This page is for victims of drunk drivers, not for people charged with DWI. If a drunk driver hit you or killed someone you love, this is about your right to hold them accountable and recover every dollar the law allows, including punitive damages designed to punish the reckless decision to drive drunk.

A drunk driver made a choice. They chose to drink, they chose to get behind the wheel, and their choice destroyed your life or the life of someone in your family. Texas law does not treat this like a simple fender-bender. When someone drives drunk and causes a collision, the law allows victims to pursue not only compensation for their injuries but punitive damages intended to punish the conduct and deter others from doing the same thing. In many cases, the bar or restaurant that kept serving the driver can also be held liable. At Guardia Law, Attorney Rolando Quesada (Texas Bar No. 24083694) handles drunk driving accident victim cases as part of our motor vehicle accident practice and has recovered over a million dollars for injured clients across Dallas. Call (214) 380-4000 for a free consultation. Hablamos Español.


Why DWI Victim Cases Are Different from Other Car Accidents

According to TxDOT’s 2024 crash data, Dallas County recorded 90 fatal DUI-alcohol crashes that killed 102 people, among the highest fatality counts of any county in Texas. Statewide, one person dies in a DUI-alcohol crash every eight hours, and roughly one in four Texas traffic deaths is alcohol-related.

A drunk driving accident case is not just a car accident with an impaired driver. It carries legal tools and strategic considerations that do not exist in ordinary negligence cases.

Punitive Damages Are on the Table

In a standard car accident, you recover compensatory damages: medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering. In a drunk driving case, you can also pursue exemplary (punitive) damages under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Chapter 41. Punitive damages are awarded when the defendant’s conduct involves fraud, malice, or gross negligence. Driving while intoxicated is strong evidence of gross negligence because it demonstrates a conscious indifference to the rights, safety, and welfare of others. Punitive damages can significantly increase the total value of your case and send a message that this conduct has consequences beyond the criminal courtroom.

Criminal and Civil Cases Run on Separate Tracks

If the drunk driver was arrested and charged with DWI, that is a criminal case brought by the State of Texas. Your case is a civil lawsuit brought by you. These are two completely separate proceedings with different standards of proof. In the criminal case, the prosecution must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. In your civil case, you only need to prove liability by a preponderance of the evidence, a much lower standard.

A criminal conviction helps your civil case because it establishes that the driver was intoxicated. But a criminal conviction is not required for you to win your civil case. Even if the criminal charges are reduced, dismissed, or result in acquittal, you can still prove civil liability. The criminal case is their problem with the government. Your case is about your injuries, your losses, and accountability.

Multiple Defendants Mean Multiple Insurance Policies

Drunk driving cases frequently involve more than one liable party. The drunk driver is the obvious defendant, but the bar, restaurant, or social host that provided the alcohol may also be liable. If the drunk driver was working at the time of the collision, their employer may share responsibility. Each additional defendant means an additional insurance policy and a larger pool of money available to compensate you.


Texas Dram Shop Liability

Texas has one of the strongest dram shop laws in the country. Under Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code Section 2.02(b), a provider of alcoholic beverages, including bars, restaurants, nightclubs, and liquor stores, can be held liable if they served alcohol to a person who was obviously intoxicated to the extent that they presented a clear danger to themselves and others, and that intoxication proximately caused your injuries.

What This Means in Practice

If a bartender kept pouring drinks for someone who was visibly stumbling, slurring, and falling off their barstool, and that person then drove away and hit you, the bar can be sued alongside the drunk driver. Dram shop cases require proving:

  1. The provider sold, served, or provided alcoholic beverages to the individual.
  2. At the time of service, the individual was obviously intoxicated to the extent that they presented a clear danger to themselves and others.
  3. The intoxication was a proximate cause of the damages you suffered.

“Obviously intoxicated” is the key phrase. The provider does not have to know the person’s blood alcohol content. The question is whether the intoxication was apparent to the provider based on observable behavior.

Why Dram Shop Claims Matter

Bars and restaurants carry commercial liability insurance with limits that are often much higher than an individual driver’s auto policy. A drunk driver may carry the Texas minimum of $30,000 in liability coverage. The bar that overserved them may carry $1,000,000 or more. A dram shop claim can be the difference between a $30,000 recovery and a seven-figure recovery.

