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New York Construction Accident Lawyer

Home New York Construction Accident Lawyer
Mike Greenspan
Content Legally Reviewed By: Mike Greenspan – Attorney

If you’ve suffered a serious injury on a New York construction site, you’re probably dealing with a flood of emotions, pain, frustration, and the stress of mounting medical bills. You might feel unsure about what steps to take next or where to turn for help. Amid this confusion, you want answers: Who’s responsible for my injuries? Do I have options beyond workers’ compensation benefits? How can I protect my future?

These questions matter because your livelihood, health, and family’s well-being could be at stake. Fortunately, you don’t have to face this challenge on your own. 

At Greenspan & Greenspan Injury Lawyers P.C., we approach these cases as trial lawyers. When property owners, general contractors, or equipment manufacturers violate New York safety laws, we use the full power of New York State Labor Law to hold them accountable. A New York construction accident lawyer from our firm can investigate your case immediately and pursue the maximum compensation available under the law.

Contents hide
1 What Are the Risks for New York Construction Workers?
2 Frank Alessandri vs. a Negligent Job Site
3 What Types of Construction Accidents Does Our Firm Handle?
4 How Do Weather Conditions Factor into a Construction Accident Claim in New York?
5 What Is New York’s Unique Protection for Construction Workers?
6 Why Isn’t Workers’ Compensation the Whole Story?
7 How Do Third-Party Claims Expand Your Legal Options?
7.1 Labor Law § 240: What Is the Scaffold Law?
7.2 Labor Law § 241(6): What Are Industrial Code Violations?
7.3 Labor Law § 200: What Are General Site Safety Obligations?
8 What Are Employer and General Contractor Responsibilities on a New York Construction Site?
8.1 How Do We Prove Labor Law Violations in Court?
9 How Dangerous Is Construction Work in New York City?
10 What Are Common Construction Site Injuries and Their Impact?
11 What Happens When a Construction Accident Is Fatal?
12 What Is the True Financial Impact of a Serious Construction Injury?
13 How Can a New York Construction Accident Attorney Guide You?
14 What Is Our Investigative Approach in Construction Litigation?
15 What Is the Legal Process Timeline for a New York Construction Accident Case?
16 How Do Expert Witnesses and Technical Evidence Come Into Play?
17 What Happens During a Deposition in a Construction Accident Case?
18 How Do We Address the “Recalcitrant Worker” Defense?
19 Choosing Greenspan & Greenspan as Your New York Construction Injury Lawyer
20 How Do We Support Families Through Every Stage of the Case?
21 Why Does Trial Preparation Matter in Construction Accident Cases?
22 What Should You Do Immediately After a Construction Accident in New York?
23 How Should You Document a Construction Injury?
24 How Does a Contingency Fee Work in a Construction Accident Case?
25 How Long Do You Have to File a Construction Accident Lawsuit in New York?
26 Contact a New York Construction Accident Lawyer Today

What Are the Risks for New York Construction Workers?

Construction is an essential industry in New York. Yet, it also ranks among the most hazardous fields. Whether you’re working on a new high-rise in Manhattan, a renovation in Brooklyn, or an infrastructure project in Westchester County, you face countless dangers each day:

  • Falls from heights. Even a momentary lapse in safety can lead to a devastating plunge.
  • Falling objects. Tools, building materials, and debris can strike unsuspecting workers.
  • Heavy machinery accidents. Forklifts, cranes, and excavators can become lethal if poorly maintained or operated recklessly.
  • Electrocution and fires. Exposed wiring, faulty installations, or chemical hazards create life-threatening scenarios.

These construction site injuries often leave victims with debilitating pain, lost wages, and emotional trauma. While the inherent risks are part of the job, negligence by someone other than your employer shouldn’t be. That’s where a New York construction accident attorney comes in—helping you identify whether a third party bears some or all of the blame.

Hazards are common in the construction industry, but New York law does not treat them as unavoidable when proper safety protections were required but ignored. Under New York Labor Laws 200, 240, and 241(6), property owners and general contractors have non-delegable duties to maintain safe construction sites and provide adequate safety devices. At the same time, New York Labor Law 200 imposes a more negligence-based duty on property owners and general contractors to provide workers with a reasonably safe place to work. When property owners or general contractors fail to follow these laws, injured workers may pursue substantial compensation through a personal injury lawsuit. These statutory protections often allow recovery far beyond the limited benefits available through workers’ compensation.

