FELA Law Experienced Railroad Injury Lawyers VA,
WV, NC, SC, DC
Statute of Limitations
For FELA railroad
injuries that occur on the job as a traumatic accident,
there is a three year statute of limitations. This means that
you have three years to file a claim from the date of a traumatic
injury. If a lawsuit is filed in your behalf by a lawyer within
the three years, then the amount of time that you have extends with
the law suit.
If the time limit is
running close on your claim, then you need to call an experienced
FELA railroad injury lawyer such as the law firm of Wilson &
Hajek, in order that suit may be filed and your time limit on your
claim will not expire.
For those injuries that
are disease related or occupational injuries, the statute of limitation
generally begins to run at the time when you became aware that the
problems that you are having, such as cancer, carpal tunnel, hearing
loss, or other such injuries, first became known to you. This
time may be extended not only from the time that it became known
to you but also from the time that you knew it was job related.
This information can often come from your doctor relating the injuries
you suffered to the work duties that you performed with the railroad.
From the date that you gain that knowledge, you then have three
years to file a claim. The same rules then apply as for a
traumatic injury. Once a suit is filed, you can extend beyond
the three years until the completion of the suit.
Again, if the time limit is running close
on your claim, then you need to call an experienced FELA railroad
injury lawyer at the law firm of Wilson & Hajek to file
a claim on your behalf.
Railroad
workers can collect for injuries. Call
the law firm of Wilson & Hajek.
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