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      Varghese Summersett Background

      Fort Bend Premise Liability Lawyer

      If you were injured on someone else’s property in Fort Bend County, the property owner may owe you compensation. Texas law requires property owners to maintain reasonably safe conditions for people they invite onto their land — and when they fail, they can be held legally responsible for the harm that results.

      Varghese Summersett Legal Team

      Fort Bend County Premises Liability Attorneys You Can Count On

      Varghese Summersett’s Personal Injury Division represents people injured on dangerous properties across Fort Bend County — from Sugar Land retail centers to Richmond apartment complexes to Missouri City parking lots. Our team brings a powerful combination of prosecutorial training and courtroom experience to every case.

      Partner Ty Stimpson leads the Personal Injury Division and has built a reputation for exceptional negotiation and trial skills after his years as a prosecutor at both the Dallas County and Tarrant County District Attorney’s offices. Partner Damian Williams adds depth to the team with his experience in complex premises liability, catastrophic injury, and wrongful death matters, known for his strategic approach and ability to navigate high-stakes cases with precision.

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      Common Questions After a Premises Injury in Fort Bend County

      Common Questions After a Premises Injury in Fort Bend County

      People injured on someone else’s property often have the same questions. Can I sue a store if I slipped and fell? What if the accident happened at an apartment complex or someone’s home? What if the property was poorly lit and I was attacked? What if I was partly at fault?

      The answer to most of these depends on your visitor status, the property owner’s knowledge of the hazard, and whether their negligence caused your injuries. Texas law provides a framework for answering each of those questions — and an experienced premises liability attorney can tell you quickly whether your case has merit.

      Common situations that give rise to premises liability claims in Fort Bend County include:

      • Slip and fall accidents in grocery stores, shopping centers, and restaurants
      • Injuries from broken flooring, uneven pavement, or poorly maintained stairs
      • Swimming pool accidents at apartment complexes or private homes
      • Dog bites and animal attacks on private property
      • Assaults caused by inadequate security at apartment complexes, hotels, or parking garages
      • Construction site hazards open to the public
      • Injuries to children caused by “attractive nuisances” like unfenced pools
      • Fires, flooding, or toxic exposure due to building code violations

      What Texas Law Requires Property Owners to Do

      What Texas Law Requires Property Owners to Do

      Texas premises liability law is rooted in the common law and shaped by the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. The duty a property owner owes you depends on why you were on the property.

      If you were an invitee — someone invited onto the property for business purposes, like a customer at a store — the property owner owes the highest duty of care. They must use ordinary care to reduce or eliminate unreasonable risks of harm that they knew about or should have discovered through reasonable inspection.

      If you were a licensee — someone allowed onto the property for non-business purposes, like a social guest — the owner must warn you of dangerous conditions they knew about but that you would not reasonably discover on your own.

      If you were a trespasser, the owner’s duty is more limited. However, an important exception exists for children: under the “attractive nuisance” doctrine, owners can be liable when a dangerous condition (like an unfenced swimming pool) was likely to attract children who could not appreciate the danger.

      What You Must Prove

      To win a premises liability case in Texas, a plaintiff must prove four elements by a preponderance of the evidence — meaning it is more likely than not that each element is true. The burden is on you, not the property owner.

      • Duty: The defendant owed you a legal duty based on your visitor status
      • Breach: The defendant failed to meet that duty — for example, by failing to fix a known hazard or failing to warn of a dangerous condition
      • Causation: The breach directly caused your injury
      • Damages: You suffered real, compensable harm as a result

      In addition, Texas follows a modified comparative fault rule under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code § 33.001 . If you were partly at fault for your own injury, your compensation is reduced by your percentage of fault. If you are found to be more than 50% at fault, you cannot recover anything. This is a common defense strategy — property owners and their insurers often try to shift blame onto the person who was hurt.

      Types of Damages Available

      Types of Damages Available in a Fort Bend Premises Liability Case

      Texas law allows injury victims to recover both economic and non-economic damages. Economic damages cover losses with a clear dollar value:

      • Medical bills, including emergency care, surgery, physical therapy, and future treatment
      • Lost wages from time missed at work
      • Lost earning capacity if your injuries affect your ability to work long-term
      • Out-of-pocket costs related to your injury

      Non-economic damages cover losses that are harder to quantify but just as real:

      • Physical pain and suffering
      • Mental anguish
      • Disfigurement
      • Loss of enjoyment of life
      • Loss of consortium for spouses

      In cases involving gross negligence — where a property owner’s conduct was particularly reckless — punitive damages may also be available under Texas law.

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      How Long Do You Have to File a Premises Liability Claim in Fort Bend County?

      Texas has a two-year statute of limitations for premises liability claims. Under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code § 16.003, you generally have two years from the date of your injury to file a lawsuit. If you miss that deadline, the court will almost certainly dismiss your case — no matter how strong it is.

      There are limited exceptions: claims involving minors, claims against government entities (which require notice within six months), and situations where the injury was not immediately apparent. But these exceptions are narrow. If you’ve been injured on someone else’s property, speak with an attorney as soon as possible. Evidence disappears, witnesses forget, and surveillance footage gets overwritten. Early action protects your case.

      You can also read more about the statute of limitations for personal injury claims in Texas on our website.

      Your Next Move Matters

      What Your Fort Bend Premises Liability Case May Be Worth

      There is no standard settlement amount for a premises liability case. The value depends on the severity of your injuries, the clarity of the property owner’s negligence, the strength of the evidence, the extent of your medical expenses, and how your injuries have affected your life and work.

