Protecting you and your family. Your teammate for justice.
Whether you were rear-ended at the Bustleton Pike and Street Road intersection on your way to the Feasterville-Trevose shopping plaza, slipped on water leaking from a refrigerator case at a Feasterville restaurant, tore something in your knee, or had a driver running a stale yellow on County Line Road T-bone your car, the first 72 hours determine what your case is ultimately worth. You should not have to learn Pennsylvania’s injury laws, insurance carrier tactics, or the rules of the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas on top of physical recovery and a financial mess you did not cause.
Since 1995, attorney Greg Prosmushkin has litigated Bucks County injury claims from our office five minutes south of Feasterville on Bustleton Pike. Our team appears at the Doylestown courthouse regularly. We know the judges. We know the insurance defense bar that handles lower Bucks claims. We know the rules of the road, the names of the Lower Southampton Township and Bensalem Township police districts that patrol Feasterville, and the trauma protocols at Jefferson Bucks Hospital and Jefferson Torresdale.
Our Pennsylvania personal injury lawyers work on contingency, which Pennsylvania law calls a no-win, no-fee arrangement. You pay nothing unless we recover for you. No retainer, no hourly billing, no obligation after the call. If you are searching for a personal injury lawyer near Feasterville, the free consultation starts at (215) 770-2978 at any hour.
Defective Steps. A Bad Fall. The Property Owner Said It Was Her Fault. We Recovered $285,000.
Our client fell on defective steps at a Pennsylvania property in 2024. The owner’s insurance carrier blamed her, citing the open and obvious doctrine. We documented the structural defect, established the owner’s notice of the condition, and proved the steps did not meet building code. We recovered $285,000 in premises liability damages. Premises cases turn on documentation built in the first 72 hours, not on what the insurance adjuster tells you on day one.
We handle the full range of injury cases for Feasterville and lower Bucks County clients, from Bustleton Pike car accidents and County Line Road truck crashes to Feasterville-Trevose shopping plaza premises claims and light-industrial workers’ comp situations. If someone else’s negligence put you here, one of our personal injury practice areas below covers it.
Bustleton Pike (PA Route 532), Street Road (PA Route 132), County Line Road, and Philmont Avenue crashes through Feasterville-Trevose. We walk you through your limited tort vs. full tort election before you sign anything. Related: hit and run accidents, Uber and Lyft crashes, and Amazon delivery accidents.
Commercial truck volume on Bustleton Pike, Street Road, and County Line Road through Feasterville. We pull FMCSA driver logs, electronic logging device data, and corporate negligence records that boutique Feasterville firms typically do not request.
Feasterville riders face built-in bias from claims adjusters. Our $1 million Bucks County motorcycle wrongful death case closed in four months and proves how we rebut the comparative-fault narrative the defense raises by default.
Pennsylvania’s hills and ridges doctrine governs winter cases. Our $285,000 defective steps premises settlement in 2024 demonstrates the file-building standard that fall cases require.
Misdiagnosis, surgical error, birth injury, and medication errors at Jefferson Bucks Hospital, Holy Redeemer Hospital, Jefferson Torresdale, and the regional Bucks providers serving Feasterville. We file the Certificate of Merit under Pa.R.C.P. 1042.3 within sixty days.
Lower Bucks light-industrial sites, restaurant employees, retail workers, delivery drivers, and construction crews. We handle the PA workers’ comp claim and the third-party tort claim in parallel when a defective tool, contractor, or third party caused the injury.
Pennsylvania uses a hybrid strict-liability and negligence regime under 3 P.S. § 459-502-A. Feasterville’s residential density produces frequent dog-bite cases. Recognized as a Top 10 Philadelphia Dog Bite Lawyer 2025 by TrustAnalytica.
Feasterville commercial builds, residential expansions across Lower Bucks, scaffold collapses, falling-object injuries, trench failures, and equipment malfunctions. We coordinate the third-party tort claim alongside the workers’ comp claim.
Bucks County wrongful death and survival actions under 42 Pa.C.S. § 8301 and § 8302. We handled a $1 million pre-suit motorcycle wrongful death case in four months and a $3.3 million Top 10 PA wrongful death matter recognized by TopVerdict.com.
