Plantation Personal Injury Lawyer | Medical Malpractice, Corporate Parks, and Retail Claims

A Plantation personal injury lawyer represents people injured by negligence in this central-Broward business hub. Attorney Dean Levy handles Plantation cases involving HCA Florida Westside Hospital medical malpractice, corporate office park slip-and-falls, Broward Mall premises liability, and crashes along the I-595 commercial corridor.

Last reviewed by Attorney Dean Levy on April 20, 2026. This page is reviewed quarterly to reflect current Florida personal injury law.

TL;DR

  • HCA Florida Westside Hospital is at 8201 W Broward Blvd, Plantation.
  • Plantation hosts Corporate Park West (Fiserv, American Express, more).
  • HCA Westside is private, so no sovereign immunity damage caps apply.
  • Plantation General is now HCA Florida Plantation Emergency.
  • Florida statute of limitations is 2 years from injury date.

Plantation occupies central Broward County at the intersection of I-595, University Drive, and Broward Boulevard. The city’s defining feature for personal injury practice is the concentration of business and medical infrastructure: HCA Florida Westside Hospital (a 250-bed private acute-care hospital), the Corporate Park West office complex hosting Fiserv and American Express, Broward Mall, and Westfield Broward shopping districts. These commercial defendants carry substantial liability insurance and require different case strategy than residential premises cases in neighboring cities.


Can I sue HCA Florida Westside Hospital for medical malpractice?

Yes. HCA Florida Westside Hospital at 8201 W Broward Blvd is a private hospital owned by HCA Healthcare, the largest for-profit healthcare provider in the United States. Unlike Memorial Hospital Miramar or other public hospitals in Broward, HCA Westside is not subject to Florida’s sovereign immunity damage caps under Florida Statute 768.28. Recovery is limited only by the case’s actual damages and the hospital’s substantial liability insurance.

Medical malpractice claims against HCA Westside still require compliance with Florida’s pre-suit investigation procedures under Florida Statute Chapter 766. A corroborating expert affidavit from a same-specialty physician must accompany the pre-suit notice. The hospital then has 90 days to investigate before suit can be filed. Florida medical malpractice cases carry a 2-year statute of limitations from when the injury was discovered or should have been discovered with due diligence.


What is HCA Florida Plantation Emergency and how does it differ from Westside?

Plantation General Hospital was acquired by HCA and rebranded. It now operates as HCA Florida Plantation Emergency, a freestanding emergency department that functions as an extension of HCA Florida Westside Hospital rather than as a standalone hospital. Patients requiring admission are typically transferred to Westside or another HCA facility.

From a malpractice standpoint, claims involving the Plantation Emergency facility follow the same Florida Statute Chapter 766 procedures as Westside claims. Liability flows through HCA Florida Healthcare. The distinction matters because patients sometimes assume “Plantation General” still operates as a full hospital and are surprised when complex cases require transfer. Documenting the transfer-related care decisions becomes important in cases where delay or coordination issues contributed to harm.


What about slip-and-fall cases at Plantation corporate parks?

Plantation’s Corporate Park West and Fashion Mall office complexes host major employers including Fiserv (financial technology), American Express call centers, Magic Leap, and historically Motorola. Slip-and-fall and premises liability cases at these locations involve corporate landlord defendants with substantial insurance coverage and aggressive defense counsel.

Corporate park premises liability claims under Florida Statute 768.0755 require proof that the property owner had actual or constructive notice of the dangerous condition. Constructive notice in corporate environments is often established through scheduled cleaning logs, security patrol records, and incident report patterns. The discovery process in these cases is more complex than residential premises cases because corporate landlords delegate maintenance to property managers, who delegate to contractors. Multiple potentially liable parties must be identified and sued before the statute expires.


What about Broward Mall and other Plantation retail centers?

Broward Mall sits at 8000 W Broward Blvd, almost directly across from HCA Westside Hospital. Westfield Broward Plaza, the Fashion Mall (now redeveloped), and numerous strip retail centers complete Plantation’s retail density. Each generates a distinct premises liability profile.

Plantation Retail LocationPremises Liability PatternInsurance Defendant
Broward MallFood court spills, escalator falls, parking lotMall owner + tenant + management
Westfield Broward PlazaAnchor store falls, parking, pedestrianProperty owner + anchor tenant
Grocery and pharmacy retailSpills, produce hazards, aisle obstaclesNational chain insurer
Restaurant retailFood poisoning, bathroom slip, parkingRestaurant + landlord
Big-box retailFalling merchandise, aisle obstructionNational chain insurer

What are the most dangerous Plantation intersections and corridors?

Plantation’s crash density concentrates at I-595 interchanges with University Drive, Pine Island Road, and Nob Hill Road, and along Broward Boulevard’s commercial stretch. The city’s wide multi-lane arterials carry heavy commuter and commercial traffic between Fort Lauderdale and western Broward.

LocationHazardCommon Crash Types
I-595 at University Drive (Exit 5)High-volume freeway exitRear-end, sideswipe, merging
I-595 at Pine Island Road (Exit 7)Mall traffic merging with freewayRear-end, sideswipe
Broward Blvd at University DriveHospital and retail corridorT-bone, left-turn, pedestrian
Sunrise Blvd at Pine Island RoadCommercial-residential mixT-bone, rear-end
Broward Blvd at NW 31st AveHospital corridor pedestrian densityPedestrian, rear-end
Cleary Blvd corridorCorporate park accessRear-end, parking lot

How do Plantation business defendants handle injury claims?

