Skip to main content

How to File a Mesothelioma Lawsuit


How to File a Mesothelioma Lawsuit


Getting Started with your Asbestos Lawsuit
When people with mesothelioma approach our office about a potential asbestos lawsuit, the first contact is often with our intake department. This starts an information-gathering process. We ask them to provide us with essential information about themselves, their family members, their work history, their exposure to asbestos, and their medical history. We also obtain releases so that we can order employment and medical records.

Usually one of our investigators interviews a potential client, and one of the attorneys will call or visit.

As soon as we have sufficient information, we decide if we can recommend filing suit and if our firm can represent them.

We accept an asbestos lawsuit case if we think there is a reasonable chance of a successful outcome. We need to be confident that we can establish the diagnosis, and that there are defendants who are responsible.

Filing An Asbestos Lawsuit
We usually file our cases in California, but not every person has a case that can be properly filed in California. If we conclude, after reviewing all the facts, that a case should be filed in another state, we call upon the most appropriate attorney in our long-established network of attorneys in different states with whom we have worked before. We make a recommendation to the potential client that we associate with an attorney who practices in the most appropriate jurisdiction for the case. It is very important to file an asbestos case in the right jurisdiction and we believe that this decision should be made at the beginning of the process rather than mid-stream.

When we take on new clients, both parties sign a retainer agreement. This is a contract between the clients and Kazan Law, and sets out the details of our representation, the contingency fee structure, and so on. An attorney from our office meets with the client to go over all aspects of your asbestos lawsuit in detail. (Read more about contingency fees.)

Filing the Asbestos Lawsuit Complaint
The formal start of the case comes when we file the complaint against all companies that we believe are probably responsible for the asbestos exposure. These might include asbestos mining companies, manufacturers, distributors, brokers, insulation contractors, other contractors whose workers used asbestos products (e.g. sheet-metal, joinery, fireproofing) or were responsible for safety (e.g. the prime or general contractor), and the owners of the sites where exposure occurred.

It is obvious that determining which companies to sue is a complex matter. We usually file suit against more than a dozen defendants, and sometimes as many as forty or more. Because we have been handling asbestos cases for over 40 years, we have extensive resources to enable our attorneys to make well-informed decisions about who to sue, and how to go about it. We have a team of seven investigators, an extensive document archive, and a database of records and depositions. We also have cooperative working relationships with many other plaintiffs’ law offices around the country and in Britain, Australia, Canada and other parts of the world.

Our client is known as the plaintiff in the lawsuit – because he (or she) is making the complaint. The companies that the plaintiff sues are called defendants – because they are defending. The defendants have about a month, after receiving the complaint, to respond.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Mesothelioma Lawsuit Settlement Amounts

Mesothelioma Settlements Many people diagnosed with mesothelioma , or who have passed away because of this terrible disease, were diagnosed after working under unsafe conditions over which they had no control. Workers exposed to harmful asbestos for years on the job in construction, in the military, in shipyards, and in other industrial settings, without understanding or being aware of the risks, are now paying the price. Decades after inhaling or ingesting asbestos dust and fibers on the job, some of these workers were diagnosed with mesothelioma. Many of them are now fighting for settlements to get fair compensation for the high costs of living with this devastating disease. The average mesothelioma settlement amount is around $1 million to $1.5 million, but the exact amount any victim can get depends on individual factors. Asbestos and Mesothelioma Victims Asbestos was used in many industries and as a component a wide range of different materials for several decades....

Tips for Mesothelioma After Death

Tips for Mesothelioma After Death Thousands of businesses have had to defend themselves against asbestos and mesothelioma lawsuits in the past several decades. Some of these asbestos lawsuits were brought by the individual who suffered from mesothelioma or other asbestos-related disease. In other cases, the family of the victim files the lawsuit because the victim passed away. People who have a close enough relation to the deceased mesothelioma victim can file a wrongful death lawsuit, if they meet certain legal criteria. In California, for example, the statute of limitations for an asbestos-related lawsuit is one one year after the date that the person suffered a disability, or one year after the date the person know or should of known that their disability was caused by asbestos exposure. Who Can File a Mesothelioma Wrongful Death Lawsuit? To file a wrongful death lawsuit, certain criteria must be met and the death needs to be a result of a person’s or company’s negligenc...

Mesothelioma Lawsuit After Death - America’s Toxic Legacy

America’s toxic legacy may leave behind a half-million deaths WASHINGTON, D.C. — The first sign of trouble came as Bill Rogers was mowing his lawn one morning in January 2007. “As I would go back and forth with the mower, I would run out of air,” says Rogers, 67, of Palm Bay, Fla. Rogers went to the doctor and learned that his right lung was full of fluid. Three days later he was diagnosed with mesothelioma , a lethal tumor that occurs in the lining of the chest or the abdomen and is almost always associated with asbestos exposure. “I’d heard of it, but I didn’t really know what it was,” he says. “They told me it’s not a good cancer to get.” That Rogers is alive more than three years after his diagnosis is something of a miracle. To him, the source of his illness is clear: He worked on or around asbestos -containing automobile brakes, mostly at General Motors dealerships, for 44 years. He and his co-workers had used compressed-air hoses to clean out brake drums, where debri...