Social Host Liability

Texas social host liability is limited. Under current Texas law, a social host who provides alcohol to an adult guest is generally not liable for injuries caused by that guest’s intoxication. However, if a social host provides alcohol to a minor (under 21) and that minor causes a collision, the host can be held liable. If your case involves a minor who was served alcohol at a private party and then caused a drunk driving accident, social host liability may apply.


Evidence Preservation in Drunk Driving Cases

Evidence in DWI cases is time-sensitive. If your lawyer does not act quickly, critical evidence will be lost.

Blood alcohol results. If the driver was arrested, law enforcement likely obtained a blood or breath sample. These results are powerful evidence, but they must be obtained through proper legal channels. Your attorney can subpoena BAC results from the criminal case.

Surveillance footage from bars and restaurants. Most bars have security cameras that show how much the driver was served, how they were behaving, and when they left. This footage is routinely overwritten within days or weeks. A preservation demand sent by your lawyer creates a legal obligation to preserve the footage. Without it, the evidence disappears.

Server testimony. The bartender or server who poured the drinks can testify about how much the driver consumed and whether they appeared intoxicated. These witnesses need to be identified and interviewed quickly, before memories fade and before the bar’s lawyers coach them.

Cell phone records. Cell phone records can establish when and where the driver was drinking, who they were communicating with, and whether they were texting or using their phone at the time of the crash.

Receipts and credit card records. Bar tabs and credit card statements document exactly how many drinks were purchased and over what time period.

Toxicology reports and medical records. If the driver was taken to the hospital, their blood work may reveal BAC levels, drug use, or other relevant information.

Police dashcam and bodycam footage. Officers responding to the scene often capture the driver’s behavior, field sobriety tests, and statements on camera. This footage is gold in a civil case.


What to Do If You Were Hit by a Drunk Driver

  1. Call 911 immediately. Report the accident and tell the dispatcher you suspect the other driver is intoxicated. This triggers DWI investigation procedures at the scene, including field sobriety tests and potential blood draws.
  2. Do not negotiate with the driver. A drunk driver at the scene may try to talk you out of calling police, offer to pay out of pocket, or become aggressive. Do not engage. Wait for law enforcement.
  3. Get medical attention. Go to the emergency room the same day, even if your injuries seem manageable. Document everything.
  4. Photograph the scene. The vehicles, damage, road conditions, the other driver (if safe to do so), any alcohol containers in or around their vehicle, and your injuries.
  5. Get witness information. Witnesses who saw the driver’s behavior, smelled alcohol, or observed erratic driving before the collision are critical.
  6. Do not give a recorded statement. Not to the drunk driver’s insurance company, and not to any insurance company without consulting your lawyer first.
  7. Call a drunk driving accident lawyer immediately. The clock is ticking on surveillance footage from bars, server testimony, and other evidence that will help prove your case and identify dram shop defendants.

Call Guardia Law at (214) 380-4000. The consultation is free, and we do not charge a fee unless we recover money for you.


Texas Laws That Protect Drunk Driving Victims

Punitive damages. Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Chapter 41 authorizes exemplary damages when the defendant acted with gross negligence. Section 41.001(11) defines gross negligence as an act or omission involving an extreme degree of risk, considering the probability and magnitude of potential harm, of which the defendant had actual, subjective awareness but proceeded with conscious indifference. Under Section 41.003, exemplary damages require clear and convincing evidence of fraud, malice, or gross negligence. Driving with a BAC well above the legal limit is textbook gross negligence. Punitive damages are typically capped at the greater of $200,000 or two times economic damages plus non-economic damages up to $750,000. These caps do not apply when the defendant is convicted of intoxication assault or intoxication manslaughter under the Texas Penal Code (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Section 41.008(c)).

Dram shop liability. Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code Section 2.02(b) holds alcohol providers liable when they serve obviously intoxicated patrons who then cause injuries. This law gives victims a path to recovery beyond the drunk driver’s personal insurance policy.

Statute of limitations: 2 years. You have two years from the date of the accident to file a civil lawsuit. For wrongful death claims, the two-year period begins on the date of death. Do not wait. Evidence in dram shop cases, particularly surveillance footage and server memory, deteriorates rapidly.

