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      Varghese Summersett Background

      Fort Bend Construction Accident Lawyer

      Construction accidents in Fort Bend County can leave workers with devastating injuries, mounting medical bills, and no clear path forward. Texas law gives injured workers and their families powerful legal tools to pursue compensation — but insurance companies and employers move fast to protect themselves. You need an experienced lawyer on your side just as quickly.

      Varghese Summersett Legal Team

      Why Fort Bend Workers Trust Varghese Summersett

      Fort Bend County is one of the fastest-growing counties in the United States, with major commercial, residential, and infrastructure construction happening across Sugar Land, Missouri City, Richmond, Rosenberg, and Katy. That growth means more construction workers — and more risk.

      Varghese Summersett’s Personal Injury Division is built for exactly these cases. The team includes Partner Damian Williams,  who has handled complex construction-site injury and industrial accident cases throughout Texas. Damian is known for trial-ready preparation and has secured multiple seven-figure verdicts and settlements in catastrophic injury and wrongful death cases. He is recognized by Lawdragon as one of the 500 Leading Plaintiff Consumer Lawyers and named one of the Best Plaintiff Lawyers Under 40 by D Magazine.

      Partner Ty Stimpson leads the Personal Injury Division. A former prosecutor at both the Dallas County and Tarrant County District Attorney’s Offices, Ty has built a reputation for exceptional negotiation and trial skills. He has been named a Texas Super Lawyer, a 40 Under 40 honoree by Fort Worth Inc., and a Fellow of the Texas Bar Foundation.

      The firm has more than 70 team members across four Texas offices and a track record that includes over 1,600 dismissals and 800+ charge reductions on the criminal side — a testament to a firm that fights hard in every practice area. On the personal injury side, the team has recovered significant compensation for clients suffering catastrophic injuries , amputations, and traumatic brain injuries — exactly the kind of harm construction accidents cause.

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      Common Questions After a Fort Bend Construction Accident

      Common Questions After a Fort Bend Construction Accident

      Can I sue if I was hurt on a construction site?

      Possibly — and against multiple parties. Texas law does not require all employers to carry workers’ compensation insurance. If your employer opted out, you may be able to sue them directly. Even if workers’ comp applies to your direct employer, third parties — such as a general contractor, subcontractor, equipment manufacturer, or property owner — may still be liable for your injuries.

      What if I’m an independent contractor?

      Independent contractors are not covered by workers’ compensation, but they have full access to the civil court system. If another party’s negligence caused your injury, you can pursue a personal injury claim regardless of your employment classification.

      What are the most common construction accidents in Fort Bend County?

      OSHA identifies four leading causes of construction fatalities — known as the “Fatal Four:” falls from heights, being struck by objects, electrocution, and caught-in or caught-between accidents. Fort Bend’s active construction corridors along U.S. 59/69, Highway 90, and the Grand Parkway (SH 99) generate a high volume of these incidents each year. Scaffolding accidents and explosion injuries are also common on industrial and commercial job sites throughout the county.

      Does Texas workers’ comp prevent me from suing?

      If your direct employer is a workers’ compensation subscriber, that coverage generally limits your ability to sue that employer. It does not, however, prevent claims against other negligent parties on the job site. Many construction accident cases involve multiple defendants, and identifying all of them is one of the first things a skilled attorney does.

      The Law Behind Your Claim: What Must Be Proven

      The Law Behind Your Claim: What Must Be Proven

      A Fort Bend construction accident claim is a personal injury case grounded in negligence. Under Texas law, your attorney must prove four elements by a preponderance of the evidence — meaning it is more likely than not that each element is true. The burden of proof falls entirely on you as the injured party, not the defendant.

      Under Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 33.001 , the four elements are:

      • Duty: The defendant owed you a legal duty of care. General contractors, subcontractors, property owners, and equipment manufacturers all owe duties to workers and others on a job site.
      • Breach: The defendant failed to meet that duty. Examples include ignoring OSHA fall protection requirements, failing to warn workers of hazards, or sending defective equipment to a job site.
      • Causation: The breach directly caused your injury. Your attorney must connect the defendant’s specific failure to the specific harm you suffered.
      • Damages: You suffered actual losses as a result — medical expenses, lost income, pain and suffering, and more.

      Texas’s comparative fault rule matters. Under CP § 33.001, your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. If you are found more than 50% responsible for the accident, you are barred from recovering any compensation. Insurance companies aggressively push fault onto injured workers — which is exactly why having an attorney is so important from day one.

