Chehardy Sherman Williams
1 Galleria Blvd, Suite 1100, Metairie, LA 70001, Metairie, LA 70001
About Chehardy Sherman Williams
Chehardy Sherman Williams is a Louisiana law firm serving the Greater New Orleans area and Southeastern Louisiana since 1989. The firm provides legal services to individuals and businesses across multiple practice areas, including personal injury, business and corporate law, healthcare, and criminal defense. Their Trial Team has secured significant verdicts, including $421 million for insurance fraud and $49 million in a personal injury case. The firm maintains offices in Metairie, New Orleans, and Hammond.
Notable Case Results
Case results are sourced directly from attorney websites by Injuria.ai's data infrastructure, which actively monitors 22,000+ personal injury law firms. They are not results obtained by ThatCarHitMe.com. Every case is unique and must be evaluated on its own facts. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. The results shown are not necessarily representative of all results obtained by these firms.
$421M
Insurance Fraud
Verdict against Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana for fraud and abuse of rights in favor of St. Charles Surgical Hospital (SCSH) and Center for Restorative Breast Surgery (CRBS) for failing to pay claims of breast cancer survivors.
$125M
Breach of Contract
Verdict in favor of Huntsman Corporation against Praxair/Linde for breach of an industrial supply contract, failing to provide agreed-upon quantities of hydrogen and carbon monoxide.
$7.4M
Commercial Property Damage
Hurricane Katrina commercial property settlement for an office building in downtown New Orleans.
$5.7M
Business Dispute
Jury verdict after a six-week trial involving a business dispute on behalf of a closely held insurance agency doing business in Puerto Rico.
$4M
Property Damage
Jury verdict for a retail center in St. Bernard Parish, damaged during Hurricane Katrina.
$3M
Personal Injury
Judgment for Thomas Lavigne, victim of a serious car accident, for back wages and medical bills, after initial settlement offer of $300,000 was rejected.