You fell on someone else’s property, and now everything hurts. Before the bruises even show, the property owner and their insurance company are already building a story: you weren’t paying attention, you should have watched where you were going, you were wearing the wrong shoes. They will try to make this your fault. It is not. If a dangerous condition on someone’s property caused your fall, you have the right to hold them accountable. Call Guardia Law at (214) 380-4000 for a free consultation. Hablamos Espanol.

What Is Premises Liability in Texas?

Under Texas law, property owners owe a duty of care to people who enter their property. They are required to keep their premises in a reasonably safe condition, and when they fail to do so, they can be held legally responsible for the injuries that result.

The level of duty a property owner owes depends on why you were on their property:

Invitees receive the highest level of protection. If you were a customer at a grocery store, a patron at a restaurant, a guest at a hotel, or a visitor at any business open to the public, you are an invitee. The property owner must inspect the premises for hazards, fix dangerous conditions, and warn you about risks they know about or should know about.

Licensees are social guests. If you were visiting a friend’s home, you are a licensee. The property owner must warn you about hidden dangers they are actually aware of, but they don’t have the same duty to inspect the property that they owe to invitees.

Trespassers receive limited protection under Texas law. Property owners generally cannot set intentional traps, but they owe trespassers a much lower duty of care. There is one important exception: the attractive nuisance doctrine. If a property has a condition that is likely to attract children, such as a swimming pool, trampoline, or construction equipment, the property owner may owe a heightened duty to protect children from that hazard, even if the child entered the property without permission.

The vast majority of slip and fall cases involve invitees at businesses. That means the property owner owed you the highest duty of care, and failing to meet that duty is negligence.

Common Causes of Slip and Fall Accidents

Falls don’t just happen. They are caused by conditions that someone had a responsibility to prevent or correct. The most common causes we see include:

  • Wet or slippery floors. Freshly mopped surfaces without warning signs, liquid spills in grocery store aisles, grease on restaurant floors, rainwater tracked inside building entrances without mats or barriers.
  • Uneven surfaces and broken sidewalks. Cracked pavement, raised concrete, broken tiles, and warped flooring create tripping hazards that property owners are obligated to repair.
  • Poor lighting. Stairwells, parking garages, hallways, and entryways that are not properly lit make it impossible to see hazards underfoot.
  • Missing or defective handrails. Staircases and ramps without handrails, or with loose or broken handrails, are a violation of building codes and a leading cause of serious falls.
  • Parking lot hazards. Potholes, uneven speed bumps, ice and snow that hasn’t been treated, oil slicks, and debris that hasn’t been cleared.
  • Cluttered aisles and walkways. Merchandise stacked in aisles, boxes left on the floor, cords and cables running across walking paths.
  • Unmarked elevation changes. Steps, ramps, or changes in floor height that aren’t marked with contrasting paint, signage, or other warnings.
  • Inadequate security. While negligent security is a related but distinct claim, dangerous conditions caused by insufficient security measures, such as broken locks, missing lighting in parking areas, or lack of surveillance, can contribute to injuries on the property.

Every one of these conditions is preventable. When a property owner chooses to cut corners on maintenance, cleaning, or safety, the people who get hurt pay the price.

Proving a Premises Liability Case

The central question in any slip and fall case is knowledge. Did the property owner know about the dangerous condition, or should they have known?

Texas law recognizes two types of knowledge:

Actual knowledge means the property owner was directly aware of the hazard. An employee saw the spill and didn’t clean it up. A manager received a complaint about the broken handrail and didn’t fix it. Maintenance records show the pothole was reported weeks ago.

Constructive knowledge means the hazard existed long enough that a reasonable property owner should have discovered it through ordinary inspection. A puddle of water that sat in the produce aisle for two hours. A broken tile in a high-traffic hallway that had been cracked for days. If the property owner wasn’t aware of the condition, the question becomes: why not? A business that conducts regular inspections has a much stronger defense than one that doesn’t inspect at all.