      For cases involving non-subscribing employers, Texas Labor Code § 406 removes certain employer defenses — including contributory negligence, assumption of risk, and the fellow-servant rule — making it significantly easier for injured workers to recover.

      What Damages Can You Recover

      What Damages Are Available?

      Texas law allows injured construction workers to seek two categories of compensation.

      Economic damages cover your actual financial losses: medical bills (past and future), lost wages, reduced earning capacity, rehabilitation costs, and out-of-pocket expenses related to the injury.

      Non-economic damages compensate for losses that don’t come with a receipt: physical pain, mental anguish, disfigurement, loss of enjoyment of life, and the impact on your relationships.

      In cases involving gross negligence — where a company’s conduct goes far beyond ordinary carelessness — Texas law also allows exemplary (punitive) damages to punish the wrongdoer and deter future misconduct. These are not available in every case and require clear and convincing evidence.

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      How Long Do You Have to File in Texas?

      Under Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 16.003, you have two years from the date of your injury to file a personal injury lawsuit. If a loved one was killed in a construction accident, the same two-year window applies to a wrongful death claim. Missing this deadline almost always means losing your right to compensation forever.

      There are limited exceptions — for example, when injuries are not discovered immediately or when the injured party is a minor. But waiting is never the right move. Evidence disappears, witnesses’ memories fade, and surveillance footage gets overwritten. The sooner you speak with an attorney, the stronger your case.

      You can learn more about Texas deadlines on our statute of limitations page.

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      What Is a Fort Bend Construction Accident Case Worth?

      There is no standard settlement amount for construction accident cases. The value of your claim depends on the severity of your injuries, the cost of your medical care, how your ability to work has been affected, and the degree of the defendant’s negligence.

      Construction accidents often produce some of the highest-value personal injury claims because the injuries tend to be severe: broken bones, spinal damage, traumatic brain injuries, amputations, and burns. Cases involving permanent disability or wrongful death can carry values in the millions.

      What your case is actually worth depends on a thorough investigation — something that requires an attorney with the resources and experience to take on large construction companies, general contractors, and their insurance carriers. Read more about how attorneys evaluate claims on our personal injury settlements page.

      How a Fort Bend Construction Accident Case Works

      How a Fort Bend Construction Accident Case Works

      Most people have no idea what to expect after a serious construction accident. Here is how the process typically unfolds.

      Immediate aftermath: Get medical attention right away, even if you feel like you can walk it off. Report the accident to your employer or the general contractor and document the scene if you are able to do so safely. Do not give recorded statements to any insurance adjuster before speaking with a lawyer.

      Investigation: Your attorney will gather evidence — OSHA records, safety inspection logs, equipment maintenance records, witness statements, surveillance footage, and expert analysis. In complex cases involving multiple defendants, this investigation can take weeks.

      Demand and negotiation: Once your medical condition stabilizes and your damages are clear, your attorney will submit a formal demand to the responsible parties and their insurers. Most cases resolve through negotiation, but not always.

      Litigation: If a fair settlement cannot be reached, your attorney will file suit in Fort Bend County District Court in Richmond. Discovery, depositions, and potentially a jury trial follow. Having attorneys who actually try cases — and who insurance companies know will try cases — matters enormously at the negotiating table.

      Why Insurance Companies Fight Construction Claims

      Why Insurance Companies Fight Construction Claims

      General contractors, construction companies, and equipment manufacturers carry large commercial liability policies. Their insurers have experienced adjusters and defense attorneys working your case from the moment the accident is reported. Their goal is to minimize the payout — or eliminate it entirely.

      Common tactics include blaming the injured worker for the accident, arguing that OSHA violations are irrelevant to civil liability, disputing the severity of injuries, and offering quick lowball settlements before victims understand their full damages. An experienced construction accident attorney knows these moves and knows how to counter them.

      See also: Texas Industrial Injury Attorney and Construction Accidents.