Slip and falls at Feasterville-Trevose restaurants, shopping centers, and the retail corridor along Bustleton Pike and County Line Road. We secure the surveillance video before it overwrites and document the hazard before the property owner repairs it. Our $285,000 defective steps settlement in 2024 demonstrates the documentation standard.
Traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury, paralysis, severe burns, and amputation. We retain life-care planners and vocational economists from intake forward.
We handle additional Bucks County injury cases, including, bus accidents, distracted driving crashes, railroad accidents, burn injuries, food poisoning, spinal cord injuries, police brutality, and daycare injuries.
Feasterville injury victims have options. What they rarely have is an attorney who knows the Doylestown courthouse, has closed a $1 million Bucks County case in four months, speaks their language, and answers the phone around the clock. The points below explain why injured Feasterville residents pick us.
Five minutes south on Bustleton Pike
9637 Bustleton Avenue. Closest Bucks County city to our office. You walk in. The attorney at the table is the attorney on your file.
30+ years filing in Bucks County
Greg has appeared at the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas in Doylestown since 1994. PA Bar 72888 in active standing with no disciplinary history.
$285,000 premises liability settlement (2024)
Defective steps. Property owner blamed the client. We documented the structural defect and the owner’s notice, and recovered fair value for our client.
$1,000,000 Bucks County motorcycle wrongful death, 4 months pre-suit
Ford Road truck driver ran a stop sign. We hired the reconstructionist, found the video, closed the case in four months. (PRNewswire, February 2019.)
Multilingual Communication (English, Spanish, Russian, Polish, Ukrainian, Italian)
Hard conversations happen in your own language. Feasterville’s diverse population means real bilingual representation matters. No other Feasterville-area firm we are aware of publishes comparable multilingual capabilities.
24 hours a day · Home and hospital visits
A real team member answers when you call, day or night. When you cannot drive to us after a Bustleton Pike wreck, we come to you.
Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.
Feasterville sits five minutes north of our Bustleton Avenue office, making it the closest Bucks County community to our front door. Distance matters more than people expect when a case actually gets filed.
Bucks County personal injury lawsuits are filed at the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas in Doylestown, twenty miles north of Feasterville. The court hears Feasterville cases through the Civil Division. The judges, the local rules, the discovery procedures, and the jury pool are not Philadelphia’s. They are Bucks County’s. An attorney who regularly appears in Doylestown knows how a Bucks County jury responds to a Bustleton Pike rear-end versus a Center City crosswalk strike. An attorney who has never been to Doylestown does not.
Our office is twenty-five minutes from the Doylestown courthouse via Route 611 North through Warminster. We regularly file in the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas. When the case moves from negotiation to litigation, the file does not change hands, and the strategy does not change firms.
When you cannot drive after a Feasterville accident, the lawyer comes to you. That is not a marketing line. The drive from our office to most Feasterville addresses is shorter than the drive from a downtown Philadelphia courthouse to City Hall. We have taken cases in clients’ living rooms across Feasterville-Trevose more times than we can count.
Feasterville is a Census Designated Place that does not have its own municipal government. The area marketed as Feasterville-Trevose sits primarily inside Lower Southampton Township, with portions touching the borders of Bensalem Township and Northampton Township. The dual-name CDP plus the three-township edge problem creates jurisdictional complexity that boutique competitor firms regularly mishandle.
The legal consequences of which township your injury actually happened in matter for two things:
Feasterville personal injury lawsuits are filed at the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas in Doylestown regardless of which of the three townships the injury happened in. The township question matters before filing, not after.
Injured in Bensalem? Talk to Greg's Team Today.
Free consultation. No fee unless we win your case.
Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.
