Attorney
Newburgh, Indiana, 47630
Todd C. Barsumian has been named an Indiana Super Lawyer since 2018 by Super Lawyers in the area of Plaintiff's Personal Injury. Previously, he was selected by Super Lawyers as an Indiana Rising Star on four occasions.
Todd was selected to The National Trial Lawyers Association: Top 40 under 40 for the State of Indiana. The National Trial Lawyers Association named Todd a “Top 100 Civil Plaintiff’s Attorney” in Indiana. Todd also received the Top 100 Attorneys Lifetime Achievement Award in Indiana and was selected to the National Association of Distinguished Counsel Nation's Top 1 Percent.
Todd started his legal career at a large Evansville law firm where he was a litigation partner typically hired to defend injury and death claims, including multiple cases that made it to the Indiana Supreme Court. He chaired the Defense Trial Counsel of Indiana's Product Liability Section in 2007 and served on DTCI's Board of Directors from 2008 to 2010.
In 2010, Todd founded a law firm focused on helping victims of personal injury, medical malpractice, and wrongful death. Todd returned to his roots in 2013, opening a law office in his hometown of Newburgh. Since 2000, Todd has also been licensed in Kentucky, where he has handled cases from trial courts up to the Kentucky Supreme Court, often traveling between Henderson and Evansville. In 2018, Todd opened an office in the Indianapolis suburb of Fishers, Indiana, and an office in Evansville. In 2021, Todd and Jonathan Armiger started the law firm of Barsumian Armiger Injury Lawyers with offices in Newburgh, Fishers, and Evansville.
Todd has an extensive range of litigation experience. He successfully represented a severely injured child in a negligence and product liability case that prompted a national recall of a product purchased off the shelf of a Tri-State retailer. He once defended corporations in similar instances and counseled manufacturers on product safety and recall issues.
After beginning his career as an Evansville personal injury lawyer, Todd immediately took on a trucking company for his trucker-client, whose semi was struck on Highway 41 by a semi that could not stop while hauling a trailer full of industrial paper rolls. Shortly after that, Todd handled two separate medical malpractice cases in Kentucky. The first of these claims was against a plastic surgeon on behalf of a client who was left with horrible and permanent scarring after an elective procedure. The second of these claims was against a pharmacist and pharmacy on behalf of a client left with bilateral vestibular impairment after the prescription, dosing, and monitoring of an aminoglycoside antibiotic known as gentamicin. Todd has continued to use his knowledge of automobile insurance company defense tactics to benefit his motor vehicle accident clients throughout southwestern Indiana and western Kentucky.
Todd has brought lawsuits on behalf of the estates of nursing home residents in Kentucky, including one on behalf of the estate of a patient who suffered dehydration, renal failure, and metabolic acidosis ending in death and another for the estate of a patient who suffered a broken humeral head during a fall from her bed. Todd reviewed thousands of pages of records in meticulous detail and worked with nursing home experts to formulate arguments as to breaches in standards of care and worked with a forensic pathologist to develop a strong opinion on the cause of death other than his client's advanced age and other medical conditions.
To aid in the presentation of arguments, Todd often charts his client’s medical care to help effectively demonstrate a pattern of neglect to nursing home representatives.
Unfortunately for the injured, Indiana has legislated medical review panels that significantly delay the litigation process in medical malpractice cases. Fortunately for citizens of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, Kentucky's Supreme Court found nearly identical medical review panel legislation unconstitutional. However, Kentucky has since passed legislation requiring Kentucky medical malpractice complaints to be accompanied by a certification that the case has merit.
Todd was part of the trial team for a Gibson County man who was severely injured when the vehicle he was traveling in was struck by another car that had disregarded a stop sign on a county road. After settling the case with the other driver’s insurance company, Todd and his co-counsel turned to his client’s own insurance company, demanding the total policy limits of his underinsured motorist policy. When the company refused to offer little more than the man’s medical expenses, they took the case to trial in Princeton. They recovered their client’s total policy limits, roughly twice what had been offered.
Presently, Todd is prosecuting various personal injury, wrongful death, and medical malpractice cases in Indiana and Kentucky courts.