      Make the Call

      Fort Bend County Local Resources

      If you or a coworker has been injured on a Fort Bend construction site, here are key local resources:

      • Houston Methodist Sugar Land Hospital (Level III Trauma Center) — 16655 Southwest Freeway, Sugar Land, TX 77479 | houstonmethodist.org/sugar-land
      • Memorial Hermann Sugar Land Hospital — 17500 W Grand Pkwy S, Sugar Land, TX 77479 | memorialhermann.org/locations/sugar-land
      • OakBend Medical Center — 1705 Jackson St, Richmond, TX 77469 | oakbendmedcenter.org
      • Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office — 1410 Ransom Rd, Richmond, TX 77469 | fortbendcountytx.gov
      • Sugar Land Police Department — 3900 Paradise Dr, Sugar Land, TX 77479 | sugarlandtx.gov
      • Missouri City Police Department — 1522 Texas Pkwy, Missouri City, TX 77489 | missouricitytx.gov
      • Fort Bend County District Court — Fort Bend County Justice Center, 1422 Eugene Heimann Cir, Richmond, TX 77469
      • Texas Department of Insurance, Workers’ Compensation Division — tdi.texas.gov

      Get the Compensation You Deserve - Varghese Summersett

      What to Expect From Varghese Summersett

      Varghese Summersett is not a referral mill. When you hire the firm for a Fort Bend construction accident case, you get attorneys who investigate aggressively, identify every potentially liable party, and prepare every case as if it will go to a jury. That reputation changes how insurance companies respond.

      The firm handles personal injury cases on a contingency fee basis — you pay nothing upfront, and there is no fee unless the firm recovers for you. Your initial consultation is free. The team serves Fort Bend County clients from its Houston-area office and can be reached at (281) 805-2220.

      The firm’s personal injury team has handled construction accidents, industrial explosions, oilfield disasters, and other workplace catastrophes throughout Southeast Texas. The attorneys understand the complexity of multi-party construction litigation, the role of OSHA records in building a case, and the importance of acting before critical evidence disappears.

      Learn more about what it means to have Varghese Summersett in your corner on our Fort Bend Personal Injury Lawyer page.

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      Texas Industrial Accidents: Who’s Responsible?

      Our attorneys break down how Texas law determines liability after industrial and construction accidents — and what injured workers can do to protect their rights.

      Frequently Asked Questions

      My employer has workers’ comp. Can I still sue someone?

      Yes. Workers’ compensation from your direct employer does not shield other parties from liability. General contractors, subcontractors, equipment manufacturers, and property owners can all be sued for their role in causing your injury. Many construction accident recoveries come entirely from third-party claims, not workers’ comp.

      What if OSHA already investigated and issued a citation?

      An OSHA citation is powerful evidence in a personal injury case. It shows a regulator found a specific safety violation. Your attorney can use those findings — along with the underlying inspection records — to establish that the defendant breached its duty of care.

      How long will my case take?

      Cases that settle typically resolve within several months to a couple of years. Cases that go to trial take longer. The timeline depends on the number of defendants, the complexity of the injuries, and whether liability is disputed. Your attorney can give you a realistic picture after reviewing the specific facts of your case.

      What if I can’t afford a doctor right now?

      Your attorney can help connect you with medical providers who treat on a lien basis — meaning they are paid from the settlement proceeds rather than upfront. Do not let cost keep you from getting the treatment you need. Untreated injuries also hurt your case.

      What if the accident happened because a coworker made a mistake?

      Under Texas law, a coworker’s negligence may be attributed to your shared employer — or to a subcontractor who employed the coworker. The answer depends on who employed whom and the structure of the job site. An attorney can sort through the employment relationships to identify who is legally responsible.

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      Fort Bend County Personal Injury Practice Areas

      Our Fort Bend County injury lawyers fight for maximum compensation

      Injured in Fort Bend County? Get a free consultation.

      (281) 805-2220

      Speak With a Fort Bend Construction Accident Lawyer Today

      Construction accidents change lives in an instant. The decisions you make in the days and weeks afterward can determine whether your family is protected for years to come. Varghese Summersett offers free consultations for Fort Bend County construction accident victims, and you owe nothing unless the firm wins your case. Reach the team at (281) 805-2220 — available around the clock.

      Benson Varghese is the founder and managing partner of Varghese Summersett, where he has built a distinguished career championing the underdog in personal injury, wrongful death, and criminal defense cases. With over 100 jury trials in Texas state and federal courts, he brings exceptional courtroom experience and a proven record with Texas juries to every case.

      Under his leadership, Varghese Summersett has grown into a powerhouse firm with dedicated teams across three core practice areas: criminal defense, family law, and personal injury. Beyond his legal practice, Benson is recognized as a legal tech entrepreneur as the founder of Lawft and a thought leader in legal technology.

      Benson is also the author of Tapped In, the definitive guide to law firm growth that has become essential reading for attorneys looking to scale their practices.

      Benson serves as an adjunct faculty at Baylor Law School.

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