Pennsylvania’s personal injury laws determine what every Feasterville injury victim can recover, how long they have to file, and whether a limited tort election blocks their pain and suffering claim before they ever speak to an attorney. These seven facts decide most of them.
| You have 2 years to file. | The PA statute of limitations gives most injury plaintiffs two years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit. Wrongful death runs two years from the date of death. The window sounds long. It compresses fast once evidence collection, medical treatment, and pre-suit negotiation begin. Minors have until two years after their eighteenth birthday under 42 Pa.C.S. § 5533. |
| Feasterville cases get filed in Doylestown. | Feasterville personal injury lawsuits are filed at the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas, 55 East Court Street, Doylestown, PA 18901. The court hears Feasterville cases through the Civil Division regardless of which of the three townships (Lower Southampton, Bensalem, or Northampton) the injury happened in. The judges, the local rules, the discovery procedures, and the jury pool are not Philadelphia’s. A Bucks County attorney who appears in Doylestown regularly knows how local juries respond. |
| Being partly at fault does not disqualify you. | PA follows modified comparative negligence under 42 Pa.C.S. § 7102 with a 51% bar. At 50% fault or less, you recover, reduced by your share. At 51% or more, you recover nothing. We push the percentage down with evidence. |
| PA is a “choice no-fault” state for auto insurance. | Under 75 Pa.C.S. § 1705, every PA driver picked limited tort or full tort when the policy was issued. Limited tort drivers still recover non-economic damages when the injury meets the serious injury threshold, the at-fault driver was uninsured, convicted of DUI, or driving a commercial vehicle. |
| Three-township notice rule applies to government claims. | Claims against Lower Southampton Township, Bensalem Township, Northampton Township, the Bucks County government, SEPTA, PennDOT, or any Commonwealth agency require a written notice of claim within six months of the date of injury under 42 Pa.C.S. § 5522. Damage caps apply at 42 Pa.C.S. § 8528 and 42 Pa.C.S. § 8553. Miss the six-month window and the underlying claim usually dies. |
| PA does not cap most personal injury damages. | Standard personal injury cases face no statutory cap on economic damages (medical bills, lost wages, future care) or non-economic damages (pain and suffering, loss of consortium, scarring). Medical malpractice cases against certain government-affiliated providers face caps under 40 P.S. § 1303.505. |
| Workers’ comp has a separate 3-year deadline. | Pennsylvania workers’ compensation claims run on a three-year clock under 77 P.S. § 602, measured from the date of injury or the last payment of compensation. The two-year tort deadline still applies separately if the workplace injury involves a third-party defendant. |
The amount your Feasterville personal injury case is worth depends on your economic damages, your non-economic damages, and whether the defendant’s conduct justifies punitive damages. The insurance company already has a number. It reflects what they want to pay, not what Pennsylvania law says you are owed. None of these three damages categories are capped under Pennsylvania law for standard personal injury claims.
Non-economic damages cover pain and suffering, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life, scarring, and loss of consortium. The amount depends on the severity of the injury, the duration of treatment, the impact on daily activities, and the strength of the medical and personal-witness evidence. Limited tort drivers face restrictions under 75 Pa.C.S. § 1705 unless the serious injury threshold applies.
Punitive damages are available in Bucks County for outrageous or reckless conduct, including drunk-driving cases, intentional misconduct, and corporate negligence with documented disregard for safety. The standard at trial is clear and convincing evidence.
Pennsylvania uses modified comparative negligence under 42 Pa.C.S. § 7102 with a 51 percent bar.
Suppose you were turning left from Street Road onto Bustleton Pike near the Feasterville-Trevose shopping center. Another driver coming from your right ran a stale yellow and T-boned your vehicle. Discovery later shows that you started your turn before checking that the oncoming lane was clear. The Bucks County jury determines that the other driver was 65% at fault for running the light and your incomplete pre-turn check was 35% at fault.
The jury awards a total of $95,000 in damages.
Under modified comparative negligence, the $95,000 gets reduced by your 35% share of fault. You recover $61,750. The $33,250 represents your 35% contribution.
