Why Choose Varcadipane & Pinnisi, P.C. for Your Bridgewater Personal Injury Case ?
Bridgewater’s busy highways and construction zones lead to serious injuries every year. Our local team knows Somerset County courts and insurers inside-out.
- Proven Results: $50M+ recovered in verdicts and settlements.
- Elite Credentials: Certified Civil Trial Attorney, Super Lawyers, Million Dollar Advocates Forum.
- No Win, No Fee: Contingency basis—zero upfront costs.
Table Of Content
- Types of Injury & Accident Claims In NJ
- New Jersey Statute of Limitations for Injury Cases
- Personal Injury Cases We Handle Near You
- Contact A Skilled New Jersey Personal Injury Attorney Near Your Location
- How a New Jersey Personal Injury Lawyer in Your Area Can Help You?
- Frequently Asked Questions
Benefits of Hiring a Personal Injury Lawyer
Legal Expertise
Navigate NJ statutes, prove negligence, and avoid insurer traps.
Maximum Compensation
Skilled negotiators counter lowball offers for full medical, wage, and pain recovery.
Stress-Free Recovery
We handle paperwork and calls so you focus on healing.
Bridgewater Personal Injury Attorney Near You
Have you or your loved one suffered a serious personal injury in Bridgewater New Jersey from an accident? At Varcadipane & Pinnisi, P.C., we have the experience, skill, and dedication it takes to help you recover the maximum compensation permitted under the law for your injuries.
We regularly litigate personal injury cases in New Jersey, Florida, New York, and in the Federal and State Courts and we have obtained millions of dollars in recoveries for our clients.
Give us a call or send us an email to arrange an immediate free consultation with a Bridgewater New Jersey personal injury attorney. In almost every case, we will handle your personal injury claim at no upfront cost and we only recover a fee as a percentage of what we recover for you. Call us now to learn more.
Types of Injury & Accident Claims Bridgewater Personal Injury Lawyer Handle:
- Car Accidents: Rear-end, intersection, or highway crashes on Route 287.
- Truck Accidents: 18-wheeler, semi-truck, tractor-trailer collision complex FMCSA rules.
- Construction Injuries: Falls, crane accidents, forklift incidents, scaffold collapses.
- Medical Malpractice: Surgical errors, misdiagnosis, birth injuries.
- Slip & Fall / Premises Liability: Unsafe stores, icy walkways, dog bites.
- Product Liability: Defective drugs, tools, or vehicles under strict liability.
- Brain & Spinal Injuries: Traumatic brain injury (TBI), paralysis, herniated discs.
- Wrongful Death: Compassionate support for grieving families.
General Negligence:
Typically, “negligence” claims involve a person or company that has caused harm or damages to others because they failed to act reasonably. Generally, a party is liable if they act without reasonable care or fail to act when a reasonable person would have, and someone suffers an injury as a result.
In general, a negligence claim requires proving negligence involves establishing four “elements” or issues in your case. These elements are:
- Duty of care – Not only must the plaintiff establish what the duty or standard of care was in the particular case but must also establish that the particular defendant owed that duty to this particular plaintiff.
- Breach of that duty – Once the plaintiff establishes the duty of care, the plaintiff must prove that the defendant’s conduct constituted a breach of that duty.
- Causation – The plaintiff must prove that the defendant’s breach of the duty of care was the actual and proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries and/or damages. Actual cause or cause in fact is the objective factual standard – did A cause B. Proximate cause is legal causation which subjectively recognizes that the conduct at issue was the primary cause of the personal injury without any intervening cause and without which the injury would not have occurred.
- Actual damages – The plaintiff must establish that the injury caused actual damages in order to sustain a negligence personal injury claim. This requirement means that to sustain the case, the plaintiff must prove that he or she suffered some damage or loss that can be equated to a specific monetary value of the loss suffered. Our New Jersey personal injury law firm works hard to prove negligence in your claim.

Product Liability:
If you have been injured in Bridgewater, New Jersey by a dangerous or defective product or device, you may have a viable product liability claim against the company that designed, manufactured, distributed, and/or sold the device. Product liability law in New Jersey typically allows an injured party to recover monetary damages if the personal injury was caused by defective design, manufacturing, or marketing of that product or if the injury was caused because the product did not provide adequate warnings of known hazards. Our New Jersey personal injury lawyers are here to represent your case.
A product liability claim is based on the legal theory of “strict liability”. This theory means that the plaintiff only has to prove that the plaintiff suffered damages caused by the product. In other words, the plaintiff does not have to prove negligence. Instead, the plaintiff must provide an actual loss caused by a defective product used as a reasonable individual would have used it.
If you believe you have sustained a personal injury in New Jersey as the result of a defective product or because the product lacked adequate warnings, the law may entitle you to compensation.
Professional Malpractice:
Professional malpractice is the action or inaction by a professional that violates the generally accepted standard applicable to that professional’s practice. Types of professional malpractice include Medical Malpractice; Chiropractic Malpractice; Architectural Malpractice; and, Engineering Malpractice.
If you believe you have sustained a personal injury as a result of a professional’s malpractice, the law may entitle you to compensation.
To establish a claim for professional malpractice, you must prove that the professional in question:
- Owed the Plaintiff a duty of care – In professional negligence claims, the standard of care that is applicable refers to a similar professional of similar training in that location. Thus, a New Jersey personal injury lawyer is held to the standard of care of a certified civil trial attorney in that location; a medical professional is held to the standard of that particular kind of medical professional, such as that of a certifying board, in that location.
- Breach that duty of care – Generally, two tests are used to determine whether the duty of care was breached. The “foreseeability test” looks to determine whether the professionals should have known that their actions would result in damages to the plaintiff. The “multifactor tests” evaluate several factors to determine whether the defendant deviated from the applicable professional standard of care. These factors can include the nature and severity of the personal injuries, other options the defendant could have employed and their costs, and whether safer or less harmful options were available to the defendant.
- The breach caused the plaintiff’s injury – The plaintiff must be able to prove that “but for” the failure to meet the applicable standard of professional care, the damages would not have occurred.
- Plaintiff Suffered Damages from the Injury – The plaintiff must be able to establish actual damages to recover on a professional malpractice claim. As the New Jersey Appellate Court stated in 2019, the plaintiff cannot satisfy this requirement by “mere conjecture, surmise, or suspicion.” Specifics are required.
Around these, you may find yourself as a victim of:
- CAR ACCIDENTS
- SLIP & FALLS
- DOG BITES
- MOTORCYCLE ACCIDENTS
- CONSTRUCTION ACCIDENTS
- MEDICAL MALPRACTICE
- BIRTH-RELATED INJURIES
- WRONGFUL DEATH
- DEFECTIVE PRODUCTS
- DANGEROUS PRODUCTS
- PROFESSIONAL MALPRACTICE
- NEGLIGENCE
New Jersey Statute of Limitations for Injury Cases
You have 2 years from the injury date to file most personal injury lawsuits in New Jersey. Delaying risks losing your right to compensation forever. Contact us now.
Are You Inside of the Time Frame to File a Lawsuit in NJ?
The statute of limitations for your personal injury case is 2 years. Exceeding it can severely limit or completely invalidate your legal options for seeking compensation. Act swiftly to ensure your rights are preserved and explore your legal recourse before time runs out, otherwise, the likelihood of pursuing your case successfully may diminish considerably. However, if your claim is against a public entity, your timeframe can be significantly shorter.
“There is nothing our firm takes more seriously than fiercely advocating for our clients in a manner that makes them feel confident and informed at all times. We are not striving to be the biggest law firm for our practice areas but we do aim to be the best.”