Modified comparative fault. Texas follows a 51% bar rule. If the drunk driver’s insurance company tries to argue you were partly at fault, your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault, but you can still recover as long as you are not 51% or more at fault. In drunk driving cases, comparative fault arguments by the defense are particularly weak because the defendant’s own intoxication is overwhelming evidence of primary negligence.


Results We’ve Achieved

$100,000, Wrongful Death (Driver Had Been Drinking)

A motor vehicle collision took the life of our client’s loved one. Investigation revealed the at-fault driver had been drinking before the crash. Despite disputed liability, Attorney Rolando Quesada secured $100,000 for the family within 45 days of engagement. The insurance company tried to deny the claim. We held them accountable.

$1,067,874.84, Catastrophic Motor Vehicle Wrongful Death

A commercial vehicle collision caused catastrophic injuries and death. Attorney Rolando Quesada recovered every dollar of available insurance coverage, totaling $1,067,874.84, for the surviving family.

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is different.


Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to wait for the criminal DWI case to finish before filing my civil claim?

No. Your civil case and the criminal case are separate proceedings. You can file your civil lawsuit while the criminal case is pending. In fact, waiting for the criminal case to conclude can waste valuable time that should be spent preserving evidence, investigating dram shop defendants, and building your case. A criminal conviction helps your civil case, but it is not a prerequisite.

Can I sue the bar that served the drunk driver?

Yes, under Texas dram shop law. If the bar, restaurant, or nightclub served alcohol to a person who was obviously intoxicated and that intoxication caused your injuries, the alcohol provider can be held liable. Dram shop claims are important because commercial establishments typically carry far more insurance than individual drivers. Your lawyer can investigate where the driver was drinking, subpoena bar receipts and surveillance footage, and build the dram shop claim.

What are punitive damages, and how much can I recover?

Punitive (exemplary) damages are awarded to punish defendants for grossly negligent conduct and deter similar behavior. In Texas, punitive damages are generally capped at the greater of $200,000 or two times economic damages plus non-economic damages up to $750,000. Drunk driving cases are among the strongest candidates for punitive damages because intoxicated driving demonstrates conscious indifference to the safety of others.

What if the drunk driver has no insurance or only minimum coverage?

You may still have significant options. First, if there is a viable dram shop claim against the bar or restaurant, their commercial insurance can provide substantial coverage. Second, if you carry uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage on your own auto policy, that coverage can fill the gap. Third, if the drunk driver has personal assets, a judgment can be pursued against those assets. We evaluate every potential source of recovery.

What if a family member was killed by a drunk driver?

You may have a wrongful death claim under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 71.004. Wrongful death claims can be brought by the surviving spouse, children, and parents of the deceased. Damages include loss of companionship, loss of financial support, mental anguish, and funeral expenses. Punitive damages are also available in wrongful death cases caused by drunk driving. The two-year statute of limitations runs from the date of death.


Serving Drunk Driving Accident Victims Across Dallas

Guardia Law represents victims of drunk drivers in Dallas, Mesquite, Garland, Irving, Grand Prairie, Arlington, Fort Worth, Plano, McKinney, and communities throughout North Texas.

Attorney Rolando Quesada has recovered over a million dollars in verdicts and settlements for injured clients across Dallas. He brings aggressive advocacy to every drunk driving case because these cases are about more than money. They are about accountability. A drunk driver made a choice that destroyed a life. The bar that kept pouring drinks made a choice that put a dangerous person on the road. We hold them both accountable.

Hablamos Español. Si usted o un ser querido fue víctima de un conductor ebrio, llame al (214) 380-4000 para una consulta gratuita y confidencial.


Call Guardia Law Today

A drunk driver chose to get behind the wheel. That choice changed your life. You did not get a choice. But you have one now: fight for accountability or let the insurance company decide what your suffering is worth.

Call (214) 380-4000 for a free consultation. Available 24/7. Hablamos Español.

Guardia Law, PLLC Rolando Quesada, Managing Attorney 6301 Gaston Ave, Ste. 1516 Dallas, TX 75214 (214) 380-4000 Contingency fee. No fee unless we win.

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. This page is for informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice.

