In 1998, Tom Benson & John Case combined their 55 years of legal experience to form a Denver law firm to help individuals, families and business owners. While guiding our clients through the legal process, we have built relationships with them, their families, and our community. Today, our team of eight experienced lawyers offers you solutions in a wide range of services, including:
- Personal Injury
- Auto Accidents
- Motorcycle Accidents
- Truck Accidents
- Slip and Fall cases
- Defective Products cases
- Unsafe Products cases
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Wrongful Death cases
- Property Accidents
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- Land Accidents
- Traffic cases
- DUI / DWAI
- Speeding
- Careless Driving
- Criminal cases
- Civil Trials
- Criminal Trials
- Appeals
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We have helped hundreds of clients achieve the satisfaction proving their case through litigation and obtain fair and full compensation after suffering a personal injury.
Top 4 Reasons You Should Work With Us
- Experience. Our attorneys have a combined 184 years of experience and are uniquely qualified to represent you in their respective practice area.
- Involvement. Our client’s involvement is a vital part of making the case successful. You will know what is happening with your case at all times.
- Efficiency. We save expense through the use of technology and teamwork.
- Team Approach. When you retain an attorney at Benson & Case, you are hiring the entire team of experienced attorneys and staff including legal researchers and paralegals. Delivering great service is not about being the biggest, it’s about being accessible, being committed and caring about what we do – one client at a time.
What does "personal injury" mean?
Personal injury is a legal term for an injury to the body, mind or emotions, as opposed to an injury to property. The term is most commonly used to refer to a type of tort lawsuit alleging that the plaintiff's injury has been caused by the negligence of another. The most common types of personal injury claims are road traffic accidents, accidents at work, tripping accidents, assault claims, accidents in the home, product defect accidents (product liability) and holiday accidents. The term personal injury also incorporates medical and dental accidents (which lead to numerous medical negligence claims every year) and conditions that are often classified as industrial disease cases, including asbestosis and mesothelioma, chest diseases (e.g., emphysema, pneumoconiosis, silicosis, chronic bronchitis, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and chronic obstructive airways disease), vibration white finger, occupational deafness, occupational stress, contact dermititis, and repetitive strain injury cases. If the negligence of another party can be proved, the injured party may be entitled to monetary compensation from that party. In the United States, this system is complex and controversial, with critics calling for various forms of tort reform. Attorneys often represent clients on a "contingency basis," in which the attorney's fee is a percentage of the plaintiff's eventual compensation, payable when the case is resolved. Oftentimes, having an attorney becomes essential because cases become extremely complex, such as in medical malpratice cases. This is differentiated between damage to vehicles, homes, or anyother inanimate thing of value. The official legal term is "tort", and the most common type of legal action involves another actor committing "negligence" against the person which results in the personal injury to that person. Negligence means that someone did not use the appropriate degree of care in their actions.
Credit for this article is due to Wikipedia, and sources cited within.
Premises Liability : Premises are land and buildings together considered as a property. This usage arose from property owners finding the word in their title deeds, where it originally correctly meant "the aforementioned; what this document is about", from Latin prae-missus = "placed before". In this sense, the word is always used in the plural, but singular in construction. Note that a single house or a single other piece of property is "premises", not a "premise", although the word "premises" is plural in form as in "The equipment is located on the customer's premises" and never "The equipment is located on the customer's premise". Premises liability is the liability for a landowner for certain torts that occur on the real property. In sum: Premises liability law is the body of law which makes the person who is in possession of land or premises responsible for certain injuries suffered by persons who are present on the premises. —ExpertLaw website[1] For premises liability to apply: 1. The defendant must possess the land or "premises".[1] 2. The plaintiff must be an invitee or, in certain cases, a licensee.[1][2] Traditionally, trespassers were not protected under premises liability law.[1][2] However, in 1968, the California Supreme Court issued a vastly influential opinion, entitled Rowland v. Christian (1968) 69 Cal.2d 108, which abolished the significance of legal distinctions such as invitee, licensee, or trespasser in determining whether one could hold the possessor of a premises liable for harm. This opinion led to changes in the law in many other states in the United States, and is viewed as a seminal opinion in the development of the law of premises liability. 3. There must be negligence or some other wrongful act.[2] In recent years, the law of premises liability has evolved to include cases where a person is injured on the premises of another by a third person's wrongful act, such as an assault. These cases are sometimes referred to as "third party premises liability" cases and they represent a highly complex and dynamic area of tort law. They pose especially complex legal issues of duty and causation because the injured party is seeking to hold a possessor or owner of property directly or vicariously liable when the immediate injury-producing act was, arguably, not caused by the possessor or owner.
Credit for this article is due to Wikipedia, and sources cited within.
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