Building the evidence is critical, and it starts immediately:

  • Surveillance video. This is often the single most important piece of evidence. Video can show how long a hazard existed, whether employees walked past it, and exactly how the fall happened. Property owners routinely overwrite surveillance footage on short cycles, so requesting preservation right away is essential.
  • Incident reports. Most businesses are required to fill out an incident report when someone is injured on their property. If the manager tried to avoid documenting your fall, that tells a story too.
  • Maintenance logs. Cleaning schedules, inspection records, and repair orders can prove that the property owner either knew about the hazard or failed to inspect frequently enough.
  • Prior complaints. If other people reported the same hazard before your fall, the property owner’s defense that they “didn’t know” falls apart.
  • Building code violations. If the property was not in compliance with applicable building codes, that’s strong evidence of negligence.
  • Witness statements. Other customers or employees who saw the condition or your fall can corroborate your account.

Evidence disappears quickly. Surveillance footage gets overwritten. Spills get mopped. Broken surfaces get repaired. The sooner you contact an attorney, the more evidence we can preserve.

Where Slip and Falls Happen in Dallas

Slip and fall accidents happen wherever property owners neglect their duty of care. Approximately 2,000 miles of sidewalks are missing across Dallas, and nearly half of the 4,534 miles that exist are damaged. Low-income and southern Dallas neighborhoods are disproportionately affected. The most common locations we see in Dallas include:

  • Grocery stores. Walmart, Kroger, Aldi, and other high-volume stores where spills, produce on the floor, and wet entrance areas are constant risks.
  • Restaurants and bars. Grease, water, food debris, and recently mopped floors without adequate warning.
  • Apartment complexes. Broken stairways, missing lighting in parking areas, uneven walkways, and failure to address ice or standing water.
  • Retail stores. Cluttered aisles, merchandise on the floor, and recently cleaned floors.
  • Office buildings. Lobbies with wet floors, poorly maintained stairwells, and elevator thresholds with gaps.
  • Parking garages. Oil slicks, crumbling concrete, poor lighting, and unmarked elevation changes.
  • Hotels and motels. Wet pool areas, slippery lobby floors, poorly maintained hallways and stairways.
  • Construction sites. Debris, uneven terrain, and hazards that should be cordoned off from the public.

No matter where your fall happened, the same question applies: did the property owner fail to keep the premises safe?

Injuries from Slip and Fall Accidents

Falls are one of the leading causes of serious injury in the United States. The injuries we see in slip and fall cases are often severe and life-altering:

  • Broken hips. Especially common in older adults, a broken hip from a fall can lead to surgery, months of rehabilitation, and a permanent decline in mobility and independence.
  • Wrist and arm fractures. The instinct to catch yourself with your hands often results in broken wrists (Colles fractures), forearm fractures, and elbow injuries.
  • Back and spinal injuries. Falls can cause herniated discs, compression fractures, and other spinal injuries that lead to chronic pain, nerve damage, and in severe cases, paralysis.
  • Traumatic brain injuries (TBI) and concussions. Hitting your head on the ground or on a hard surface during a fall can cause concussions, contusions, and more severe brain injuries. TBI symptoms can be subtle at first and worsen over time.
  • Knee injuries. ACL tears, meniscus tears, and patellar fractures from the twisting and impact forces of a fall. These injuries often require surgery and extensive physical therapy.
  • Shoulder injuries. Rotator cuff tears, labral tears, and dislocated shoulders from the impact of landing.

Insurance companies love to minimize fall injuries. They’ll call a herniated disc “pre-existing” or argue that your concussion symptoms are “stress.” These are serious injuries with serious consequences, and they deserve to be fully compensated.