Client Story — Construction Accident

Frank Alessandri vs. a Negligent Job Site

Frank Alessandri — in his own words

Injury Type

Construction Site Injury

Location

White Plains, NY

Client

Frank Alessandri

Background

Union steamfitter and pipe welder, 40+ years

While working on a job site in White Plains, a pipe fell through a floor opening and crushed Frank’s hand. The injury required multiple surgeries and kept him out of work for months. Frank knew he did nothing wrong and believed negligence played a role in the accident.

After a trusted referral, Frank contacted Mike Greenspan while still recovering in the hospital. The legal team moved quickly. Investigators went to the job site and preserved evidence. Frank stayed informed at every stage of the case and felt supported throughout the process.

“From the beginning, Greenspan and Greenspan treated Frank and his family with care, urgency, and respect.”

— Frank Alessandri, construction accident client

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What Types of Construction Accidents Does Our Firm Handle?

New York construction accident lawyers at Greenspan & Greenspan handle the full range of worksite incidents, from catastrophic single events to injuries that develop from repeated exposure to hazardous conditions. Common accident types include:

  • Scaffold collapses. When scaffolding fails because of inadequate bracing, overloading, or defective components, workers fall or become buried under collapsing materials. These cases often involve strict liability under Labor Law § 240.
  • Trench and excavation cave-ins. Soil instability and inadequate shoring create life-threatening cave-in risks. Workers caught in these collapses face crushing injuries, asphyxiation, and death.
  • Crane and rigging failures. A crane operating beyond its load capacity or with poorly maintained rigging can drop materials on workers below, with devastating consequences.
  • Electrical contact. Workers who contact unguarded power lines, improperly grounded equipment, or live wires on a job site face electrocution injuries that can cause cardiac arrest, severe burns, and nerve damage.
  • Struck-by accidents. Moving vehicles, swinging loads, and falling tools regularly strike workers in areas with inadequate barriers or insufficient site traffic controls.
  • Weather-related accidents. Ice, high winds, and wet surfaces create hazards that responsible site managers are expected to address before sending workers into dangerous conditions.

No two construction accidents follow the same pattern, but all of them raise the same core legal question: Did someone with control over that site fail to take steps that could have prevented the injury?

How Do Weather Conditions Factor into a Construction Accident Claim in New York?

New York winters create some of the most dangerous construction site conditions in the country. Ice accumulation on scaffolding, wet surfaces after rain, high winds affecting crane operations, and reduced visibility during storms all raise the risk of serious injury. General contractors and property owners bear a duty to monitor weather conditions and implement protective measures before those conditions become hazards.

When a site supervisor sends workers onto an icy scaffold without ice removal or anti-slip measures, or when crane operations continue during high-wind advisories, the failure to act in response to a foreseeable weather risk can support a Labor Law or negligence claim. The argument that “the weather caused the accident” does not, by itself, eliminate liability. Courts examine whether the party with site control had sufficient notice of the conditions and adequate time to respond. 

A New York construction accident attorney at our firm can evaluate if the weather conditions were foreseeable, if warnings were in place, and whether the work should have been halted or modified. That analysis is often what separates a denied claim from a successful one.

What Is New York’s Unique Protection for Construction Workers?

New York is one of the few states that provides construction workers with enhanced statutory protections. The legislature enacted Labor Laws 240 and 241(6) specifically to address the dangerous nature of construction work and to place responsibility on those with the power to enforce safety standards.

Unlike ordinary negligence cases, specific Labor Law claims shift the burden away from injured workers and toward owners and contractors. The law recognizes that workers often have limited authority over job site safety conditions. They follow instructions. They use the equipment provided. They rely on supervisors to enforce safety protocols.

When safety devices are missing, defective, or inadequate, the law does not treat the resulting injury as a mere workplace accident. Instead, it treats it as a statutory violation that can justify significant financial recovery.

This framework exists because construction work is essential to New York’s infrastructure and economy. When worksite controllers fail to protect workers from preventable injuries, public policy mandates that they be held responsible.

New York Construction Accident Lawyer

Why Isn’t Workers’ Compensation the Whole Story?

