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Catastrophic Injury Representation

Miami Serious InjuryAttorney

Catastrophic injury cases involving traumatic brain injury, spinal cord damage, severe orthopedic trauma, amputation, burn injuries, and permanent impairment. Plaintiff and defense representation across South Florida.

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Serious injuries cross Florida's no-fault threshold automatically. Under Fla. Stat. § 627.737, significant scarring, permanent injury, loss of an important bodily function, or death opens the door to full third-party damages including pain and suffering.
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35+
Years of Practice
Florida Bar member since 1989
1989
Florida Bar Licensed
University of Miami School of Law
State & Federal
Court Admission
SDFL (1991), MDFL (2001)
Boutique
Practice Model
Direct attorney involvement
Three Layers of Serious Injury Cases

What Makes a Case Serious

Serious injury cases differ from ordinary personal injury matters in three significant ways. The damages are larger, the experts required are more specialized, and the procedural complications are more demanding. The work has to be built differently from day one.

01

Threshold & Liability

Serious injuries automatically meet Florida's no-fault threshold under Fla. Stat. § 627.737, opening pain and suffering damages. Liability development becomes the primary battleground rather than threshold disputes.

02

Future Damages & Experts

Future medical care, life-care planning, vocational impairment, and permanent disability ratings drive the damages. Specialized experts (neurologists, orthopedists, life-care planners, economists) become essential.

03

Liens, Subrogation & Set-Offs

Medicare, Medicaid, ERISA, hospital, and PIP liens all attach to serious-injury recoveries. Resolving these competing claims is itself a substantial part of the case.

Three Florida Frameworks

Three Statutes That Define These Cases

Serious injury cases operate under the same Florida statutory framework as other personal injury matters, but several provisions take on heightened importance given the damages exposure. The threshold, the SOL, and the comparative fault bar all matter at every stage.

2
Years / Statute of Limitations

Negligence SOL

For injuries on or after March 24, 2023, the statute of limitations is 2 years under Fla. Stat. § 95.11(4)(a). HB 837 cut this from the prior 4-year period.

§
No-Fault Threshold

FS 627.737

Significant scarring, permanent injury, loss of an important bodily function, or death satisfies the threshold and opens pain and suffering damages.

50
% / Comparative Bar

HB 837 Modified Comparative

Florida is a modified comparative negligence state. A finding of more than 50% plaintiff fault bars recovery entirely. Fault below 50% reduces the recovery proportionally.

Plaintiff & Defense Representation

Both Sides of Serious Injury Litigation

The firm represents both injured parties pursuing claims and businesses, drivers, property owners, or insureds defending high-exposure claims. The strategy is different on each side, but the underlying preparation and discipline is the same.

Pursuing a Claim

Plaintiff Representation

  • Liability development against multiple potential defendants
  • Full coverage analysis including excess and umbrella policies
  • Future medical care and life-care planning expert work
  • Lost earning capacity and vocational expert development
  • Permanent impairment ratings under AMA Guides
  • Lien resolution including Medicare, Medicaid, ERISA, and hospital liens
Defending a Claim

Defense Representation

  • Liability defense including comparative fault under HB 837 50% bar
  • Damages challenges and life-care plan critique
  • Pre-existing condition analysis and causation defense
  • Defense IME coordination and expert rebuttal
  • Set-off, structured settlement, and offer of judgment strategy
  • Trial defense and post-judgment motion practice
Categories of Serious Injury

Common Catastrophic Injuries

Serious injuries fall into several recurring categories. Each carries its own medical framework, expert requirements, and damages profile.