What to Do After a Slip and Fall

The steps you take immediately after a fall directly affect the strength of your case. Here is what to do:

  1. Report it to the manager or property owner. Ask them to create an incident report. Get a copy if possible. If they refuse to document it, note the name of the person you spoke with, the time, and what they said.
  2. Photograph everything. Take pictures and video of the hazard that caused your fall, the surrounding area, any warning signs (or lack of them), your injuries, and your shoes. Photograph from multiple angles. Do this before anything is cleaned up or repaired.
  3. Get witness names and contact information. If anyone saw you fall or saw the hazardous condition, get their name and phone number. Witness testimony can be decisive.
  4. Seek medical attention immediately. Go to the emergency room or urgent care the same day. Even if you think you’re “fine,” some injuries, especially concussions and spinal injuries, have delayed symptoms. Prompt medical documentation connects your injuries to the fall and prevents the insurance company from arguing that something else caused your pain.
  5. Do not give a recorded statement. The property owner’s insurance company will contact you. Be polite, but do not agree to a recorded statement. Everything you say will be used to minimize or deny your claim. Tell them your attorney will be in touch.
  6. Call a slip and fall lawyer. The sooner an attorney is involved, the sooner we can send a preservation letter demanding that the property owner retain all surveillance footage, incident reports, and maintenance records. This evidence is critical, and it has a habit of disappearing.

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

Texas Laws That Affect Your Slip and Fall Case

Statute of limitations: 2 years. Under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 16.003, you have two years from the date of your injury to file a lawsuit. If you miss this deadline, your case is barred forever. Do not assume you have plenty of time. Building a strong premises liability case requires investigation, evidence gathering, and medical documentation that takes months.

Modified comparative fault: 51% bar. Under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 33.001, if you were partially at fault for your fall, your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. If you are found to be 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. This is exactly the rule that property owners exploit when they blame you for not “watching where you were going.” An attorney’s job is to make sure the evidence shows what actually happened: the property owner’s negligence caused your fall.

Results We’ve Achieved

$300,000 — Fall From Boat / Premises Liability. A young woman fell from a boat due to the captain’s negligence. Everyone initially blamed the victim until our investigation revealed the captain had violated every safety rule. We recovered $300,000 for her injuries.

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

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to hire a slip and fall lawyer?

Nothing upfront. Guardia Law works on a contingency fee basis. We only get paid if we recover money for you. If we don’t win, you don’t owe us a fee. The consultation is free.

How long do I have to file a slip and fall lawsuit in Texas?

Two years from the date of your injury. This is set by Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 16.003. While two years may sound like plenty of time, investigating premises liability claims, preserving evidence, completing medical treatment, and preparing your case all take significant time. Contact an attorney as soon as possible.

What if the property owner says I should have been more careful?

This is the most common defense in slip and fall cases, and it is designed to make you doubt yourself. Texas law does not require you to expect hidden hazards on someone else’s property. The property owner has a legal duty to maintain safe conditions and warn about dangers. If a hazard was not obvious, was not marked, or shouldn’t have been there in the first place, the property owner bears responsibility, not you.

Can I sue if I fell at a store or business?

Yes. Businesses owe the highest duty of care to their customers. If a dangerous condition in the store caused your fall, and the business knew or should have known about it, you have a valid premises liability claim. This includes grocery stores, retail stores, restaurants, hotels, and any other business open to the public.

What if there were no witnesses to my fall?

You can still pursue a claim. Surveillance video, incident reports, photographs, medical records, and maintenance logs can all establish what happened and why. Many slip and fall cases are won without eyewitness testimony. The physical evidence and the property owner’s own records often tell the full story.

Serving Slip and Fall Victims Across Dallas-Fort Worth

Guardia Law represents people injured in slip, trip, and fall accidents throughout Dallas, Mesquite, Garland, Irving, Grand Prairie, Arlington, Fort Worth, Plano, McKinney, and communities across North Texas.

Attorney Rolando Quesada (Texas Bar No. 24083694), who has recovered millions for injured clients across Dallas, has built his career on one principle: holding corporations and property owners accountable when their negligence hurts people. Insurance companies know that when Guardia Law sends a demand, litigation follows if they don’t pay what the case is worth. That leverage matters.

Hablamos Espanol. Si usted se lastimo en una caida en una propiedad ajena, llame al (214) 380-4000 para una consulta gratuita y confidencial.

Call Guardia Law Today

Property owners and their insurance companies will try to convince you that your fall was your fault. It wasn’t. A dangerous condition on their property caused your injuries, and Texas law says they are responsible.

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

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.