Your employer’s workers’ compensation insurance typically covers on-the-job injuries without requiring you to prove fault. This system is designed to ensure employees receive medical and wage-loss benefits quickly. However, it has significant limits:

  1. No pain and suffering compensation. Workers’ comp doesn’t offer damages for your physical pain, emotional distress, or loss of life’s enjoyment.
  2. Limited wage replacement. You might only receive a portion of your regular paycheck, leaving you struggling to pay household bills.
  3. No direct lawsuits against your employer. Workers’ comp generally shields employers from being sued for negligence, barring extreme situations.

Fortunately, if someone other than your employer played a role in your accident, like a property owner, contractor, subcontractor, or equipment manufacturer, you may have the right to pursue a personal injury lawsuit. Filing a claim against that third party could open the door to a more comprehensive financial recovery, including compensation for your pain and suffering.

Greenspan & Greenspan Injury Lawyers P.C. does not handle workers’ compensation claims. When appropriate, we work with trusted workers’ compensation law firms that can handle the workers’ compensation portion of your case. Doing this for you allows you to pursue available benefits while we focus on investigating and litigating any third-party personal injury claims. Our focus is on pursuing third-party personal injury lawsuits under New York State Labor Law. While workers’ compensation may cover basic medical care and a portion of lost wages, it does not provide damages for pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, or full future earning capacity. 

By bringing claims under Labor Laws 200, 240, and 241(6), we seek to hold negligent property owners, general contractors, subcontractors, and equipment manufacturers directly accountable in court. These cases allow juries to award full and fair compensation for the actual impact of catastrophic construction injuries.

While a separate workers’ compensation claim may provide certain benefits, our role focuses on identifying and pursuing claims against third parties who may be legally responsible for your injuries.

How Do Third-Party Claims Expand Your Legal Options?

Some construction accidents are traced back to parties other than your direct employer. For instance, a general contractor who was responsible for installing safety nets but neglected to do so, or a subcontractor left power cords strewn around a walkway, causing you to trip. In other cases, a faulty piece of equipment, such as a defective harness or malfunctioning forklift, could be at fault, placing liability on the manufacturer or supplier.

A New York construction site injury lawyer can help you figure out who’s responsible by investigating:

  • Site conditions. Was there a failure to comply with safety standards (e.g., missing guardrails, unmarked hazards)?
  • Equipment maintenance records. Could improper servicing by a third party have led to machinery breakdowns?
  • Ownership and control. Did the property owner fail to address known issues, or did a subcontractor create a perilous environment?
  • Design or manufacturing flaws. Do you have a product liability claim because specialized equipment or materials were faulty?

Identifying every liable party from the start, rather than working backward after a lowball offer, is the difference between a case that settles on your terms and one that settles on theirs.

Labor Law § 240: What Is the Scaffold Law?

New York Labor Law § 240, commonly known as the Scaffold Law, provides extraordinary protection for construction workers exposed to gravity-related risks. Workers can make claims under this statute when they fall from heights or when falling objects, which someone should have adequately secured, injure them. Owners and general contractors are required to provide adequate safety devices, including scaffolds, ladders, hoists, harnesses, guardrails, and other protective equipment.

When those safety devices are absent, defective, or improperly installed, the law may impose strict liability. If someone failed to provide the required protection, the law cannot simply shift responsibility for performing assigned job duties to the injured worker. This makes Labor Law § 240 one of the most powerful legal tools available to a New York construction accident lawyer.

Labor Law § 241(6): What Are Industrial Code Violations?

Labor Law § 241(6) requires property owners and contractors to comply with specific provisions of the New York Industrial Code. These regulations set detailed safety standards for construction, demolition, and excavation work.

When a specific Industrial Code rule violation contributes to an injury, an injured worker may pursue a lawsuit seeking full damages. Common violations involve inadequate fall protection, unsafe ladder placement, improperly secured materials, insufficient trench protection, or hazardous debris left in walkways. Unlike workers’ compensation claims, these lawsuits allow recovery for pain and suffering and other non-economic damages.

Labor Law § 200: What Are General Site Safety Obligations?

Labor Law § 200 codifies the long-standing common law duty to maintain a safe construction site. This provision applies when a property owner or contractor had authority to supervise or control the work and failed to correct a dangerous condition.