Injury Type
Damages Profile
Key Issues
Traumatic Brain InjuryTBI / Concussion
Catastrophic / Lifetime
Mild, moderate, or severe TBI. Neuropsychological testing, cognitive impairment, lost earning capacity. Mild TBI cases require careful documentation since symptoms may not appear on standard imaging.
Spinal Cord InjuryParaplegia / Quadriplegia
Catastrophic / Lifetime
Permanent paralysis, lifetime medical care, home modifications, attendant care, and adaptive equipment. Among the highest-value personal injury cases when liability is clear.
Severe Orthopedic TraumaMultiple Fractures / Surgery
Major / Long-term
Multiple fractures, surgical repair, permanent hardware, joint replacement, ongoing physical therapy, and chronic pain syndromes. Often involves return-to-work and vocational issues.
AmputationLimb Loss
Catastrophic / Lifetime
Surgical amputation, prosthetic devices and replacements over a lifetime, permanent disability, vocational impairment. Damages include both economic and significant non-economic components.
Burn InjuriesSevere Burns
Catastrophic / Long-term
Second and third-degree burns, skin grafting, scarring, disfigurement, infection risk, and ongoing reconstructive surgery. Significant scarring meets no-fault threshold automatically.
Internal Organ DamageSurgical / Chronic
Major / Variable
Solid organ injury, surgical intervention, ongoing monitoring, and potential long-term complications. Often present in high-impact motor vehicle and crush injury cases.
Vision & Hearing LossSensory Loss
Major / Permanent
Permanent partial or complete sensory loss. Vocational impact, independence loss, ongoing medical needs. Loss of an important bodily function under Fla. Stat. § 627.737.
Permanent ImpairmentLong-term Disability
Variable / Long-term
AMA Guides impairment ratings, social security disability, lost earning capacity, and reduced quality of life. The medical impairment rating drives much of the damages calculation.

Summary of common Florida serious injury categories. Not legal advice. Each case turns on the specific medical facts, the liability picture, the available coverage, and the comparative fault analysis. Damages depend heavily on age, occupation, and the specific functional impact of the injury.

Case Approach

How a Serious Injury Case Gets Built

Serious injury cases require a different scale of preparation than ordinary personal injury matters. The damages are larger, the experts required are more specialized, the procedural complications more demanding, and the defense more aggressive. The work has to match the stakes.

Liability development. In serious injury cases, liability is the primary battleground because the threshold is met automatically and damages are substantial. Insurance carriers and corporate defendants invest heavily in defending these matters. Police reports, scene reconstruction, witness statements, surveillance video, and accident reconstruction all need development beyond what an ordinary case requires. Multiple potential defendants are common: identifying every entity with potential liability and securing every available coverage source is critical.

Coverage and excess policy identification. Serious injury damages typically exceed primary policy limits. Excess and umbrella policies, additional defendants, MCS-90 endorsements in trucking cases, and any other available coverage become essential. Florida policy stacking analysis, coverage by occurrence or per-person limits, and the interplay between primary and excess carriers all matter when the damages are catastrophic.

Future medical care and life-care planning. The dominant damages category in serious injury cases is future medical care. A life-care planner produces a comprehensive cost analysis covering ongoing medical treatment, equipment, attendant care, home modifications, prosthetic replacement schedules, and other lifetime needs. Economists then reduce the lifetime cost projection to present value. Vocational experts evaluate lost earning capacity and any residual employability. These expert workups are essential and they take time.

Lien resolution and net recovery. A serious injury recovery is often subject to multiple competing liens. Medicare and Medicaid have statutory rights of recovery. ERISA health plans assert subrogation under federal law. Hospital liens under Florida law attach to recoveries. PIP and med-pay carriers may have subrogation rights. Florida workers' compensation carriers have liens under Fla. Stat. § 440.39. Negotiating these competing claims often determines what the injured person actually receives. The gross settlement number is meaningless without the lien resolution that determines net recovery.

