Why Hire Spinal Cord Injury Lawyers?
Spinal cord injury cases involve some of the highest damages in personal injury law because the costs are staggering. According to the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center, the lifetime cost of care for a high tetraplegic (quadriplegic) injury can exceed $5 million, and even incomplete injuries requiring ongoing rehabilitation and adaptive equipment cost well over $1 million. Insurance companies know these numbers and fight aggressively to minimize payouts.
Our attorneys retain the leading medical experts — spinal cord injury specialists, physiatrists, life care planners, vocational economists, and assistive technology consultants — to document the full scope of your current and future needs. We understand the medical complexities of complete versus incomplete injuries, the difference between paraplegia and tetraplegia, and how spinal cord injury level and classification (ASIA scale) directly impact your damages calculation.
At Roden Law, we have the resources to take on the large insurance carriers and corporate defendants that are typically involved in catastrophic spinal cord injury cases. We invest heavily in each case because we know the outcome will determine our client’s quality of life for decades to come.
At Roden Law, our personal injury attorneys have helped numerous victims secure millions in compensation across Georgia and South Carolina. We provide all potential clients with a free, no-obligation review of their claim and do not charge upfront legal fees.
Types of Spinal Cord Injury Lawyers Cases We Handle
Meeting the Statute of Limitations
If you fail to file within the statute of limitations, your claim will be dismissed and you will permanently lose the right to pursue compensation. You should not hesitate to consult with a skilled attorney to ensure your claim is filed on time.
Do I Have a Case?
Before our attorneys can take legal action, we must prove the four elements of negligence existed in your accident:
Duty of Care
The other party owed you a duty of care and was obligated to act in a manner that ensured your safety and the safety of others.
Breach of Duty
The other party breached that duty by failing to act as a reasonably safe and prudent person would have in the same situation.
Causation
The at-fault party's conduct and the resulting accident directly caused your injuries. We gather evidence to prove that but for their negligence, you would not have been harmed.
Damages
You suffered actual, quantifiable damages — medical expenses, lost income, pain and suffering — as a direct result of the at-fault party's breach.
Types of Compensation You Can Recover
Economic Damages
- Past and future medical expenses
- Lost wages or income
- Loss of earning capacity
- Property damage and vehicle repair/replacement
- Cost of rehabilitation and physical therapy
- Assistive medical equipment
- Cost of long-term or lifelong care
Non-Economic Damages
- Pain and suffering
- Mental and emotional distress
- Loss of companionship (spouse/family)
- Disability and disfigurement
- Loss of enjoyment of life
- Humiliation or loss of reputation
Non-economic damages can only be pursued through a personal injury lawsuit, not a standard insurance claim.
Comparative Fault — What If I'm Partially At Fault?
🍑 Georgia — Modified Comparative Fault
You can recover if less than 50% at fault (O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33). Your award is reduced by your fault percentage.
🌙 South Carolina — Modified Comparative Fault
You can recover if less than 51% at fault. Your award is reduced by your fault percentage.
For example, if you filed a $100,000 lawsuit and a court finds you are 30% at fault, your award would be reduced to $70,000. Our attorneys will work to minimize any fault assigned to you.
Common Causes of Spinal Cord Injury Lawyers Cases
- Motor vehicle accidents (car, truck, motorcycle)
- Falls from heights (construction, ladders, roofs)
- Slip-and-fall accidents on unsafe premises
- Diving accidents into shallow water
- Sports and recreational injuries
- Workplace and industrial accidents
- Acts of violence (gunshot wounds, assaults)
- Bicycle and pedestrian accidents
- Medical malpractice (surgical errors)
- Defective products and equipment
- Boating and watercraft accidents
- Nursing home falls and neglect
Common Injuries in Spinal Cord Injury Lawyers Cases
Complete loss of motor function and sensation below the level of injury in the thoracic, lumbar, or sacral spine. Paraplegics lose the use of their legs and may lose bladder and bowel control, requiring a wheelchair and extensive daily assistance for the rest of their lives.
Damage to the cervical spinal cord resulting in complete loss of function in all four limbs and the torso. High-level cervical injuries (C1–C4) may also impair breathing, requiring mechanical ventilation and around-the-clock attendant care.
The spinal cord is damaged but not fully severed, preserving some motor or sensory function below the injury level. Incomplete injuries vary widely — some patients retain significant movement while others experience severe impairment. Recovery potential is greater but often requires years of intensive rehabilitation.
Traumatic disc herniations compress spinal nerves, causing severe pain, numbness, weakness, and radiating symptoms in the arms or legs. Many herniated discs require surgical intervention such as discectomy, laminectomy, or spinal fusion.