If the jury had found you 51% at fault, you would recover zero. The 51% bar is unforgiving. The defense in Bucks County cases will push your percentage up to whatever they can prove. We push it down with police reports, surveillance video from nearby Feasterville-Trevose businesses, vehicle telematics, witness statements, and accident reconstruction.
| Result | Case Type | What We Did |
|---|---|---|
| $3,300,000 | Motorcycle Wrongful Death (PA) | Retained accident reconstruction expert. Top 10 PA wrongful death settlement (TopVerdict.com, 2020). |
| $1,925,000 | Construction Falling Object (PA) | Established contractor liability for falling granite slabs. Construction safety experts retained. |
| $1,300,000 | Tractor-Trailer Accident | Sued the contractor and co-company. Proved failure to train and safety protocol violations. |
| $1,000,000 | Motorcycle Wrongful Death vs. Truck (Bucks County, pre-suit, 4 months) | Uncovered video of the truck running a stop sign. Closed 4 months from the accident. |
| $500,000 | Car Accident (Prior Counsel Undervaluation) | The prior attorney valued the case under $100,000. We secured five times the prior valuation. |
| $300,000 | Slip and Fall / Traumatic Brain Injury (Bucks County) | ADA-non-compliant ramp at a Pennsylvania convenience store. Documented TBI and wrist injury. |
| $285,000 | Premises Liability, Defective Steps (PA, 2024) | Structural defect documented and building code violation established. Property owner’s notice proven. |
| $250,000 | Sidewalk Slip and Fall, Pre-Suit (Bucks County, 2025) | Tree-root uplift on a Bucks County walkway. Anastasia Gradinari documented owner notice and settled pre-suit. |
Attorney advertisement. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. See additional verdicts and settlements.
Most Bensalem cases follow the same five-step path. The exact timeline depends on case facts, the parties, the insurer, and whether the case settles or is filed at Doylestown.
Yes. Every personal injury attorney practicing in Pennsylvania is licensed and regulated by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania through the Disciplinary Board and the Office of Disciplinary Counsel. Greg Prosmushkin holds PA Bar 72888, admitted November 21, 1994, in active standing with no disciplinary history.
Pennsylvania’s attorney advertising rules fall under Rule 7.1 through Rule 7.4 of the PA Rules of Professional Conduct. Every legal services advertisement in PA must be truthful, non-deceptive, and include required disclosures.
Contingency-fee representation under PA law creates no financial obligation unless your case produces a recovery. After your free case review, you are free to consult other attorneys, take time to decide, or choose not to proceed at no cost.
Four practicing attorneys. Each was admitted in Pennsylvania. Meet the full team.
Feasterville’s road network funnels Lower Bucks commuter traffic, retail corridor volume, and three-township edge traffic onto a small set of corridors. Six roads and four trauma centers account for the bulk of our Feasterville caseload.
| Bustleton Pike (PA Route 532)
The north-south spine through Feasterville-Trevose. Heavy commuter and commercial traffic. Side-impact and rear-end crashes concentrate at the Street Road, County Line Road, and Philmont Avenue intersections. Our office sits five minutes south on Bustleton Pike, which is why we see more Feasterville Bustleton Pike cases than any other firm. | Street Road (PA Route 132)
The east-west arterial through Feasterville and into Bensalem. Rear-end and intersection crashes concentrate at the Bustleton Pike, Knights Road, and Brownsville Road intersections. The Street Road and Bustleton Pike intersection produces a meaningful share of Feasterville injury cases. |
| County Line Road
Crosses the Bucks-Montgomery county line through Feasterville-Trevose. Heavy retail-driven traffic between the Feasterville shopping plazas. Pedestrian and intersection crashes concentrate at the Bustleton Pike and Philmont Avenue intersections. | Philmont Avenue
Connects Feasterville to Huntingdon Valley and Philmont. Residential and Philmont Country Club traffic. Side-impact crashes concentrate at the County Line Road and Bustleton Pike intersections. |
| Buck Road
Lower Bucks residential collector connecting Feasterville to Holland and Northampton. Pedestrian and school-zone cases concentrate here. The Buck Road and Bustleton Pike intersection produces frequent rear-end cases. | Bridgetown Pike
Connects Feasterville to Langhorne and Penndel. Light commercial and commuter traffic with residential intersections that produce side-impact cases at the Buck Road and Brownsville Road intersections. |
Trauma Centers and Courthouse Serving Feasterville Injury Victims
Severe Feasterville injuries are most often treated at Jefferson Bucks Hospital (the closest Jefferson Health facility to Feasterville, located in Langhorne), Jefferson Torresdale Hospital (Northeast Philadelphia, the next-closest), Holy Redeemer Hospital (Meadowbrook, Montgomery County, just across the County Line Road border), and Temple University Hospital (Pennsylvania Level I Trauma Center, North Philadelphia) for catastrophic cases.
