Personal-injury matters, handled with care.
Across North and South Carolina — from a single rear-end collision to a wrongful-death claim, every case is worked personally.
Car & Rear-End Collisions
Highway and intersection wrecks, soft-tissue and severe injuries, against the contributory-negligence arguments North Carolina insurers rely on.
Read more → 02Dog Bites
Bite and attack injuries: scarring, nerve damage, trauma. Strict-liability and owner-negligence theories across NC and SC.
Read more → 03Pedestrian Accidents
Crosswalk, parking-lot, and hit-and-run cases where you were the one on foot.
Read more → 04Wrongful Death
Steady, careful representation for families after a loss caused by someone else’s negligence.
Read more → 05Construction Accidents
Falls, equipment failures, and third-party liability claims for injured workers.
Read more → 06Drunk Driving Victims
Holding impaired drivers — and sometimes those who over-served them — to account.
Read more →NC and SC don’t treat fault the same way.
Where your wreck happened changes what your case is worth and how it’s fought. That’s why local, state-specific representation matters.
North Carolina — pure contributory negligence
North Carolina is one of a small handful of states that still applies pure contributory negligence: if you are found even 1% at fault for an accident, the insurance company can argue you recover nothing. Insurers know this and lean on it hard. Anticipating and dismantling those arguments is a core part of every NC case.
South Carolina — modified comparative negligence
South Carolina uses modified comparative negligence. You can recover damages if you are 50% or less at fault, with your award reduced by your share of fault. The math, the proof, and the negotiation posture are different on the SC side of the line.
Find an attorney near your city.
Each city below has dedicated practice-area pages built around local courts, corridors, and carriers. Select a city to see what’s available.
North Carolina
Not sure which one fits your situation?
If it doesn’t line up cleanly with one of the categories above, ask anyway. A short conversation is the fastest way to find out where you stand.