Vertebral fractures — including burst fractures, compression fractures, and fracture-dislocations — can destabilize the spine and damage the spinal cord. Surgical stabilization with rods, screws, and fusion is often required, followed by months of restricted activity.
The most common incomplete spinal cord injury, central cord syndrome causes greater weakness in the arms and hands than in the legs. It typically results from hyperextension injuries to the cervical spine and disproportionately impacts fine motor skills and hand dexterity.
Compression of the nerve roots at the base of the spinal cord can cause severe lower back pain, loss of bladder and bowel control, leg weakness, and sexual dysfunction. This is a medical emergency — delayed diagnosis or treatment constitutes medical malpractice.
Spinal cord injury survivors frequently suffer from chronic neuropathic pain, muscle spasms, and autonomic dysreflexia. These conditions require ongoing pain management, medication, and can significantly diminish quality of life even when motor function is partially preserved.
Recent Case Results
Results shown are gross settlement/verdict amounts before fees and costs. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes.
Reviewed by Eric Roden, Founding Partner, CEO — Licensed in Georgia & South Carolina
Frequently Asked Questions
Spinal cord injury cases are among the highest-value personal injury claims. According to the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center, lifetime costs range from approximately $1.2 million for incomplete motor injuries at any level to over $5.1 million for high tetraplegia (C1–C4). Case value depends on injury severity, level of paralysis, age at injury, future medical and care needs, lost earning capacity, and pain and suffering. Our attorneys work with life care planners and economists to document the full lifetime cost.
In Georgia, the statute of limitations is 2 years from the date of injury (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33). In South Carolina, you have 3 years (S.C. Code § 15-3-530). Given the complexity of spinal cord injury cases — which require extensive expert analysis, life care planning, and medical documentation — it is critical to contact an attorney as early as possible to begin building your case.
A complete spinal cord injury means there is no motor or sensory function below the level of injury — the damage to the spinal cord is total. An incomplete injury means some nerve pathways remain intact, preserving partial motor or sensory function. Incomplete injuries are classified using the ASIA Impairment Scale (A through E), which impacts both prognosis and the damages calculation in a legal claim.
Spinal cord injury victims may recover compensation for: all past and future medical expenses (surgery, hospitalization, rehabilitation, medications), assistive devices and home modifications (wheelchair, accessible vehicle, home renovation), attendant care and nursing services, lost wages and lifetime lost earning capacity, pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and loss of consortium for spouses. Punitive damages may also be available in cases of egregious negligence.
In most cases, yes. Spinal cord injuries require ongoing medical management including: physical and occupational therapy, urological care, respiratory management (for cervical injuries), skin integrity monitoring to prevent pressure ulcers, mental health treatment, medication management, and regular specialist evaluations. A life care plan documents all of these future needs and their projected costs, which our attorneys use to support your claim.
Yes. Motor vehicle accidents are the leading cause of spinal cord injuries. You can file a personal injury claim against the at-fault driver, and potentially against other liable parties such as a trucking company, vehicle manufacturer, or government entity responsible for road conditions. Georgia's modified comparative fault rule (O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33) allows recovery if you are less than 50% at fault; South Carolina's threshold is 51%.
Workplace spinal cord injuries may be covered by workers' compensation, but you may also have a third-party claim against a property owner, general contractor, subcontractor, or equipment manufacturer whose negligence contributed to your fall. Third-party claims allow you to recover damages beyond what workers' compensation provides, including pain and suffering and full lost earning capacity. Our attorneys evaluate all potential sources of recovery.
Spinal cord injury cases typically take 18 to 36 months or longer to resolve due to their complexity. We generally wait until the patient has reached maximum medical improvement (MMI) — which can take a year or more for spinal cord injuries — before settling, to ensure we have a complete picture of long-term needs. Cases involving disputed liability, multiple defendants, or corporate negligence may take longer and may proceed to trial.
Depending on the level of injury, home modifications may include: wheelchair ramps and widened doorways, accessible bathroom renovations (roll-in shower, grab bars), kitchen modifications for wheelchair access, stair lifts or single-floor living arrangements, smart home technology for environmental controls, and accessible vehicle modifications with hand controls. These costs are documented in a life care plan and are fully recoverable in your claim.
At Roden Law, we handle spinal cord injury cases on a contingency fee basis — you pay nothing upfront and owe no attorney fees unless we recover compensation for you. Given the catastrophic nature of these injuries and the millions of dollars potentially at stake, having experienced legal representation is essential. We provide free, confidential consultations to evaluate your case and explain your legal options.
Related Resources
Contact Our Spinal Cord Injury Lawyers Today
If you were injured and believe another party is at fault, contact us for a free, no-obligation review. We dedicate our skills and resources to recovering the maximum compensation you deserve — at no upfront cost.