“They explained Pennsylvania premises liability law to me in Russian. The settlement was three times what the insurance company first offered. I cannot thank them enough.”
-Yulia Rosenberg, Google Review
Our office at 9637 Bustleton Avenue sits five minutes south of the Feasterville-Trevose line on Bustleton Pike. We serve Feasterville and the surrounding lower Bucks County corridor.
Not sure if your neighborhood is covered? Call (215) 799-9990. We serve all of Bucks County from our Bustleton Avenue office.
Feasterville injury victims talk themselves out of calling a lawyer because they assume they were partly to blame, their injuries were not serious enough, or they waited too long. In most cases, those fears are bigger than the actual legal barriers.
Financial worry is part of what brought you here. Our representation is 100% contingency-based under Pennsylvania law. If we do not recover for you, you pay zero in attorney fees. Not a reduced fee. Not costs. Nothing. We invest our own time and resources because we believe in the case, and we only get paid when you do. There is no financial risk to calling us. The only real risk is waiting.
Either way, your case files at the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas in Doylestown. Feasterville is a Census Designated Place that does not have its own municipal government. The marketed Feasterville-Trevose area sits primarily inside Lower Southampton Township, with portions touching the borders of Bensalem Township and Northampton Township. The township distinction matters for two things: which police department took the initial accident report, and whether a township government entity was involved in the injury. If yes, the 6-month notice rule under 42 Pa.C.S. § 5522 applies, and damage caps under 42 Pa.C.S. § 8553 limit recovery to $500,000 aggregate. Call (215) 770-2978 the day of the incident if a township vehicle or municipal property was involved.
Yes, with caveats. Claims against any of the three townships bordering Feasterville require a written notice of claim within six months of the date of injury under 42 Pa.C.S. § 5522. Damage caps apply at 42 Pa.C.S. § 8553 ($500,000 aggregate against local agencies). Township government vehicles, township-owned property defects, and township police negligence all fall under this rule. The 6-month deadline is harder than the 2-year tort deadline most people remember. We treat the township notice as a same-week priority on every Feasterville case where a township could be implicated.
Pennsylvania premises liability law applies. The property owner owes a duty of reasonable care to its invitees. We secure surveillance video within the first business day to prevent overwrite, request the incident report, depose the loss-prevention officer who handled the report, and document the hazard before the property owner repairs it. Our $285,000 premises liability settlement in 2024 involved defective steps and the insurance carrier’s initial denial of liability. Documentation built in the first 72 hours wins these cases.
Pennsylvania is a choice no-fault state under 75 Pa.C.S. § 1705. If you picked limited tort, you face restrictions on recovering pain and suffering unless the injury meets the serious injury threshold or the at-fault driver was uninsured, convicted of DUI, or driving a commercial vehicle. Our limited tort guide walks through the exceptions.
Nothing up front. We handle every Feasterville personal injury case on a 100% contingency-fee basis. The consultation is free. We advance case costs, including expert witnesses, court fees, accident reconstruction, and medical records. Our fee and advanced costs are recovered only from your settlement or verdict. No recovery means no attorney fee. Read our full PA personal injury FAQ.
Case value depends on the severity of the injuries, the long-term prognosis, the liability evidence, the available insurance limits, and the strength of the documentation. Our Bucks County results include a $285,000 defective-steps premises settlement in 2024, a $300,000 mild-TBI premises case, a $250,000 pre-suit sidewalk slip-and-fall settlement (2025), and a $1 million pre-suit motorcycle wrongful death closed in 4 months. Any attorney who quotes you an “average” before reviewing your medical records and your declarations page is selling, not advising. Browse our full verdicts and settlements.
"*" indicates required fields