It is possible
Animals are legally considered property. However, if your animal has been injured due to the negligence of another person, you have the right to sue the person who caused the injury to your animal. You may also sue for loss of use if the animal had a particular use (guide dog, dairy cow, etc). A personal injury attorney in your state can tell you your rights based on your state's laws.
From what I've read, you can legally sue for personal injury as soon as possible because it must be filed within a certain time limit or the injured person's claim will be barred or his legal sue might be void forever. So as much as possible, try to consult personal injury lawyers.
How long you can sue your job after a work injury varies slightly from state to state. In most states you have three years to sue for a personal injury or accident at work.
No. You do not sue for what you've spent or what you'd like returned. If you entered into a contract with someone where your portion of the bargain was physical labor, and the other person refused to perform their obligations under the contract, you may sue them for breach of contract and ask to be paid for your labor.
If your injury is work-related it could be covered by Workers' Comp regardless of whether the person responsible for the injury works with you or not.
Can you sue your employer for breaking labor laws for minors?Read more: Can_you_sue_your_employer_for_breaking_labor_laws_for_minors
Why not? Whoever causes an injury should be sued.
So long as your employer pays you the WC benefit, no lawsuit against them is possible. Courts insist that WC is the "exclusive remedy" for your injury. You can sue a third party who contributed to your damages, but never the employer.
People can sue for three reasons: Property, money, and injury.
No.
Sue Ranney has written: 'A note on the proletarianization of the African peasantry in Rhodesia' -- subject(s): Labor supply, Labor