Slip and Fall Lawyer in Dallas, Texas

You fell on someone else’s property, and now everything hurts. Before the bruises even show, the property owner and their insurance company are already building a story: you weren’t paying attention, you should have watched where you were going, you were wearing the wrong shoes. They will try to make this your fault. It is not. If a dangerous condition on someone’s property caused your fall, you have the right to hold them accountable. Call Guardia Law at (214) 380-4000 for a free consultation. Hablamos Espanol.

What Is Premises Liability in Texas?

Under Texas law, property owners owe a duty of care to people who enter their property. They are required to keep their premises in a reasonably safe condition, and when they fail to do so, they can be held legally responsible for the injuries that result.

The level of duty a property owner owes depends on why you were on their property:

Invitees receive the highest level of protection. If you were a customer at a grocery store, a patron at a restaurant, a guest at a hotel, or a visitor at any business open to the public, you are an invitee. The property owner must inspect the premises for hazards, fix dangerous conditions, and warn you about risks they know about or should know about.

Licensees are social guests. If you were visiting a friend’s home, you are a licensee. The property owner must warn you about hidden dangers they are actually aware of, but they don’t have the same duty to inspect the property that they owe to invitees.

Trespassers receive limited protection under Texas law. Property owners generally cannot set intentional traps, but they owe trespassers a much lower duty of care. There is one important exception: the attractive nuisance doctrine. If a property has a condition that is likely to attract children, such as a swimming pool, trampoline, or construction equipment, the property owner may owe a heightened duty to protect children from that hazard, even if the child entered the property without permission.

The vast majority of slip and fall cases involve invitees at businesses. That means the property owner owed you the highest duty of care, and failing to meet that duty is negligence.

Common Causes of Slip and Fall Accidents

Falls don’t just happen. They are caused by conditions that someone had a responsibility to prevent or correct. The most common causes we see include:

  • Wet or slippery floors. Freshly mopped surfaces without warning signs, liquid spills in grocery store aisles, grease on restaurant floors, rainwater tracked inside building entrances without mats or barriers.
  • Uneven surfaces and broken sidewalks. Cracked pavement, raised concrete, broken tiles, and warped flooring create tripping hazards that property owners are obligated to repair.
  • Poor lighting. Stairwells, parking garages, hallways, and entryways that are not properly lit make it impossible to see hazards underfoot.
  • Missing or defective handrails. Staircases and ramps without handrails, or with loose or broken handrails, are a violation of building codes and a leading cause of serious falls.
  • Parking lot hazards. Potholes, uneven speed bumps, ice and snow that hasn’t been treated, oil slicks, and debris that hasn’t been cleared.
  • Cluttered aisles and walkways. Merchandise stacked in aisles, boxes left on the floor, cords and cables running across walking paths.
  • Unmarked elevation changes. Steps, ramps, or changes in floor height that aren’t marked with contrasting paint, signage, or other warnings.
  • Inadequate security. While negligent security is a related but distinct claim, dangerous conditions caused by insufficient security measures, such as broken locks, missing lighting in parking areas, or lack of surveillance, can contribute to injuries on the property.

Every one of these conditions is preventable. When a property owner chooses to cut corners on maintenance, cleaning, or safety, the people who get hurt pay the price.

Proving a Premises Liability Case

The central question in any slip and fall case is knowledge. Did the property owner know about the dangerous condition, or should they have known?

Texas law recognizes two types of knowledge:

Actual knowledge means the property owner was directly aware of the hazard. An employee saw the spill and didn’t clean it up. A manager received a complaint about the broken handrail and didn’t fix it. Maintenance records show the pothole was reported weeks ago.

Constructive knowledge means the hazard existed long enough that a reasonable property owner should have discovered it through ordinary inspection. A puddle of water that sat in the produce aisle for two hours. A broken tile in a high-traffic hallway that had been cracked for days. If the property owner wasn’t aware of the condition, the question becomes: why not? A business that conducts regular inspections has a much stronger defense than one that doesn’t inspect at all.