Claims under § 200 often arise when supervisors direct unsafe work methods, ignore known hazards, or allow defective equipment to remain in use. By combining § 200 negligence principles with §§ 240 and 241(6), construction accident attorneys can pursue comprehensive claims designed to maximize recovery.

What Are Employer and General Contractor Responsibilities on a New York Construction Site?

New York law distributes safety responsibilities across multiple parties on a construction site, and understanding who controlled what becomes critical when building a claim. 

Property owners carry a non-delegable duty under Labor Laws 240 and 241(6), meaning they cannot hand that responsibility to a contractor and then claim ignorance when safety fails. General contractors must supervise safety across all subcontractors and trades working on the project. Subcontractors are responsible for safety within their own scope and must comply with Industrial Code requirements. Equipment manufacturers bear responsibility for delivering machinery that performs as intended and includes adequate safety systems.

The overlap between these responsibilities is exactly where defense attorneys focus their energy. Owners blame contractors. Contractors blame subcontractors. Subcontractors point to the equipment manufacturer. Our job is to follow the evidence through those layers and identify every party that had the authority to prevent the injury and failed to exercise it.

How Do We Prove Labor Law Violations in Court?

Understanding the statutes is only the beginning. Successfully litigating a Labor Law case requires demonstrating precisely how safety failures occurred and why the responsible parties cannot escape liability.

In cases involving Labor Law § 240, we analyze whether someone provided the appropriate elevation-related safety devices and whether they were correctly constructed, placed, and secured. Courts routinely hold that providing a safety device in name only is not enough. The tool must be adequate for the task performed.

In § 241(6) claims, we identify the exact Industrial Code provisions that apply to the specific work performed at the time of the accident. Construction regulations are detailed and technical. A successful claim requires linking the violated code section directly to the injury.

Under § 200, we examine supervisory authority and site control. We determine who directed the work, who had authority to correct hazards, and whether anyone knew of dangerous conditions or should have known about them.

This level of analysis is what separates routine claims from powerful trial-ready cases. Construction accident attorneys must prepare to present evidence clearly and convincingly before a jury.

Identifying every possible defendant is crucial because it maximizes your potential compensation, ensuring you’re not relying solely on the limited benefits of workers’ compensation claims handled separately. This approach can mean the difference between struggling financially and having the resources to rebuild your life.

How Dangerous Is Construction Work in New York City?

Building construction-related fatalities across the five boroughs hit their lowest point in nearly a decade in 2023, with 7 deaths, down from a high of 14 in 2019. But worksite injuries rose for the third consecutive year, up 25% from 2022. When the Bureau of Labor Statistics examined all workplace deaths in New York City that year, construction recorded the highest fatality count of any sector, at 24 deaths, with falls accounting for 12 of them.

Falls remain the leading cause of both fatalities and serious injuries on New York construction sites. The downward trend in fatalities reflects enforcement and compliance efforts. Still, the continued rise in injuries confirms that these sites remain genuinely hazardous environments, and that the legal framework New York built specifically to hold negligent parties accountable remains as necessary today as ever.

What Are Common Construction Site Injuries and Their Impact?

The type of injury you sustain can shape every aspect of your life—physically, emotionally, and financially. Some frequently seen construction site injuries include:

  1. Traumatic brain injuries (TBIs). Falls or blows to the head can lead to memory loss, cognitive difficulties, and long-term personality changes.
  2. Spinal cord damage. A severe fall or crushing accident can cause partial or complete paralysis, requiring lifelong medical care.
  3. Broken bones and fractures. While often treatable, these injuries may keep you off the job for months and lead to chronic pain.
  4. Burns. Electrocutions or chemical exposure can result in painful and disfiguring burns.
  5. Amputations or severe lacerations. Machinery mishaps or falling debris can result in permanent disability.

No matter the injury, the aftermath can be devastating. You may be staring at hospital bills you can’t afford while also worrying about whether you can continue working. At Greenspan & Greenspan, we believe you deserve compassionate support and aggressive advocacy from a New York construction accident law firm that understands your struggles.

What Happens When a Construction Accident Is Fatal?

When a worker dies on a New York construction site, the law provides the family with a path to pursue compensation through a wrongful death claim. The personal representative of the worker’s estate files the action, and any recovery benefits the family members who depended on that worker financially and emotionally. 