Litigation readiness and trial preparation. Serious injury cases that resolve favorably are the ones where the defense knows the case will be tried if it cannot be resolved on appropriate terms. Filing suit, completing discovery, taking corporate representative and defense expert depositions, and preparing for trial all build the leverage that produces a real settlement offer. Cases that do go to trial require months of focused preparation. The work is substantial but it is what produces the result.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What qualifies as a serious injury case?+
A serious injury case typically involves catastrophic or permanent injury: traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury, severe orthopedic trauma requiring surgery, amputation, severe burns, internal organ damage, vision or hearing loss, or any injury that causes permanent impairment. These cases automatically satisfy Florida's no-fault threshold under Fla. Stat. § 627.737, opening the door to full third-party damages including pain and suffering. The damages typically include future medical care and lost earning capacity in addition to past medical expenses.
What is a life-care plan and why is it important?+
A life-care plan is a comprehensive document prepared by a certified life-care planner that projects the cost of future medical care, equipment, attendant care, home modifications, and other ongoing needs over the injured person's lifetime. An economist then reduces these projected costs to present value. In serious injury cases, the life-care plan is often the largest single damages category. Insurance carriers will not pay catastrophic damages without a credible life-care plan, and the defense will produce its own competing plan.
What is permanent impairment and how is it rated?+
Permanent impairment is a measured loss of function that persists after maximum medical improvement. Florida and most states use the AMA Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment to assign percentage ratings. The impairment rating affects damages calculations, lost earning capacity analysis, and Florida no-fault threshold satisfaction. Treating physicians, qualified medical examiners, and defense IME doctors all may produce competing impairment ratings.
How are liens handled in serious injury settlements?+
Multiple liens typically attach to a serious injury recovery. Medicare has a statutory right of recovery under federal law. Medicaid asserts state-law subrogation. ERISA health plans assert federal subrogation rights. Florida hospitals can record statutory hospital liens. PIP and med-pay carriers may have subrogation. Workers' compensation carriers have liens under Fla. Stat. § 440.39. Each lien must be identified, negotiated, and resolved before final distribution. Lien resolution is a substantial part of the case and significantly affects net recovery.
What is lost earning capacity?+
Lost earning capacity is the difference between what the injured person could have earned over their working lifetime before the injury and what they can realistically earn after the injury. It is different from lost wages. Lost wages are past income missed; lost earning capacity is future earning ability. Vocational experts evaluate the injured person's pre-injury job skills, education, and physical abilities, then determine post-injury capacity given the medical limitations. Economists then reduce the lifetime difference to present value. Lost earning capacity is often the second-largest damages category in serious injury cases.
How long do I have to file a serious injury claim in Florida?+
For injuries on or after March 24, 2023, the statute of limitations is 2 years under Fla. Stat. § 95.11(4)(a). HB 837 cut this from the prior 4-year period. The deadline is strict. Missing the statute of limitations permanently bars the claim. Wrongful death is also 2 years under Fla. Stat. § 95.11(4)(d). Medical malpractice has its own deadline under Fla. Stat. § 95.11(4)(b) with a 2-year discovery rule and a 4-year statute of repose.
Are serious injury cases worth more than ordinary personal injury cases?+
Generally yes, because the damages are larger. Future medical care, lost earning capacity, and significant pain and suffering all contribute to higher case values. However, the case value depends heavily on liability strength, available coverage limits, comparative fault, and lien exposure. A serious injury case with disputed liability and limited coverage may resolve for substantially less than a clearer-liability case with full coverage and lower damages.
What is a structured settlement?+
A structured settlement provides settlement proceeds as periodic payments over time rather than a single lump sum. The defendant or its insurer purchases an annuity that funds the payments. Structured settlements are common in catastrophic injury cases, particularly involving minors, persons with cognitive impairment, or where lifetime needs are substantial. They provide tax advantages under Internal Revenue Code section 104(a)(2) and can ensure long-term financial security. Whether to structure all or part of a settlement is a strategic decision discussed at the resolution stage.
What does it cost to hire a serious injury attorney?+
Plaintiff serious injury cases are typically handled on contingency: the attorney is paid a percentage of the recovery only if there is a recovery. There is no upfront fee. Costs (filing fees, expert fees, life-care planning, accident reconstruction, deposition costs) are typically advanced by the firm and reimbursed at resolution. Costs in serious injury cases can be substantial given the expert work required. Defense representation is structured differently, typically on hourly or flat-fee arrangements.
Does the firm represent both plaintiffs and defendants?+
Yes. The firm represents both injured parties pursuing claims and businesses, drivers, property owners, or insureds facing claims. Each side requires different strategy, but the underlying preparation, document review, and disciplined approach to the case is the same. Conflicts are screened at intake on every matter.
Speak With Andre

Direct attorney access at (305) 774-7000

Serious injury cases require early case development, careful coverage analysis, and substantial expert work. Cases that resolve well are the ones where counsel was engaged early, every available coverage was identified, and the damages were built with the full expert workup needed for catastrophic injury claims.

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