Building the evidence is critical, and it starts immediately:

  • Surveillance video. This is often the single most important piece of evidence. Video can show how long a hazard existed, whether employees walked past it, and exactly how the fall happened. Property owners routinely overwrite surveillance footage on short cycles, so requesting preservation right away is essential.
  • Incident reports. Most businesses are required to fill out an incident report when someone is injured on their property. If the manager tried to avoid documenting your fall, that tells a story too.
  • Maintenance logs. Cleaning schedules, inspection records, and repair orders can prove that the property owner either knew about the hazard or failed to inspect frequently enough.
  • Prior complaints. If other people reported the same hazard before your fall, the property owner’s defense that they “didn’t know” falls apart.
  • Building code violations. If the property was not in compliance with applicable building codes, that’s strong evidence of negligence.
  • Witness statements. Other customers or employees who saw the condition or your fall can corroborate your account.

Evidence disappears quickly. Surveillance footage gets overwritten. Spills get mopped. Broken surfaces get repaired. The sooner you contact an attorney, the more evidence we can preserve.

Where Slip and Falls Happen in Dallas

Slip and fall accidents happen wherever property owners neglect their duty of care. Approximately 2,000 miles of sidewalks are missing across Dallas, and nearly half of the 4,534 miles that exist are damaged. Low-income and southern Dallas neighborhoods are disproportionately affected. The most common locations we see in Dallas include:

  • Grocery stores. Walmart, Kroger, Aldi, and other high-volume stores where spills, produce on the floor, and wet entrance areas are constant risks.
  • Restaurants and bars. Grease, water, food debris, and recently mopped floors without adequate warning.
  • Apartment complexes. Broken stairways, missing lighting in parking areas, uneven walkways, and failure to address ice or standing water.
  • Retail stores. Cluttered aisles, merchandise on the floor, and recently cleaned floors.
  • Office buildings. Lobbies with wet floors, poorly maintained stairwells, and elevator thresholds with gaps.
  • Parking garages. Oil slicks, crumbling concrete, poor lighting, and unmarked elevation changes.
  • Hotels and motels. Wet pool areas, slippery lobby floors, poorly maintained hallways and stairways.
  • Construction sites. Debris, uneven terrain, and hazards that should be cordoned off from the public.

No matter where your fall happened, the same question applies: did the property owner fail to keep the premises safe?

Injuries from Slip and Fall Accidents

Falls are one of the leading causes of serious injury in the United States. The injuries we see in slip and fall cases are often severe and life-altering:

  • Broken hips. Especially common in older adults, a broken hip from a fall can lead to surgery, months of rehabilitation, and a permanent decline in mobility and independence.
  • Wrist and arm fractures. The instinct to catch yourself with your hands often results in broken wrists (Colles fractures), forearm fractures, and elbow injuries.
  • Back and spinal injuries. Falls can cause herniated discs, compression fractures, and other spinal injuries that lead to chronic pain, nerve damage, and in severe cases, paralysis.
  • Traumatic brain injuries (TBI) and concussions. Hitting your head on the ground or on a hard surface during a fall can cause concussions, contusions, and more severe brain injuries. TBI symptoms can be subtle at first and worsen over time.
  • Knee injuries. ACL tears, meniscus tears, and patellar fractures from the twisting and impact forces of a fall. These injuries often require surgery and extensive physical therapy.
  • Shoulder injuries. Rotator cuff tears, labral tears, and dislocated shoulders from the impact of landing.

Insurance companies love to minimize fall injuries. They’ll call a herniated disc “pre-existing” or argue that your concussion symptoms are “stress.” These are serious injuries with serious consequences, and they deserve to be fully compensated.