Damages in a construction wrongful death case can include:

  • Lost financial support. The income the worker would have provided to the family over the course of their working life, based on age, occupation, and earning history.
  • Medical expenses incurred before death. Hospital bills and treatment costs the worker accumulated between the accident and death.
  • Funeral and burial expenses. The immediate costs the family bears in the aftermath of the loss.
  • Loss of parental guidance and services. The value of care, supervision, and support a parent or spouse provides to their household.

Wrongful death claims follow a two-year filing deadline running from the date of the worker’s death. Because these claims involve Labor Law violations alongside wrongful death statutes, they require immediate legal attention to preserve site evidence, obtain OSHA investigation files, and identify all responsible parties before the record is altered. 

What Is the True Financial Impact of a Serious Construction Injury?

A catastrophic construction injury affects more than your immediate medical bills. Many workers face extended hospitalization, multiple surgeries, physical rehabilitation, and long-term pain management. In severe cases, permanent disability alters earning capacity and independence.

Compensation pursued in a third-party lawsuit may include:

  • Past and future medical expenses,
  • Full lost wages and diminished earning capacity,
  • Pain and suffering,
  • Loss of enjoyment of life, and
  • Wrongful death damages in fatal cases.

Personal injury verdicts and settlements reflect the full human impact of an injury, unlike workers’ compensation benefits, which are limited by statutory formulas. Juries are permitted to consider how the injury affects your daily activities, family relationships, emotional well-being, and long-term security.

For families, the financial strain can be immediate. Mortgage payments, tuition, childcare expenses, and household obligations do not pause because of an accident. A construction accident lawyer in NYC, New York, whom families trust must understand both the legal and personal dimensions of these cases.

At Greenspan & Greenspan Injury Lawyers, we prepare every case with a clear understanding of the long-term consequences serious injuries impose on working families.

How Can a New York Construction Accident Attorney Guide You?

Taking on a complex legal battle might feel overwhelming when you’re in pain or facing financial strain. That’s where your New York construction accident lawyer steps in as a dedicated guide. By collaborating with investigators, medical experts, and accident reconstructionists, a skilled attorney can:

  1. Pinpoint liability. By reviewing evidence, an experienced attorney can determine if a third party (or multiple third parties) bears responsibility for failing to uphold basic safety measures.
  2. Calculate damages. Look beyond immediate medical expenses to include future rehabilitation costs, lost earning potential, and compensation for pain and suffering.
  3. Deal with insurance companies. Insurance adjusters sometimes downplay or deny valid claims. An experienced lawyer understands these tactics and fights for a fair outcome.
  4. Represent you in court. If settlement negotiations don’t yield a just resolution, having trial-ready legal representation can make all the difference.

Your attorney acts as a protector and advocate, ensuring the court hears your voice and your rights are respected.

What Is Our Investigative Approach in Construction Litigation?

Successfully litigating construction accident cases requires immediate and aggressive investigation. Evidence on construction sites can disappear quickly as projects move forward and conditions change. Our firm acts promptly to preserve and analyze critical proof.

Our litigation process often includes:

  • Obtaining Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) investigation files and citations;
  • Securing New York City or the local Department of Buildings’ violation records and inspection reports;
  • Reviewing site safety plans, daily logs, and incident reports;
  • Examining equipment inspection, maintenance, and repair records; and
  • Identifying all contractors, subcontractors, and responsible entities involved in the project.

This detailed approach allows us to uncover safety failures and establish clear lines of responsibility.

What Is the Legal Process Timeline for a New York Construction Accident Case?

Although timelines can vary based on case complexity and the number of defendants, construction accident litigation typically moves forward in the following steps:

  • Investigation and filing. Because of the three-year deadline for bringing personal injury actions, we immediately begin investigating OSHA records, Department of Buildings violations, site safety plans, and witness identification. 
  • Discovery. Both sides exchange documents and conduct depositions, a phase that can span months to over a year in complex multi-defendant cases.
  • Expert disclosures and summary judgment. Parties disclose experts and may file motions on legal issues, with many Labor Law § 240 cases often resolving at this stage through summary judgment.
  • Mediation and settlement. Many cases resolve after depositions and expert exchanges, when both sides have a clear picture of trial risk.
  • Trial. Cases that do not settle proceed to a trial, which can run from several days to several weeks.

