Orlando personal injury

Build the case before the insurer defines it.

A serious injury claim must connect responsibility, proof, and the full human cost of what happened. Mr. Self approaches selected claims as litigation matters from the beginning.

Orlando counsel State · Federal · Appellate

A trial perspective

Liability, damages, and the story the evidence can support.

An injury claim is more than a medical bill and an insurance form. Evidence must be preserved, all responsible parties identified, insurance coverage evaluated, and the long-term consequences documented with care.

Mr. Self’s plaintiffs’ personal-injury background includes work at Morgan, Colling & Gilbert, the predecessor firm to Morgan & Morgan. That experience informs a practical approach to selected high-consequence claims.

  • Serious and catastrophic injury
  • Wrongful death
  • Vehicle and premises-related negligence
  • Insurance and liability disputes

Case selection

The first review asks whether the facts can carry the claim.

A useful evaluation considers the incident, available evidence, medical course, prior conditions, responsible parties, insurance, and filing deadlines. Not every loss supports a viable case, and candid early advice is part of effective representation.

The firm accepts selected matters after conflict, deadline, and merits review. No fee arrangement exists until it is set out in a written agreement.

Common questions

A useful place to begin.

These answers are general information. Advice depends on the specific facts, documents, deadlines, and law governing the matter.

What should I preserve after a serious injury?

Keep photographs, incident reports, medical records, bills, insurance correspondence, witness information, and the physical items involved when safe to do so. Do not delay medical care or a legal deadline while organizing documents.

How long do I have to bring a claim?

Deadlines vary by claim, defendant, and date of loss, and some notice periods are much shorter than a general statute of limitations. A prompt case-specific review is essential.

Does the firm accept every injury matter?

No. The practice evaluates selected serious matters after reviewing conflicts, deadlines, liability, damages, available coverage, and the resources required for the case.

A direct conversation

Start with the problem as it is.

Tell us what happened, what deadline or court date is approaching, and what concerns you most. The first conversation is about whether the firm is the right fit.