      Minor soft-tissue injuries with a quick recovery typically result in smaller settlements. Catastrophic injuries — spinal cord damage, traumatic brain injuries, amputations, severe burns — can result in settlements or verdicts worth hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars. Cases involving negligent security, where an assault could have been prevented, can be particularly significant when there is clear evidence the property owner knew of a dangerous situation and failed to act.

      One thing that drives down value is delay. The longer you wait to get medical treatment after an injury, the easier it becomes for the other side to argue your injuries were minor or pre-existing. Document everything, get treated promptly, and contact a lawyer before giving any recorded statement to the property owner’s insurance company.

      How a Premises Liability Case Works

      How a Premises Liability Case Works

      Most people have never been through a civil lawsuit and don’t know what to expect. Here is a general overview of how these cases typically proceed in Fort Bend County:

      1. Investigation: Your attorney gathers evidence — incident reports, photos, video footage, witness statements, inspection records, and any history of prior complaints about the same hazard.
      2. Demand and negotiation: Once you have completed medical treatment (or your long-term needs are established), your attorney sends a demand letter to the property owner’s insurer. Negotiations follow.
      3. Filing suit: If negotiations fail or the insurer’s offer is unreasonable, your attorney files a lawsuit in Fort Bend County District Court in Richmond.
      4. Discovery: Both sides exchange evidence, take depositions, and retain expert witnesses. This phase often takes six to twelve months.
      5. Mediation: Most civil cases in Texas go through mediation before trial. A neutral mediator tries to help both sides reach a settlement.
      6. Trial: If mediation doesn’t resolve the case, it goes to trial before a judge or jury. The vast majority of cases settle before this point, but having an attorney who will genuinely take a case to trial changes the dynamic of every negotiation.

      Why Insurance Companies Fight Premises Liability Claims

      Why Insurance Companies Fight Premises Liability Claims

      Grocery chains, apartment complexes, hotels, and commercial property owners all carry liability insurance. When you file a claim, that insurer’s goal is to pay you as little as possible — not to make you whole.

      Common insurance company tactics include disputing that the property owner knew about the hazard, arguing you weren’t paying attention, claiming your injuries were pre-existing, and pressuring you to accept a quick, low settlement before you understand the full extent of your damages.

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      Local Resources for Fort Bend Injury Victims

      If you were injured on someone’s property in Fort Bend County, the following local resources may be relevant to your case or recovery:

      Medical Care

      Law Enforcement

      Courthouse

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      What to Expect from Varghese Summersett

      When you hire Varghese Summersett for a Fort Bend premises liability case, you get a full-service legal team. We investigate your case thoroughly, identify every party that may share liability, and build the strongest possible file before making a demand.

      We work on contingency, which means you pay nothing unless we win. No upfront costs, no hourly fees — we only get paid when you get paid. Our fee is a percentage of the recovery.

      We communicate with you regularly and honestly. We will tell you what risks exist, and what to expect at each stage. If the insurance company’s offer is fair, we’ll tell you. If it isn’t, we’re prepared to take your case all the way to a Fort Bend County courtroom.

      You can learn more about our broader premises liability practice, including slip and fall accidents, dog bites, and negligent security claims.

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      Watch: What Qualifies as a Personal Injury in Texas?

      Not sure if what happened to you counts as a personal injury case? This video covers the basics.

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      Frequently Asked Questions

      What if I slipped and fell at a Fort Bend County store but I’m not sure the store knew about the hazard?

      Property owners can be held liable if they knew about a dangerous condition or if they should have known about it through reasonable inspection. Stores are expected to regularly inspect their premises. If a spill had been on the floor for an extended period and no one cleaned it up, that may establish constructive knowledge even without proof the store was actually told about it. Incident reports, surveillance footage, and witness statements are key pieces of evidence in these cases.

      Can I sue if I was injured at an apartment complex in Sugar Land?

      Yes. Apartment complex owners and management companies have a duty to maintain safe conditions for residents and guests. This includes keeping common areas, stairwells, parking lots, and amenities in a reasonably safe condition. If you were injured due to a broken railing, inadequate lighting, a poorly maintained walkway, or an assault that adequate security might have prevented, you may have a valid claim. Our firm handles negligent security cases as well as general premises liability.

      What if I was partly at fault for my injury?

      Texas uses a modified comparative fault rule under Civil Practice and Remedies Code § 33.001. If you were less than 51% at fault, you can still recover damages — but your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. For example, if your damages are $100,000 and you were found 20% at fault, you would recover $80,000. If you are found 51% or more at fault, you cannot recover. Insurance companies routinely try to inflate your share of the blame to reduce or eliminate their payout. Having an experienced attorney prevents this strategy from working.

      How long does a premises liability case take in Fort Bend County?

      Cases that settle before litigation typically resolve within six to twelve months after medical treatment is complete. Cases that require filing suit in Fort Bend County District Court often take twelve to twenty-four months from filing to resolution. Trial-ready preparation is usually what produces the best settlements — insurance companies pay more when they know your attorney will try the case.

      Does it cost anything to speak with a Fort Bend premises liability lawyer at Varghese Summersett?

      No. The consultation is free, and we work on a contingency fee basis. You pay nothing out of pocket. If we take your case, we only get paid when you recover — and our fee comes from that recovery.

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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

      Hurt on someone else’s property in Fort Bend County? Varghese Summersett represents injured people in Sugar Land, Missouri City, Richmond, Stafford, Rosenberg, and throughout the county. Speak with a premises liability attorney at no charge — and remember, there is no fee unless we win your case. Call (281) 805-2220 or reach out online to get started today.

      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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