John W. Merting, P.A.
Name
 John W. Merting (contact John W. Merting, P.A.)
Address
 913 Gulf Breeze Parkway - Suite 39
Telephone
 850-916-9645
Fax
 850-916-9787
 For more than 35 years, maritime law attorney John W. Merting has been helping families suffering from catastrophic injuries, brain injuries, career-ending injuries, and wrongful death get the compensation they deserve. As the first board certified admiralty and maritime law attorney in the entire Florida Panhandle, Mr. Merting concentrates his personal injury work on cases involving injuries at sea and/or involving maritime workers. Mr. Merting often receives referrals from lawyers throughout the United States who know well of his experience in federal maritime law, including everything from the Jones Act, the Federal Tort Claims Act to the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act. He can also assist personal injury lawyers needing to set up special needs trusts and Medicare set-asides to protect their clients’ government benefits. At the Law Offices of John W. Merting, P.A., we can help anyone in the world with anything from cruise ship injuries and other recreational boating injuries to harbor worker claims. Mr. Merting has litigated claims of seamen injured in the Gulf of Alaska, the Singapore Straits, off the Coast of Africa, throughout the Gulf of Mexico, as well as on the Mississippi River, and other rivers and inland waters of the United States, including the Intracoastal Waterway. Mr. Merting has always been fully committed to giving each client and each case close, attentive service. He works with each client personally, never pushing them off to paralegals or assistants. In all injury matters, he does all work on contingency, meaning that he is paid nothing until his client receives a settlement or jury award. Someone injured in a maritime situation should refrain from giving a tape recorded or written statement until they have been advised of their rights by an experienced and qualified maritime attorney such as Mr. Merting. Employers and their insurors usually seek to obtain statements before such consultations can occur. These representatives frequently work from prepared scripts and obtain information that can be extremely detrimental to the injured party's chances of obtaining a fair financial recovery. Seamen injured in the course of their employment should immediately report the incident to their superiors, seek medical aid, and be extremely careful about completing or signing any incident reports and medical treatment forms if the description of the incident is not completely accurate. All injured parties and their families are advised that most maritime claims have a 3-year statute of limitations - a formal lawsuit must be actually filed in the proper court or your claim will be forever barred! However, some wrongful death claims and some claims against U.S. Government ships or private ships under contract to the U.S. Government or military can have limitations as short as 18 months. Cruise ships usually require written notice of claims within 6 months and suit within 1 year in a specifically designed Court - frequently far from the port of embarkation. Therefore, no one with a potential claim should delay consulting with an attorney knowledgeable in maritime law. Otherwise, your claim, no matter how serious, may be lost forever.
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