Plain-English guides to the questions injured New Yorkers actually ask — deadlines, no-fault, the serious-injury threshold, the Scaffold Law, and more. When you’re ready for advice on your own situation, one call is free.
The hours right after a crash shape your whole claim. Here's a calm, practical checklist for protecting your health and your case.
New York is a no-fault state — but that phrase confuses almost everyone. Here's what it actually means for your medical bills and your right to sue.
In New York, you can only sue for pain and suffering after a car crash if your injury clears a specific legal bar. Here's what that bar is.
Claims against the MTA and New York City follow rules that end most cases before they start. The most important one is a 90-day clock.
New York's no-fault system protects most drivers' medical bills — but generally not motorcyclists. Here's what that means if you ride.
Winning a fall case is rarely about the fall itself — it's about proving the property owner knew, or should have known, about the hazard.
New York gives construction workers protections that exist nowhere else in the country. The strongest is Labor Law §240 — the Scaffold Law.
Not every bad medical result is malpractice. The law draws a specific line — and it turns on the 'standard of care.'
New York's wrongful death law is specific about who may bring a claim and what a family can recover. Here's how it works.
Workers' comp pays benefits without proving fault — but it never pays for pain and suffering. A third-party claim can.
Contingency fees make it possible to hire a serious injury lawyer with no money up front. Here's how they work in plain English.
The adjuster who calls after your accident is friendly, professional — and working to pay you less. Here's how to protect yourself.
A free call is the fastest way to a straight answer. English or Spanish, no obligation.