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How Attorneys Handle Construction Injury Claims

19th May 2026
You finally picked up the phone and called a lawyer about your construction injury. What comes next? The forms start arriving. The questions stack up. Strangers from offices you have never set foot in start lighting up your caller ID. Most people have no real sense of what happens once an attorney takes the case. The process is straightforward. It runs on actual steps, in sequence, with people who are familiar with it. Here’s a simple walk-through of how attorneys handle construction injury claims from that first phone call to the day the file finally closes. The First Conversation and What It Actually Covers The first call a construction accident lawyer in New York takes will be two-fold. Listening first. Asking the right follow-ups second. They want the story in your words. And then the finer details. The site location. The date. The contractor’s credentials. What's at stake? The names of any witnesses to the accident. Underneath those questions, they are quietly running the facts against Labor Law Sections 240(1) and 241(6). Were you working at a height? Was a particular safety regulation violated? Those answers will dictate what happens next. Attorney-client privilege covers the entire conversation. Getting Preservation Letters Out the Door Once retained, the lawyer will draft spoliation letters quickly. Typically, on the same day, when the injury is fresh on an active site. Letters get sent to the general contractor, the property owner, the equipment vendor, and every subcontractor involved in the job. They all say the same thing, in legal terms. Leave your equipment alone. Don’t touch the scaffold. Do not alter the safety logs. What if a contractor disregards that letter and cleans up anyway? New York courts can give an adverse inference instruction at trial, telling the jury it should assume the missing evidence would be detrimental to the contractor. Filing the Workers' Comp Claim Alongside the Civil Case A reliable lawyer runs on two tracks simultaneously. Workers’ Compensation deals with urgent matters. Doctor bills and partial wage reimbursement. Under the New York Workers’ Compensation Law, benefits are payable within days of filing. The civil suit moves at its own pace. It targets the third parties who actually caused the damage. Damages include pain and suffering, loss of earning capacity, and future medical expenses. Section 29 of the Workers’ Compensation Law covers the lien that the comp carrier has against any civil recovery, and your lawyer negotiates that lien down at the end so you keep more of the settlement. Discovery, Depositions, and the Records That Surface The lawsuit hits the docket. The discovery begins. Each side submits written questions, requests for documents, and lists of witnesses. The deposition dates cover the entire calendar year. Now, the real investigation begins. Foremen swear an oath. Safety officers review protocols. Corporate representatives speak for the company. The subpoenas result in considerable case paperwork, including daily safety logs, pre-shift inspection forms, OSHA citations, and subcontractor indemnity agreements. It also includes equipment maintenance history, toolbox talk sign-ins, and the site-specific safety plan. They usually have inconsistencies between what management says in court and what the paper trail says. Trial Prep, Mediation, and the Final Push Once discovery is complete, the matter moves to the closing phase. Expert witnesses get hired. Damage reports get established. Vocational and medical experts put numbers on paper.  Most cases move to mediation before a jury ever gets inside a courtroom. After a lawyer files the notice of issue, the New York Supreme Court will usually order settlement conferences. Most construction cases settle in the weeks before a trial date, and offers become more serious as the trial date nears. Conclusion Claims for construction injuries are not always straightforward. They twist, slow down, and speed up. Very unpredictable at times. It’s the process behind them that stays stable. Something your experienced counsel has mastered. While the lawyer handles the calls, filings, and back-and-forth with the insurer, your job is simple. Focus on healing. Keep every record. Make every appointment. Pick up the phone when the office calls. Save the texts, bills, photos, and work emails, and hand them all over to the legal team. Do not put off that first call. Evidence disappears quickly, and the sooner the work begins, the more material there is to build on.

Lawyer Monthly is the go-to digital destination for legal professionals seeking the latest industry updates, expert commentary, and practical guidance. Whether it’s corporate law, litigation trends, or the evolving legal landscape, Lawyer Monthly keeps its readers ahead of the curve.


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