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Tort Lawyer in Dallas

Tort law is the broad field covering civil wrongs — harm one party causes another outside of contract. Personal injury is its best-known branch, but tort lawyers also handle defamation (libel and slander), fraud and misrepresentation, intentional harms like assault or false imprisonment pursued civilly, interference with business relationships, nuisance disputes between neighbors, and conversion — the civil claim for taken or destroyed property. What unites them: proving someone owed you a duty or crossed a legal line, that they breached it, and that the breach caused measurable harm. Unlike criminal cases, tort cases are brought by you, decided on the balance of probabilities rather than beyond reasonable doubt, and aim at compensation rather than punishment — though punitive damages exist for egregious conduct.

The Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex is one of the fastest-growing metro areas in the US, with a corporate relocation boom that drives steady demand for business, employment, and real estate legal work.

Tort Lawyers in Dallas

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When to hire a tort lawyer

See a tort lawyer quickly when the harm is ongoing or evidence is perishable. Concrete triggers: a false statement about you is circulating and damaging your reputation or business (defamation deadlines are unusually short — one year in many states), you discovered you were induced into a deal by lies, someone intentionally harmed you or took your property, or a neighbor's conduct is making your property unusable. Preserve the evidence immediately: screenshots with URLs and dates for online statements, the full paper trail for fraud, photos and witness names for everything else. For statements online, act before content is edited or deleted.

Common matters they handle

Tort Lawyer FAQ

What exactly is a tort?

A civil wrong — conduct that breaches a duty the law imposes on everyone, as opposed to breaking a promise in a contract. Negligence torts involve carelessness (crashes, unsafe premises); intentional torts involve deliberate acts (defamation, fraud, assault); strict liability torts impose responsibility without fault (defective products, in many states). The remedy is usually money damages, occasionally an injunction ordering conduct to stop.

Can I sue someone for lying about me?

If the statement is a false assertion of fact — not opinion — published to others and harmful to your reputation, potentially yes. Honest cautions: truth is a complete defense, public figures must additionally prove the speaker knew it was false or recklessly disregarded the truth, and deadlines are short, often one year from publication. Some statements (false accusations of crime, for instance) are treated as damaging on their face.

The same act was also a crime. Can I still sue?

Yes — criminal prosecution and a civil claim run on separate tracks. The state prosecutes the crime; you sue for compensation, and you can win the civil case even if the criminal case ends in acquittal, because the burden of proof is lower. Practical note: a criminal conviction, if one comes, can strengthen your civil case considerably, so your lawyer may coordinate timing around the prosecution.

What damages can a tort claim recover?

Compensatory damages cover what the wrong cost you: economic losses like medical bills, lost income, and repair costs, plus non-economic harm like reputational damage or emotional distress where the claim allows it. Punitive damages are reserved for conduct that was malicious or reckless, not merely careless. Collectability matters too — a judgment against someone with no assets or insurance may be worth little, which an honest lawyer weighs with you upfront.

Tort Lawyers in other Texas cities

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