Where every client counts.
We are a boutique law firm that delivers big results. As our client, you will receive individualized attention from experienced attorneys every step of the way. From the simplest case to complex multi-party litigation, our team is focused on delivering results based on your needs.
What We Do
Testimonials from Our Clients
Our Legal Team
Meet the Attorneys of Levy Pruett Carter. With passion and purpose, we represent clients throughout the state of Georgia, winning cases, reaching favorable settlements, and exceeding expectations.
Notable LPC Cases
Frances Cullen has defended the livelihood of professionals for more than 25 years, guiding them through the professional license application process and defending their license against potential disciplinary action or criminal charges. Here are just a few representative cases involving physician clients.
Sixteen-year-old Plaintiff sued for his own personal injuries and for the wrongful death of his father and sister, after their vehicle rear-ended a tractor-trailer on I-75 north. Plaintiff argued that DOT’s failure to install a sign warning of a prior serious crash which caused a long unexpected queue of traffic constituted the proximate cause of Plaintiff’s crash.
Plaintiff alleged he was driving straight through an intersection and had a green light when Defendant, driving in the opposite direction, failed to yield while turning left and caused a collision, which resulted in injuries to Plaintiff.
In September, 2017, Lee Pruett tried a case before a Barrow County jury and, along with Co-Counsel Bill Cowsert of Cowsert Heath in Athens, obtained a verdict in an amount which was more than $10,000 less than their client’s last offer at mediation one month prior.
In Salem v. the Georgia Department of Transportation, the Plaintiff sued for a catastrophic brain injury he sustained in an automobile collision which occurred just outside of Jesup, Georgia.
On July 28, 2015, in a big win for DeKalb County, the Georgia Court of Appeals reversed itself on the issue of whether lay testimony as to speed, based only on the experience of impact, constituted admissible evidence to defeat summary judgment.
Plaintiff alleged that on October 1, 2010, he ate chicken nuggets purchased at Defendant’s franchise restaurant and, approximately three-and-a-half hours later, began to experience nausea and diarrhea.
On March 27, 2007, Plaintiff allegedly injured herself when she fell while trying to get out of a defective chair at a Burger King restaurant located in downtown Atlanta.
Plaintiff was a front-seat passenger in a vehicle driven by Robert Lamar, traveling north on Clairmont Road. A DeKalb County police officer was driving southbound in a DeKalb County police unit on his way to back-up a fellow officer. At approximately 2:30 a.m., Mr. Lamar attempted to make a left turn into an apartment complex across the southbound lanes of Clairmont and was struck by the police officer.
Firm News
Legal News Blog
In a recent pair of companion cases, Avis Rent A Car System v. Johnson, 352 Ga.App. 858 (2019) and Avis Rent A Car System v. Smith, 353 Ga.App. 24 (2019), the Georgia Court of Appeals reversed massive jury verdicts totaling $54M on the grounds that an Avis employee’s theft of a rental vehicle cut off Avis’s liability for the employee’s subsequent crash that injured the bystander plaintiffs.
The Georgia legislature recently passed a bill designed to shield healthcare facilities and other business entities from civil liability related to the spread of COVID-19. On August 5, 2020, Governor Brian Kemp signed the “Georgia COVID-19 Pandemic Business Safety Act,” which provides businesses with a general shield against civil tort lawsuits brought by members of the public, customers, or employees who alleged that they contracted or were exposed to the virus while on the premises.
In Reid v. Morris, Case No. S20A0107 (Ga. S. Ct., June 29, 2020), the Supreme Court of Georgia held that under Georgia’ s punitive damages statute, a defendant may be subject to unlimited punitive damages if he commits a tort while intoxicated—even if the tort does not involve driving under the influence. In this case, the two defendants, Stroud and Morris, were drinking together, and though Stroud knew Morris was drunk, had no license, and was known to be reckless, he gave Morris his car keys and let him drive. The plaintiff was injured when his vehicle was struck by the vehicle driven by Morris.
In a recent decision, the Georgia Supreme Court held that the State Constitution protects Georgians’ right to pursue an occupation of their choosing free from unreasonable government interference. The case directly concerned the rights of lactation care providers (LCs) to practice with alternative licensing credentials, though it could potentially have a far-reaching impact on other professionally licensed occupations in Georgia.
Office Hours
Monday-Friday
8:00AM-5:00PM
Meetings by appointment only
Our Location
125 Clairemont Ave., Suite 410 Decatur, GA 30030
Phone number: (404)371-8857
Fax number: (404)371-8882