Drunk Driving Accidents

This page is for victims of drunk drivers, not for people charged with DWI. If a drunk driver hit you or killed someone you love, this is about your right to hold them accountable and recover every dollar the law allows, including punitive damages designed to punish the reckless decision to drive drunk.

A drunk driver made a choice. They chose to drink, they chose to get behind the wheel, and their choice destroyed your life or the life of someone in your family. Texas law does not treat this like a simple fender-bender. When someone drives drunk and causes a collision, the law allows victims to pursue not only compensation for their injuries but punitive damages intended to punish the conduct and deter others from doing the same thing. In many cases, the bar or restaurant that kept serving the driver can also be held liable. At Guardia Law, Attorney Rolando Quesada (Texas Bar No. 24083694) handles drunk driving accident victim cases as part of our motor vehicle accident practice and has recovered over a million dollars for injured clients across Dallas. Call (214) 380-4000 for a free consultation. Hablamos Español.


Why DWI Victim Cases Are Different from Other Car Accidents

According to TxDOT’s 2024 crash data, Dallas County recorded 90 fatal DUI-alcohol crashes that killed 102 people, among the highest fatality counts of any county in Texas. Statewide, one person dies in a DUI-alcohol crash every eight hours, and roughly one in four Texas traffic deaths is alcohol-related.

A drunk driving accident case is not just a car accident with an impaired driver. It carries legal tools and strategic considerations that do not exist in ordinary negligence cases.

Punitive Damages Are on the Table

In a standard car accident, you recover compensatory damages: medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering. In a drunk driving case, you can also pursue exemplary (punitive) damages under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Chapter 41. Punitive damages are awarded when the defendant’s conduct involves fraud, malice, or gross negligence. Driving while intoxicated is strong evidence of gross negligence because it demonstrates a conscious indifference to the rights, safety, and welfare of others. Punitive damages can significantly increase the total value of your case and send a message that this conduct has consequences beyond the criminal courtroom.

Criminal and Civil Cases Run on Separate Tracks

If the drunk driver was arrested and charged with DWI, that is a criminal case brought by the State of Texas. Your case is a civil lawsuit brought by you. These are two completely separate proceedings with different standards of proof. In the criminal case, the prosecution must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. In your civil case, you only need to prove liability by a preponderance of the evidence, a much lower standard.

A criminal conviction helps your civil case because it establishes that the driver was intoxicated. But a criminal conviction is not required for you to win your civil case. Even if the criminal charges are reduced, dismissed, or result in acquittal, you can still prove civil liability. The criminal case is their problem with the government. Your case is about your injuries, your losses, and accountability.

Multiple Defendants Mean Multiple Insurance Policies

Drunk driving cases frequently involve more than one liable party. The drunk driver is the obvious defendant, but the bar, restaurant, or social host that provided the alcohol may also be liable. If the drunk driver was working at the time of the collision, their employer may share responsibility. Each additional defendant means an additional insurance policy and a larger pool of money available to compensate you.


Texas Dram Shop Liability

Texas has one of the strongest dram shop laws in the country. Under Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code Section 2.02(b), a provider of alcoholic beverages, including bars, restaurants, nightclubs, and liquor stores, can be held liable if they served alcohol to a person who was obviously intoxicated to the extent that they presented a clear danger to themselves and others, and that intoxication proximately caused your injuries.

What This Means in Practice

If a bartender kept pouring drinks for someone who was visibly stumbling, slurring, and falling off their barstool, and that person then drove away and hit you, the bar can be sued alongside the drunk driver. Dram shop cases require proving:

  1. The provider sold, served, or provided alcoholic beverages to the individual.
  2. At the time of service, the individual was obviously intoxicated to the extent that they presented a clear danger to themselves and others.
  3. The intoxication was a proximate cause of the damages you suffered.

“Obviously intoxicated” is the key phrase. The provider does not have to know the person’s blood alcohol content. The question is whether the intoxication was apparent to the provider based on observable behavior.

Why Dram Shop Claims Matter

Bars and restaurants carry commercial liability insurance with limits that are often much higher than an individual driver’s auto policy. A drunk driver may carry the Texas minimum of $30,000 in liability coverage. The bar that overserved them may carry $1,000,000 or more. A dram shop claim can be the difference between a $30,000 recovery and a seven-figure recovery.