Not every case reaches trial, but every case should be built as though it will. That preparation is what drives insurance companies toward serious settlement discussions.

How Do Expert Witnesses and Technical Evidence Come Into Play?

Construction accident litigation frequently involves complex technical issues. We work with engineers, safety professionals, and industry experts who analyze scaffold construction, ladder placement, load-bearing calculations, fall protection systems, and compliance with Industrial Code regulations.

These experts help juries understand how and why safety failures occurred. For example, an engineering expert may demonstrate how an improperly braced scaffold or a ladder that violates required safety angles caused the accident. A site safety professional may testify regarding mandatory safety meetings, harness requirements, or guardrail specifications.

Medical experts also play a critical role. They provide detailed evaluations of traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, orthopedic injuries, and long-term disability. Their testimony helps establish the full extent of harm and future medical needs.

This technical foundation strengthens negotiations and positions cases for trial when necessary.

What Happens During a Deposition in a Construction Accident Case?

A deposition is sworn testimony given outside the courtroom where both sides have the opportunity to question witnesses before trial. In construction accident cases, depositions are among the most consequential stages of the entire litigation.

Witnesses typically include the: 

  • Injured worker, 
  • General contractor’s site superintendent, 
  • Property owner’s representative, 
  • Subcontractor forepersons, and 
  • Safety managers. 

Here is what most timelines skip: The deposition is often where liability gets established or lost, well before any jury ever sees the case. Construction sites involve multiple supervisors and contractors who frequently give conflicting accounts of who directed the work, who had notice of the hazard, and who was responsible for the safety equipment that failed. When a site superintendent testifies that guardrails were in place and another witness says they were not, that contradiction becomes part of the permanent record. Thorough deposition preparation and disciplined cross-examination are how those contradictions get captured and used at trial.

How Do We Address the “Recalcitrant Worker” Defense?

In cases brought under Labor Law § 240, defendants sometimes argue that the injured worker refused to use available safety equipment. The law refers to this argument as the “recalcitrant worker” defense.We carefully analyze whether proper safety devices were actually available, whether workers received adequate instruction, and whether supervision was sufficient to enforce safety rules. Through detailed depositions and documentary evidence, we work to prevent improper blame from being shifted onto injured workers who were simply performing their assigned tasks.

Choosing Greenspan & Greenspan as Your New York Construction Injury Lawyer

When you are dealing with a serious construction injury, the firm you hire shapes everything that follows:

  • Deep construction knowledge. We’re familiar with the labor laws specific to New York construction, including the Scaffold Law, which often applies to height-related injuries.
  • Client-first philosophy. We focus on building relationships, not just winning cases. You’ll work directly with attorneys who genuinely care about your outcome.
  • No upfront legal fees. We handle construction accident cases on a contingency basis, meaning you pay nothing unless we secure compensation for you.
  • Documented results. Our history of significant recoveries includes:
    • $6.52 Million—wrongful death action;
    • $1.75 Million—car accident;
    • $1.4 Million—truck crash;
    • $1 Million—motorcycle crash;
    • $900,000—truck crash;
    • $800,000—pedestrian knockdown;
    • $750,000—collision with a drunk driver;
    • $700,000—pedestrian knockdown;
    • $693,000—construction site injury; and
    • $675,000—car accident.

We represent injured workers throughout New York City, including Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island, as well as surrounding suburban communities. Let us handle the legal complexities so you can devote your energy to healing, family, and getting your life back on track.

How Do We Support Families Through Every Stage of the Case?

Construction accidents rarely affect only one person. Spouses, children, and extended family members often face emotional and financial strain after a serious injury. Many initial calls to our office come from concerned family members seeking guidance.

We understand that most clients do not come from legal backgrounds. We take the time to explain each step of the process clearly, from investigation to depositions to potential trial. Our bilingual staff assists Spanish-speaking clients and families to ensure that communication remains clear and accessible.

Throughout the case, we handle insurance communications, property damage claims, and reimbursement issues so that injured workers can focus on medical recovery and stability.

Why Does Trial Preparation Matter in Construction Accident Cases?

Insurance companies carefully evaluate which law firms are willing and able to take cases to trial. When a firm has decades of litigation experience and a history of substantial verdicts and settlements, that reputation influences negotiations.

