Our International Partner: Poland
We pride ourselves on building strong working relationships globally with reputable firms that we can engage and collaborate with on behalf of our clients, thus increasing our success rate in cases abroad. We handle all aspects of a case from correspondence to logistics.
Jolanta Budzowska
Associate Partner
Budzowska Fiutowski and Partners
The Polish law firm Budzowska Fiutowski & Partners will assist us in your claim if you have been injured in Poland, and will also assist Polish citizens injured while travelling in the Republic of Ireland.
Budzowska Fiutowski & Partners were one of the first law firms in the Polish market to specialise in compensation claims, especially for medical malpractice. The firm has been making successful claims for clients for over twenty years. The firm is based in Kraków, Poland.
Jolanta Budzowska, founding partner of the firm, has been an attorney-at-law since 1996. Jolanta provides legal assistance to victims in personal injury cases, always acting for the claimant. The most common cases handled by attorney Jolanta are medical negligence cases, road traffic and work accidents , aviation and shipping accidents.
For further information, please email us or request a call back using the form below.
Polish law governing Personal Injury
The Personal Injury system in Poland
Personal injury, which in Polish tort law is generally defined as ‘damage to a person’ (szkoda na osobie), is a specific form of damage arising from an infringement of personal interests. A non-exhaustive list of these personal interests is provided by Article 23 of the Civil Code (CC), including health, liberty, dignity, and freedom of conscience.
How is compensation assessed in Poland?
Compensation for personal injuries is regulated in a specific manner by Articles 444–448 CC, though it remains integrated with the entire system of the tort law. As a result, the general rules on tort liability are directly applicable to personal injuries, and compensation for personal injuries can be claimed under the same premises as other types of damage (e.g. under premises concerning the way of bringing a claim into litigation) and – more generally – other claims falling into the ambit of private law.