Kullmann, Klein & Dioneda, P.C
225 S. Meramec Avenue, Suite 411, St. Louis, Missouri 63105, St. Louis, MO 63105
About Kullmann, Klein & Dioneda, P.C
Kullmann, Klein & Dioneda, P.C. is a personal injury and workers' compensation law firm. The firm serves clients across Missouri and Illinois, with offices in St. Louis, St. Charles, and Granite City. Its three founding partners have over 20 years of experience. They handle cases including car accidents, wrongful death, and product liability. The firm has recovered millions of dollars for clients and also assists with social security disability claims.
Our Attorneys
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.
$72M
Products Liability
St. Louis jury awarded $72 Million to the family of Jackie Fox who died from ovarian cancer caused by Johnson & Johnson's baby powder. The company was found negligent for suppressing studies linking talc to ovarian cancer and failing to warn consumers.
$38M
Products Liability
12-year-old Madison Schmidt was awarded $38 Million in a lawsuit against Abbott Laboratories (AbbVie) for birth defects caused by in-utero exposure to Depakote, which lacked proper warning labels.
$28M
Wrongful Death
Former St. Louis County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, Allan Kaiser, received a $28 Million verdict for the wrongful death of his client's father, David Ellsworth, a long-time smoker, against R.J. Reynolds.
$9.8M
Truck Accident
Mary Kerbler and Leon Smith were awarded $9.8 million in a settlement after a commercial truck struck their stopped car from behind, leaving Mary a quadriplegic with a traumatic brain injury.
$1.8M
Car Accident
Mr. Dioneda represented a 21-year-old passenger rendered a quadriplegic in a car crash caused by a police officer who violated department policies.


