party personal injury claim is available in addition to or instead of a workers’ comp claim, and it can yield significantly higher compensation.

Can I recover compensation if I was partially at fault?

Yes, under Texas law, you can recover as long as your share of fault does not exceed 50 percent. Your compensation is reduced by your percentage of fault. For example, if you are found 20 percent at fault and your total damages are $1,000,000, you would recover $800,000. These determinations are contested in most serious cases, which is one reason how fault is framed from the beginning of a claim matters.

What if the amputation was the result of a car accident involving an uninsured driver?

Uninsured motorist coverage may apply if you carry it on your own policy. This is a common scenario in serious injury cases throughout the greater Houston area. We review all available insurance coverage, including underinsured motorist policies, when determining what compensation sources exist for an amputation injury victim.

How is a prosthetic limb factored into a settlement?

A modern prosthetic limb is not a one-time expense. Prosthetics require replacement every several years, and advanced models that restore meaningful function, particularly for active individuals, carry significant costs. Life care planners and medical experts provide documentation of these projected costs over a person’s expected lifespan. A settlement that does not account for these future expenses is almost always inadequate. We do not accept settlement offers that fail to address the full economic picture.

Do amputation injury cases always go to trial?

No. The majority of personal injury cases, including amputation cases, resolve before trial. However, the credibility and preparation of the case directly affect what the other side is willing to offer. When insurers know an attorney is prepared to try a case and has the record and resources to do so, settlement negotiations tend to produce more serious offers. We prepare every case as though it will go to trial, even when settlement is the likely outcome.

How does the no-fee arrangement work?

Henrietta Ezeoke Law Firm handles personal injury cases on a contingency fee basis. You pay no legal fees unless we recover compensation on your behalf. There is no upfront cost to begin representation, and the fee structure is explained clearly before you commit to anything.

Representation for Sienna Amputation Victims Who Need an Attorney Who Shows Up

Clients at this firm do not get handed off to paralegals or case managers and left to wonder what is happening. Henrietta Ezeoke handles her cases personally, and clients have direct access to their attorney throughout the process. For someone managing the medical, physical, and emotional weight of a traumatic amputation, that consistency matters. You should not have to re-explain your situation every time you call your own law firm. If you are looking for a Sienna amputation injury attorney who will evaluate your case honestly and handle it with the seriousness it demands, contact Henrietta Ezeoke Law Firm to schedule a consultation at no cost to you.

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