Social Host Liability

Texas social host liability is limited. Under current Texas law, a social host who provides alcohol to an adult guest is generally not liable for injuries caused by that guest’s intoxication. However, if a social host provides alcohol to a minor (under 21) and that minor causes a collision, the host can be held liable. If your case involves a minor who was served alcohol at a private party and then caused a drunk driving accident, social host liability may apply.


Evidence Preservation in Drunk Driving Cases

Evidence in DWI cases is time-sensitive. If your lawyer does not act quickly, critical evidence will be lost.

Blood alcohol results. If the driver was arrested, law enforcement likely obtained a blood or breath sample. These results are powerful evidence, but they must be obtained through proper legal channels. Your attorney can subpoena BAC results from the criminal case.

Surveillance footage from bars and restaurants. Most bars have security cameras that show how much the driver was served, how they were behaving, and when they left. This footage is routinely overwritten within days or weeks. A preservation demand sent by your lawyer creates a legal obligation to preserve the footage. Without it, the evidence disappears.

Server testimony. The bartender or server who poured the drinks can testify about how much the driver consumed and whether they appeared intoxicated. These witnesses need to be identified and interviewed quickly, before memories fade and before the bar’s lawyers coach them.

Cell phone records. Cell phone records can establish when and where the driver was drinking, who they were communicating with, and whether they were texting or using their phone at the time of the crash.

Receipts and credit card records. Bar tabs and credit card statements document exactly how many drinks were purchased and over what time period.

Toxicology reports and medical records. If the driver was taken to the hospital, their blood work may reveal BAC levels, drug use, or other relevant information.

Police dashcam and bodycam footage. Officers responding to the scene often capture the driver’s behavior, field sobriety tests, and statements on camera. This footage is gold in a civil case.


What to Do If You Were Hit by a Drunk Driver

  1. Call 911 immediately. Report the accident and tell the dispatcher you suspect the other driver is intoxicated. This triggers DWI investigation procedures at the scene, including field sobriety tests and potential blood draws.
  2. Do not negotiate with the driver. A drunk driver at the scene may try to talk you out of calling police, offer to pay out of pocket, or become aggressive. Do not engage. Wait for law enforcement.
  3. Get medical attention. Go to the emergency room the same day, even if your injuries seem manageable. Document everything.
  4. Photograph the scene. The vehicles, damage, road conditions, the other driver (if safe to do so), any alcohol containers in or around their vehicle, and your injuries.
  5. Get witness information. Witnesses who saw the driver’s behavior, smelled alcohol, or observed erratic driving before the collision are critical.
  6. Do not give a recorded statement. Not to the drunk driver’s insurance company, and not to any insurance company without consulting your lawyer first.
  7. Call a drunk driving accident lawyer immediately. The clock is ticking on surveillance footage from bars, server testimony, and other evidence that will help prove your case and identify dram shop defendants.

Call Guardia Law at (214) 380-4000. The consultation is free, and we do not charge a fee unless we recover money for you.


Texas Laws That Protect Drunk Driving Victims

Punitive damages. Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Chapter 41 authorizes exemplary damages when the defendant acted with gross negligence. Section 41.001(11) defines gross negligence as an act or omission involving an extreme degree of risk, considering the probability and magnitude of potential harm, of which the defendant had actual, subjective awareness but proceeded with conscious indifference. Under Section 41.003, exemplary damages require clear and convincing evidence of fraud, malice, or gross negligence. Driving with a BAC well above the legal limit is textbook gross negligence. Punitive damages are typically capped at the greater of $200,000 or two times economic damages plus non-economic damages up to $750,000. These caps do not apply when the defendant is convicted of intoxication assault or intoxication manslaughter under the Texas Penal Code (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Section 41.008(c)).

Dram shop liability. Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code Section 2.02(b) holds alcohol providers liable when they serve obviously intoxicated patrons who then cause injuries. This law gives victims a path to recovery beyond the drunk driver’s personal insurance policy.

Statute of limitations: 2 years. You have two years from the date of the accident to file a civil lawsuit. For wrongful death claims, the two-year period begins on the date of death. Do not wait. Evidence in dram shop cases, particularly surveillance footage and server memory, deteriorates rapidly.