Preparation begins early. The lawyers conduct depositions with precision. We retain expert witnesses to explain safety violations and causation. Medical professionals provide detailed testimony regarding the permanence of injuries. Economic experts may evaluate long-term earning losses.

When defendants understand that a New York construction accident lawyer is fully prepared to present the case before a jury, settlement discussions often become more serious.

Greenspan & Greenspan Injury Lawyers has represented injured New Yorkers since 1959. Our longevity reflects consistency, preparation, and courtroom experience. Construction accident attorneys must prepare to file claims and to litigate them aggressively when necessary.

What Should You Do Immediately After a Construction Accident in New York?

Taking the proper steps after a construction accident can protect both your health and your legal rights. First, seek immediate medical attention, even if injuries do not appear severe. Some conditions, including head injuries and internal trauma, may not present symptoms right away.

Second, report the incident to a supervisor or site manager, and ensure that one of them creates an official accident report. Accurate documentation can become critical evidence in a future claim.

If possible, preserve evidence. Photographs of the scene, equipment involved, visible hazards, and injuries can be valuable. Obtain the names and contact information of witnesses.

Finally, speak with a New York construction accident lawyer as soon as possible. Early legal involvement enables faster preservation of evidence, OSHA record retrieval, and identification of responsible parties under Labor Laws 200, 240, and 241(6).

How Should You Document a Construction Injury?

What you do in the hours and days after a construction accident can directly affect what your claim is worth. Take these steps as soon as your physical condition allows:

  • Photograph the scene. Capture the exact location where the injury occurred, including the hazard itself, the surrounding area, and any missing or defective safety equipment.
  • Preserve your clothing and gear. Do not wash or repair anything you were wearing until an attorney has evaluated it.
  • Write down everything you remember. Record the time, the conditions, the people present, and who gave you instructions that day before details fade.
  • Collect witness information. Get the names and contact information of anyone who witnessed the accident or was working nearby.
  • Obtain the accident report. Request a copy from the site supervisor or property manager. If one was not created, document that fact in writing.
  • Keep all medical records. Save records of every appointment, prescription, and treatment related to the injury.

Construction sites change rapidly, hazards get repaired or removed, and memories fade faster than most people expect. The records you preserve in those first few days remain with the case from investigation through trial, and they often make the difference between a strong claim and one built entirely on secondhand accounts. Although we conduct our own thorough investigation, the evidence you protect immediately after the accident gives that investigation a stronger foundation.

How Does a Contingency Fee Work in a Construction Accident Case?

Greenspan & Greenspan handles New York construction accident law firm cases on a contingency fee basis: No attorney fees unless we recover compensation for you. No upfront costs, no hourly bills, and no financial obligation during litigation.

When the case resolves, the firm’s fee is a percentage of the recovery, under a structure governed by New York court rules. Before representation begins, we explain exactly how fees and costs are calculated, so there are no surprises at the end of the case. For injured workers managing medical bills and lost wages simultaneously, this structure makes experienced trial representation accessible from day one, and it aligns our financial interests completely with yours. 

You focus on recovery; we focus on results.

How Long Do You Have to File a Construction Accident Lawsuit in New York?

New York law generally limits the time you have to file a personal injury lawsuit. In many construction accident cases, the statute of limitations is three years from the date of the injury. However, shorter deadlines may apply in cases involving public entities or municipal property. Waiting too long can permanently bar you from seeking compensation. Speaking with a New York construction accident lawyer promptly ensures that critical deadlines are identified and protected.

Contact a New York Construction Accident Lawyer Today

You’ve already endured the pain and stress of a construction site accident. Now, you face medical appointments, lost income, and potentially lifelong challenges. But you don’t have to navigate this uphill battle alone. Let Greenspan & Greenspan help. We’re more than just a New York construction accident law firm; we’re an advocate you can rely on when the stakes are high. Let us stand by your side so you can focus on healing and rebuilding your life. Contact us now to take the first step toward reclaiming your future.