Plantation’s commercial defendants — HCA Healthcare, Simon Property Group (which formerly owned Broward Mall, now Westfield), Fiserv, American Express — carry substantial liability insurance with experienced defense counsel. These claims do not settle through routine adjuster negotiation. They require litigation-ready preparation from day one.

HCA’s preferred defense firms aggressively contest causation in medical malpractice cases. Mall owners’ defense counsel scrutinize timing of the condition through surveillance footage and cleaning logs. Corporate landlords invoke contract-based indemnity provisions to shift liability to tenants or contractors. Successful Plantation cases against commercial defendants require expert witnesses, thorough discovery, and willingness to try the case if the offer does not match documented value.


What is Florida’s 14-day rule for Plantation residents?

Florida requires accident victims to seek medical treatment within 14 days of a motor vehicle crash to preserve $10,000 in PIP benefits under Florida Statute 627.736. Miss the window and the PIP allotment is forfeit.

HCA Florida Westside Hospital and HCA Florida Plantation Emergency both satisfy the rule. Urgent care centers along University Drive and Broward Boulevard, primary care physicians, chiropractors, and physical therapists throughout the city also qualify. The visit must document accident-related injuries. The 14-day clock runs from the crash date.


What if a hospital lien from HCA Westside affects my settlement?

HCA hospitals routinely file hospital liens under Florida Statute Chapter 713 for unpaid medical bills, asserting first-priority claims against personal injury settlements. The lien attaches to the settlement before any client distribution, which can substantially reduce what reaches the injured person.

Hospital liens are negotiable. Many liens settle at significant discounts (often 30% to 50% reduction) when the injured client’s net recovery would otherwise be inadequate. The negotiation requires documentation of the client’s medical needs, financial situation, and the proportion of recovery available. Hospital lien resolution is a routine but technical part of Plantation cases involving HCA treatment.


How does Florida’s modified comparative negligence affect Plantation cases?

Under Florida Statute 768.81, plaintiffs more than 50% at fault recover nothing. For Plantation premises liability cases involving corporate defendants, this rule becomes a defense focus. HCA’s defense counsel argues the patient ignored discharge instructions. Mall defense argues the shopper failed to watch where she was walking. Corporate landlord defense argues the visitor disregarded a posted warning.

Successful cases counter these arguments through evidence preservation, witness statements, and expert testimony. Plantation cases benefit from immediate attorney involvement to preserve evidence before corporate defendants control the narrative through their incident reports and surveillance review.

Injured in Plantation? Get experienced representation against corporate defendants.

(888) 613-3326 — Free Consultation

No fees unless we win. Attorney Levy personally handles every case.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is HCA Florida Westside Hospital protected by sovereign immunity?

No. HCA Florida Westside is a private hospital owned by HCA Healthcare. Sovereign immunity damage caps under Florida Statute 768.28 do not apply. Medical malpractice claims still require Florida Statute Chapter 766 pre-suit procedures including a corroborating expert affidavit.

How long do I have to file a medical malpractice case in Plantation?

Florida medical malpractice claims must be filed within 2 years of discovering the injury or when it should have been discovered with due diligence. The statute is found in Florida Statute 95.11(4)(b). Pre-suit notice and investigation requirements add 90 days to the timeline.

Can I sue Broward Mall directly or do I sue a specific store?

Depends on where the injury occurred. Common-area incidents (food court, parking lot, escalators, mall corridors) typically generate claims against the mall owner. Incidents inside a specific store generate claims against that tenant. Many cases involve both defendants. Identifying all potentially liable parties is essential.

What happens to my settlement if I have a hospital lien from HCA?

The lien is paid from the settlement before client distribution. However, hospital liens are negotiable. Many liens settle at 30% to 50% reductions when the client’s net recovery would otherwise be inadequate. Lien negotiation is a standard part of cases involving substantial hospital treatment.

Are corporate park slip-and-fall cases harder than retail slip-and-fall?

Often yes. Corporate landlords delegate maintenance through layered contracts, requiring identification of multiple potentially liable parties (landlord, property manager, cleaning contractor, vendor). Discovery is more complex. Defense counsel is more sophisticated. Cases benefit from immediate attorney investigation to preserve evidence.

Does the Plantation Police Department or BSO handle accidents in Plantation?

The City of Plantation operates its own police department. Plantation Police handles city streets and city-owned property. Florida Highway Patrol handles I-595 crashes. Broward Sheriff’s Office (BSO) handles unincorporated Broward areas adjacent to Plantation. Get the report from the right agency.

What does a Plantation personal injury lawyer cost?

Dean Levy Injury Law works on a contingency-fee basis under Florida Bar Rule 4-1.5(f): 33.3% before suit and 40% after suit is filed. No upfront cost. No fees unless we recover compensation. All case expenses are advanced by the firm and recovered only from the settlement.


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Dean Levy Injury Law | 955 South Federal Hwy, Suite 416, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33316 | (888) 613-3326