What to Do After a Slip and Fall

The steps you take immediately after a fall directly affect the strength of your case. Here is what to do:

  1. Report it to the manager or property owner. Ask them to create an incident report. Get a copy if possible. If they refuse to document it, note the name of the person you spoke with, the time, and what they said.
  2. Photograph everything. Take pictures and video of the hazard that caused your fall, the surrounding area, any warning signs (or lack of them), your injuries, and your shoes. Photograph from multiple angles. Do this before anything is cleaned up or repaired.
  3. Get witness names and contact information. If anyone saw you fall or saw the hazardous condition, get their name and phone number. Witness testimony can be decisive.
  4. Seek medical attention immediately. Go to the emergency room or urgent care the same day. Even if you think you’re “fine,” some injuries, especially concussions and spinal injuries, have delayed symptoms. Prompt medical documentation connects your injuries to the fall and prevents the insurance company from arguing that something else caused your pain.
  5. Do not give a recorded statement. The property owner’s insurance company will contact you. Be polite, but do not agree to a recorded statement. Everything you say will be used to minimize or deny your claim. Tell them your attorney will be in touch.
  6. Call a slip and fall lawyer. The sooner an attorney is involved, the sooner we can send a preservation letter demanding that the property owner retain all surveillance footage, incident reports, and maintenance records. This evidence is critical, and it has a habit of disappearing.

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

Texas Laws That Affect Your Slip and Fall Case

Statute of limitations: 2 years. Under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 16.003, you have two years from the date of your injury to file a lawsuit. If you miss this deadline, your case is barred forever. Do not assume you have plenty of time. Building a strong premises liability case requires investigation, evidence gathering, and medical documentation that takes months.

Modified comparative fault: 51% bar. Under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 33.001, if you were partially at fault for your fall, your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. If you are found to be 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. This is exactly the rule that property owners exploit when they blame you for not “watching where you were going.” An attorney’s job is to make sure the evidence shows what actually happened: the property owner’s negligence caused your fall.

Results We’ve Achieved

$300,000 — Fall From Boat / Premises Liability. A young woman fell from a boat due to the captain’s negligence. Everyone initially blamed the victim until our investigation revealed the captain had violated every safety rule. We recovered $300,000 for her injuries.

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

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to hire a slip and fall lawyer?

Nothing upfront. Guardia Law works on a contingency fee basis. We only get paid if we recover money for you. If we don’t win, you don’t owe us a fee. The consultation is free.

How long do I have to file a slip and fall lawsuit in Texas?

Two years from the date of your injury. This is set by Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 16.003. While two years may sound like plenty of time, investigating premises liability claims, preserving evidence, completing medical treatment, and preparing your case all take significant time. Contact an attorney as soon as possible.

What if the property owner says I should have been more careful?

This is the most common defense in slip and fall cases, and it is designed to make you doubt yourself. Texas law does not require you to expect hidden hazards on someone else’s property. The property owner has a legal duty to maintain safe conditions and warn about dangers. If a hazard was not obvious, was not marked, or shouldn’t have been there in the first place, the property owner bears responsibility, not you.

Can I sue if I fell at a store or business?

Yes. Businesses owe the highest duty of care to their customers. If a dangerous condition in the store caused your fall, and the business knew or should have known about it, you have a valid premises liability claim. This includes grocery stores, retail stores, restaurants, hotels, and any other business open to the public.

What if there were no witnesses to my fall?

You can still pursue a claim. Surveillance video, incident reports, photographs, medical records, and maintenance logs can all establish what happened and why. Many slip and fall cases are won without eyewitness testimony. The physical evidence and the property owner’s own records often tell the full story.

Serving Slip and Fall Victims Across Dallas-Fort Worth

Guardia Law represents people injured in slip, trip, and fall accidents throughout Dallas, Mesquite, Garland, Irving, Grand Prairie, Arlington, Fort Worth, Plano, McKinney, and communities across North Texas.

Attorney Rolando Quesada (Texas Bar No. 24083694), who has recovered millions for injured clients across Dallas, has built his career on one principle: holding corporations and property owners accountable when their negligence hurts people. Insurance companies know that when Guardia Law sends a demand, litigation follows if they don’t pay what the case is worth. That leverage matters.

Hablamos Espanol. Si usted se lastimo en una caida en una propiedad ajena, llame al (214) 380-4000 para una consulta gratuita y confidencial.

Call Guardia Law Today

Property owners and their insurance companies will try to convince you that your fall was your fault. It wasn’t. A dangerous condition on their property caused your injuries, and Texas law says they are responsible.

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

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.