When a sudden accident changes everything, you need clear answers and steady guidance. A Cowpens catastrophic injury lawyer from Farmer & Morris Law, PLLC, can help people and families facing severe, long-term harm after crashes, unsafe property conditions, dangerous products, or medical errors in South Carolina.
We handle claims involving traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, amputations, severe burns, and other life-altering harm. Our local team is ready to review your options and pursue compensation under South Carolina law.
To learn more, talk to a Cowpens personal injury lawyer today and schedule a free consultation. We’ve helped over 10,000 clients, and we’re ready to address your legal needs.
Why Hire a Cowpens Catastrophic Injury Lawyer from Our Team?
Local knowledge matters. Cowpens sits along the I-85 corridor and key routes like Highway 110 and U.S. 29, where high-speed traffic, truck activity, and local businesses converge. We know how to investigate crashes in this area and how cases move in nearby courts.
You can expect straight talk about strengths, risks, and timelines, plus a fee model that aligns with your recovery. We work on a contingency fee, so you pay no attorney’s fees unless we recover compensation for you.
Catastrophic injuries demand time, resources, and focus. We bring in the necessary experts, schedule depositions efficiently, and prepare you for each step. Our goal is to minimize stress while pursuing the best result available under the law.
What Counts as a Catastrophic Injury?
Catastrophic injuries are those that disrupt your daily life in a lasting way—physically, financially, and emotionally. They often include traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord injuries with paralysis, multiple fractures, amputations, severe burns, and significant organ damage.
Many clients also face profound psychological effects, such as chronic pain, anxiety, or post-traumatic stress.
We help adults, teens, and children who suffer these injuries in collisions, workplace events, on unsafe property, from defective products, or through medical negligence. Family members come to us when a loved one cannot speak for themselves or has died from their injuries. In each matter, we tailor a path forward that addresses immediate needs and long-term stability.
What to Do After a Life-Changing Accident in Cowpens
After emergency medical care, document as much as you can. Photograph vehicles, hazards, and visible injuries. Save names of witnesses, incident reports, and any notices from insurers or employers. If you cannot gather these items, we can locate them later through requests and investigations.
Follow your medical plan and keep every appointment. Gaps in care invite arguments that your injuries are unrelated or less serious. Maintain a simple journal tracking symptoms, doctor visits, missed work, and how daily activities are affected. These details often become persuasive evidence.
Avoid recorded statements or sweeping releases before you speak with an attorney. You can provide basic facts to your insurer, but the company can use early statements against you. We handle communications with carriers so you can focus on treatment.
Compensation You Can Pursue After a Catastrophic Injury
Your compensation should account for both immediate losses and the costs that follow you for years. We document hospitalizations, surgeries, therapies, and home care, as well as lost wages and the impact on future earning capacity. Non-economic harm, including pain, disfigurement, and loss of enjoyment of life, deserves equal attention.
We also evaluate whether punitive damages may apply against particularly reckless conduct, such as drunk driving or willful violations of safety rules.
Deadlines and Filing Rules Under South Carolina Law
You need to file most South Carolina personal injury claims within three years of the injury under S.C. Code § 15-3-530. Wrongful death actions generally share the same three-year period, measured from the date of death. Evidence can fade fast, so we begin preservation work as soon as you contact us.
If your accident involves a government entity —such as a city, county, or state agency—the South Carolina Tort Claims Act typically shortens the time to two years. These cases also have damage caps and specific procedural requirements that we track closely.
Medical malpractice has additional rules, including a Notice of Intent to File Suit and an expert affidavit before litigation under S.C. Code § 15-79-125. There are exceptions and tolling provisions for minors or when victims discover injuries later. We review the facts to identify the correct deadlines and any pre-suit steps.
How We Build Your Case
We start with a detailed intake and review of your medical status. Then we gather and organize records, bills, photographs, videos, and witness statements.
We often retain accident reconstructionists, biomechanical experts, life-care planners, vocational specialists, and economists to quantify long-term losses.
We map your care plan with your medical team to understand future surgeries, therapy, medications, and assistive technology. For many clients, the cost of durable medical equipment, attendant care, and home or vehicle modifications drives the value of the claim. We convert those needs into concrete, verifiable figures.
Throughout the process, we keep you updated and invite your feedback. You will know the status of negotiations, what to expect next, and how to prepare for milestones such as depositions or independent medical exams.
Catastrophic Injury Cases We Handle in South Carolina
Catastrophic injuries arise in many settings. Our team represents clients in claims and lawsuits across Spartanburg County and beyond, including:
- Tractor-trailer and commercial vehicle crashes on I-85 and regional routes
- Motorcycle and pedestrian impacts cause brain and spinal injuries
- Workplace and industrial incidents, including third-party liability
- Falls and other hazards on unsafe commercial or residential property
- Defective products and machinery failures that cause amputations or burns
- Medical negligence resulting in permanent impairment or wrongful death
A catastrophic injury lawyer in Cowpens can discuss your specific losses when you reach out for help.
How Fault Is Shared and What That Means for Your Recovery
Under South Carolina’s modified comparative negligence rule, your compensation is reduced by your percentage of fault up to 50%. If a jury finds you 20% responsible, a $1,000,000 verdict would become $800,000. If you are found 51% responsible, you cannot recover.
In multi-defendant cases, apportionment matters. We work to hold each party accountable so you are not left with gaps if one defendant has limited coverage or assets.
Start Your Recovery With a Free Case Review
Catastrophic injuries change lives in an instant. You do not have to sort out liability rules, insurance tactics, or damage caps on your own. Let our team at Farmer & Morris Law, PLLC, review your situation, preserve key evidence, and build a plan that addresses both today’s needs and tomorrow’s challenges.
Contact us for a free, no-obligation consultation. The sooner we start, the sooner we can collect time-sensitive evidence and move your case forward. Get the help you need from a Cowpens catastrophic injury attorney.