Legal References Used to Inform This Page

To ensure the accuracy and clarity of this page, we referenced official legal and other resources during the content development process:

  • General duty to protect health and safety of employees; enforcement, N.Y. Lab. Law § 200 (2014).
  • Scaffolding and other devices used for employees, Law, N.Y. Lab. Law § 240 (2014).
  • Construction, excavation, and demolition work, N.Y. Lab. Law § 241(6) (2014).
  • Action by personal representative for wrongful death, N.Y. Est. Powers & Trusts Law § 5-4.1 (2014).
  • NYC Department of Buildings, 2023 NYC Construction Safety Report (May 2024). 
  • U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Fatal Work Injuries in New York City—2023.
  • Disclosure procedures; depositions, N.Y.C.P.L.R. Art. 31 (2022).
  • Actions to be commenced within three years; personal injury, N.Y.C.P.L.R. § 214 (2022).

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Thanks for defending me with my DUI. You made a stressful situation much easier to get through. I really appreciate your professionalism and expertise. I would recommend you to anybody who needs a quality attorney! Thanks man!!
Former C.-White Plains, NY
Young, energetic, and the consummate legal professional. He settled our case with an insurance company that is known for digging it’s heels and fighting for every inch. It met its match when mike took our case. He settled our case in a manner that I was completely satisfied with.
Former C.-White Plains, NY
I was involved in a serious motor vehicle accident and sustained severe injuries. A close friend of mine who dealt with Mr. Greenspan and was very happy with his service referred me to him. Mike was very caring right from the beginning, making sure I’m recovering instead of worrying about my case.
Carmen T.-New City, NY
I was involved in a motor vehicle accident in which I got injured. I contacted Green span and Greenspan and they were very courteous and supportive through out the whole case duration. I am pleased with the service I got and if some one wants the best representation then Greenspan is the one to choose.
Mendel-New City, NY
I truly can’t thank Michael Greenspan and everyone at Greenspan & Greenspan enough for working so diligently to get us the best possible settlement after my car accident. For me, it was always about getting my life back, or at least getting as much of it back as possible.
Former C.-White Plains, NY
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PRACTICE AREA

The highly experienced attorneys at Greenspan & Greenspan Injury Lawyers represent individuals and families across New York who have suffered serious injuries due to negligence. From car accidents and construction accidents to complex personal injury claims, our team has the knowledge and resources to handle a wide range of cases. We are committed to aggressively pursuing maximum compensation while providing personalized attention every step of the way.

Our practice areas include, but are not limited to (we might add new in future):

  • Pedestrian Accident Lawyer
  • Bicycle Accident Lawyer
  • Motorcycle Accident Lawyer
  • Wrongful Death Lawyer
  • Catastrophic Injury Lawyer
  • Bus Accident Lawyer
  • Truck Accident Lawyer
  • Construction Accident Lawyer
  • Car Accident Lawyer

SERVICE AREA

Conveniently serving clients throughout New York, Greenspan & Greenspan Injury Lawyers brings decades of experience representing injury victims across the Bronx, White Plains, Yonkers, New City, and surrounding communities. Our firm is dedicated to providing personalized legal support, and we make it a priority to meet clients where they are whether at home, in the hospital, or at a location that works best for them. With a strong commitment to results and client care, we ensure every case is handled with the attention, responsiveness, and professionalism it deserves.
Bronx, NY

  • Bronx Personal Injury Lawyer
  • Bronx Car Accident Lawyer
  • Bronx Truck Accident Lawyer
  • Bronx Construction Accident Lawyer
  • Bronx Motorcycle Accident Lawyer

White Plains, NY

  • White Plains Personal Injury Lawyer
  • White Plains Car Accident Lawyer
  • White Plains Truck Accident Lawyer
  • White Plains Construction Accident Attorney
  • White Plains Motorcycle Accident Lawyer

New City, NY

  • New City Personal Injury Lawyer
  • New City Car Accident Lawyer
  • New City Truck Accident Lawyer
  • New City Construction Accident Attorney
  • New City Motorcycle Accident Lawyer

Yonkers, NY

  • Yonkers Personal Injury Lawyer
  • Yonkers Car Accident Lawyer
  • Yonkers Truck Accident Lawyer
  • Yonkers Construction Accident Attorney
  • Yonkers Motorcycle Accident Lawyer

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Disclaimer: The information provided on this website is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Viewing this website or communicating with Greenspan & Greenspan Injury Lawyers through this site does not establish an attorney-client relationship.

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