Modified comparative fault. Texas follows a 51% bar rule. If the drunk driver’s insurance company tries to argue you were partly at fault, your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault, but you can still recover as long as you are not 51% or more at fault. In drunk driving cases, comparative fault arguments by the defense are particularly weak because the defendant’s own intoxication is overwhelming evidence of primary negligence.


Results We’ve Achieved

$100,000, Wrongful Death (Driver Had Been Drinking)

A motor vehicle collision took the life of our client’s loved one. Investigation revealed the at-fault driver had been drinking before the crash. Despite disputed liability, Attorney Rolando Quesada secured $100,000 for the family within 45 days of engagement. The insurance company tried to deny the claim. We held them accountable.

$1,067,874.84, Catastrophic Motor Vehicle Wrongful Death

A commercial vehicle collision caused catastrophic injuries and death. Attorney Rolando Quesada recovered every dollar of available insurance coverage, totaling $1,067,874.84, for the surviving family.

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is different.


Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to wait for the criminal DWI case to finish before filing my civil claim?

No. Your civil case and the criminal case are separate proceedings. You can file your civil lawsuit while the criminal case is pending. In fact, waiting for the criminal case to conclude can waste valuable time that should be spent preserving evidence, investigating dram shop defendants, and building your case. A criminal conviction helps your civil case, but it is not a prerequisite.

Can I sue the bar that served the drunk driver?

Yes, under Texas dram shop law. If the bar, restaurant, or nightclub served alcohol to a person who was obviously intoxicated and that intoxication caused your injuries, the alcohol provider can be held liable. Dram shop claims are important because commercial establishments typically carry far more insurance than individual drivers. Your lawyer can investigate where the driver was drinking, subpoena bar receipts and surveillance footage, and build the dram shop claim.

What are punitive damages, and how much can I recover?

Punitive (exemplary) damages are awarded to punish defendants for grossly negligent conduct and deter similar behavior. In Texas, punitive damages are generally capped at the greater of $200,000 or two times economic damages plus non-economic damages up to $750,000. Drunk driving cases are among the strongest candidates for punitive damages because intoxicated driving demonstrates conscious indifference to the safety of others.

What if the drunk driver has no insurance or only minimum coverage?

You may still have significant options. First, if there is a viable dram shop claim against the bar or restaurant, their commercial insurance can provide substantial coverage. Second, if you carry uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage on your own auto policy, that coverage can fill the gap. Third, if the drunk driver has personal assets, a judgment can be pursued against those assets. We evaluate every potential source of recovery.

What if a family member was killed by a drunk driver?

You may have a wrongful death claim under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 71.004. Wrongful death claims can be brought by the surviving spouse, children, and parents of the deceased. Damages include loss of companionship, loss of financial support, mental anguish, and funeral expenses. Punitive damages are also available in wrongful death cases caused by drunk driving. The two-year statute of limitations runs from the date of death.


Serving Drunk Driving Accident Victims Across Dallas

Guardia Law represents victims of drunk drivers in Dallas, Mesquite, Garland, Irving, Grand Prairie, Arlington, Fort Worth, Plano, McKinney, and communities throughout North Texas.

Attorney Rolando Quesada has recovered over a million dollars in verdicts and settlements for injured clients across Dallas. He brings aggressive advocacy to every drunk driving case because these cases are about more than money. They are about accountability. A drunk driver made a choice that destroyed a life. The bar that kept pouring drinks made a choice that put a dangerous person on the road. We hold them both accountable.

Hablamos Español. Si usted o un ser querido fue víctima de un conductor ebrio, llame al (214) 380-4000 para una consulta gratuita y confidencial.


Call Guardia Law Today

A drunk driver chose to get behind the wheel. That choice changed your life. You did not get a choice. But you have one now: fight for accountability or let the insurance company decide what your suffering is worth.

Call (214) 380-4000 for a free consultation. Available 24/7. Hablamos Español.

Guardia Law, PLLC Rolando Quesada, Managing Attorney 6301 Gaston Ave, Ste. 1516 Dallas, TX 75214 (214) 380-4000 Contingency fee. No fee unless we win.

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. This page is for informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice.