Orkin Termite Lawyer

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Midland Termite Damage Lawyer

Orkin Termite Attorney

If Orkin treated your home for termites and you still have them, the treatment — not your home — is the most likely point of failure. An Orkin termite lawyer can review your termite bond, inspection records, and damage history to hold the company liable for failed treatments, missed inspections, denied repair claims, and lowball damage estimates.

Key Takeaways – Recurring termites after professional treatment often indicate improper application, missed infestation areas, or skipped inspections. – EPA registration policy requires soil termiticides to demonstrate complete termite control for at least five years in federal testing before they can be sold (EPA PRN 96-7). – Claims against pest control companies can include fraud, negligence, negligent misrepresentation, and consumer protection violations — not just breach of contract. – Recoverable damages can include repair costs, diminished home value, temporary living costs, and, where state law allows, mental anguish and punitive damages. – Campbell Law, P.C. (“Termite Tom”) has handled over 21,000 termite claims across more than 25 years.

Why Trust Termite Tom With Your Orkin Claim?

Campbell Law, P.C. is a law firm that focuses on termite litigation — suing pest control companies that fail to treat, inspect, or repair as promised. Attorney Tom Campbell, known as “Termite Tom,” has handled over 21,000 termite claims and helped homeowners across the Southeast hold their pest control companies liable for the damage caused by failed treatments and broken promises.

“Termite Tom” Campbell and the team at Campbell Law PC have successfully tried more termite damage claim cases than any law firm in America.

If you have a termite infestation or termite damage in your home, business, or church, it’s very likely that your pest control company has not done its job properly.
If your pest control company:

  • Tries to shirk responsibility
  • Take shortcuts on treatments and repairs
  • Minimize your claim in any way

You need the help of an experienced, knowledgeable termite damage claim lawyer. The effects of termite damage on your property and the financial and emotional uncertainty that come with it can be devastating. Termite Tom and Campbell Law can help.

Why Hire a Termite Lawyer?

A termite lawyer holds pest control companies financially accountable when their treatments fail. There are around 50 termite species in the United States, roughly 20 of which are considered structural pests. Termites thrive in warm climates, which is why infestations are most common in Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas.

Termite treatment and repair companies are supposed to eliminate homeowners’ termite problems — but too often, they fail to deliver and leave families with tens of thousands of dollars in structural damage. These cases are rarely simple breach of contract disputes. Pest control companies have been accused of misrepresenting the treatments they performed, concealing evidence of ongoing infestations, and denying legitimate repair claims — conduct that can give rise to claims for fraud, negligence, gross negligence, and violations of state consumer protection laws.

Your termite lawyer can help you:

  • Investigate the company’s treatment records, inspection reports, and chemical application logs to uncover what was — and wasn’t — actually done
  • Gather and preserve critical evidence, including independent inspections and expert analysis of your home’s damage
  • Establish causes of action including fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and negligence — not just breach of contract
  • File complaints with state pest control regulatory boards, which can trigger investigations into the company’s licensing, chemical applications, and business practices
  • Negotiate aggressively with Orkin and its insurers from a position of strength
  • Pursue your case through arbitration or in court — whichever path your contract and the law allow — to recover the full compensation you deserve

Working with an experienced Orkin termite attorney puts you in the strongest possible position to get compensated for damage from infestations that were supposedly treated — and to ensure the company answers for the way it handled your home.

What Is the Difference Between an Inspection Bond and a Repair Bond?

An inspection bond covers only the periodic inspections needed to uncover signs of termite activity, while a repair bond also obligates the company to treat infestations and repair the resulting damage. If your termite bond was supposed to be a repair bond and the company failed to eradicate the termites from your home, you could have cause to file a civil claim against it.

Even if you only had an inspection bond, you may be able to hold Orkin liable for damages incurred during an infestation if the company failed to find the signs of termites that were present at the time of the inspection. Speak with an Orkin termite lawyer about your options [internal link: when to call a termite damage lawyer].

What Should a Proper Termite Inspection Include?

A proper termite inspection examines every accessible area of the home where termites live or feed, including wood mulch, wood supports, and areas that hold moisture. Knowing what an inspection should look like helps you recognize when your company cut corners.

Termite inspectors are supposed to look for:

  • Wood damage
  • Termite exit holes
  • Mud tubes
  • Discarded wings
  • Flying termites (swarmers)

They should check for these signs throughout the home, including its:

  • Foundation
  • Basement
  • Attic
  • Crawlspaces
  • Outside perimeter
  • Hardwood floors
  • Exposed wood

If the inspector does not check every area of the home covered by your bond, they are not doing their job.

Where Do Termites Thrive?

Termites thrive anywhere that combines warmth, moisture, and wood or other cellulose material. Where they appear in your home depends on the species:

  • Subterranean termites live underground in the soil and build mud tubes to reach food sources. Formosan termites — an invasive species and among the most destructive subterranean termites in the U.S. — prefer damp environments and are widespread in the Southeast.
  • Drywood termites build colonies in dry wood above ground level, often inside homes. They need less moisture than subterranean termites and tunnel through wood, eating across the grain.
  • Dampwood termites live in damp or rotting wood, such as tree stumps or interior wood affected by leaky plumbing or poor drainage. They are found across the Gulf Coast and in Texas.
  • Swarmers (alates) are the winged reproductive termites that mature colonies release during mating season. They are the termites homeowners are most likely to actually see.

Research from the University of Florida shows that invasive Formosan and Asian termites are spreading faster than researchers initially predicted, threatening homes across Florida [link UF/IFAS study]. If you live in Florida and face an invasive termite infestation, tell your lawyer.

Where Should You Look for Termites in Your Home?

Check walls, bathrooms, and wooden furniture first — these are the most common termite hotspots inside a home.

  • Walls. Subterranean termites leave mud tubes on or near the structures they forage from. Other warning signs include paint blisters, damaged paneling, pinholes, and wood that sounds hollow. Because termites consume most materials containing cellulose, they can also damage drywall facings.
  • Bathrooms. Wood framing plus daily moisture makes bathrooms ideal termite habitat. Termites may hide behind walls, tiles, bathtubs, or inside wall voids.
  • Furniture. Drywood termites infest furniture, door and window frames, built-in cabinets, exposed beams, baseboards, and paneling. Termite frass — small, six-sided wooden pellets left as droppings — on or under furniture is the most obvious sign.

If you see signs of termites in any of these hotspots after a professional treatment, contact an Orkin termite lawyer right away. Your lawyer can arrange a proper inspection that identifies the full extent of the problem.

Should You Treat or Repair Termite Damage Yourself?

No. DIY termite treatment is unsafe because of the strength of professional-grade pesticides — and it can destroy the physical evidence your case depends on. Instead of repairing the damage you’ve found, document it thoroughly with photos and video and bring that documentation to your termite lawyer [internal link: how to fix termite damage].

How Effective Are Termite Treatments Supposed to Be?

Under EPA Pesticide Registration Notice 96-7, a soil-applied liquid termiticide must demonstrate complete control of termites for at least five years in standardized federal field testing — conducted through the USDA Forest Service — before it can be registered for sale. In other words, these products are proven to work when applied correctly.

So when a home treated with a soil termiticide develops an infestation anyway, the application itself is the most likely point of failure: an incomplete chemical barrier, improper mixing or concentration, missed areas around plumbing penetrations and foundation gaps, or a failure to re-treat before the product’s effective life ran out. An experienced termite lawyer can use the company’s own treatment records to find out exactly what went wrong.

What Damages Can You Recover in an Orkin Termite Case?

Homeowners who prove their termite company was negligent can recover compensation for:

  • Home repair costs
  • Diminished home value
  • Temporary living costs
  • Attorney fees, where the contract or state law allows
  • Mental anguish, where state law allows
  • Punitive damages

Courts award punitive damages only where companies were intentionally fraudulent or grossly negligent — but those cases do come up. Ask your Orkin termite lawyer whether punitive damages are a realistic possibility in your case.

How Do You Prove Negligence Against a Termite Company?

Proving negligence requires establishing four elements: duty, breach, causation, and damages.

  1. Duty. When you signed a bond with your pest control company, it took you on as a client and owed you a duty of care to provide the termite services stipulated in your bond.
  2. Breach. Failing to inspect your home properly or apply treatments correctly constitutes a breach of that duty.
  3. Causation. Because soil termiticides must demonstrate complete termite control for at least five years to earn EPA registration, a properly treated home should not develop an infestation during that period — which makes the link between the company’s failure and your infestation easier to establish.
  4. Damages. You must show the infestation caused compensable harm, such as property damage and, where state law allows, non-economic harm like mental anguish.

Evidence supporting these elements can include your termite bond, photographs of the damage, and inspection reports documenting the termites and the destruction they caused.

FAQs

Q: Can you sue Orkin for termite damage?

A: Yes. Homeowners can sue Orkin (or pursue arbitration, depending on the contract) when the company fails to properly treat, inspect, or repair under a termite bond. Common claims include negligence, fraud, negligent misrepresentation, breach of bond, and state consumer protection violations.

Q: What are the civil cases against Orkin?

A: Orkin has faced significant civil litigation over its termite work, particularly in Florida and Alabama. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, class action and fraud lawsuits alleged the company failed to perform paid-for inspections and treatments, falsified reinspection reports, and in documented instances forged customer signatures on inspection notices. Internal memos that became evidence in a 1999 Florida class action acknowledged falsified reinspections, and Orkin settled the high-profile Coachman Crossing case in 2003 after former employees testified about forged reinspection tickets. Homeowners continue to bring individual claims against Orkin and other major pest control companies today.

Q: How much does Orkin charge to treat termites?

A: Orkin’s termite treatment cost depends on the extent of the infestation, the termite species, the severity of existing damage, the treatment type, and the size and location of the home. There is no flat published rate; pricing is quoted after inspection.

Q: How long should a termite treatment last?

A: Soil-applied termiticides must demonstrate at least five years of complete termite control in federal testing to earn EPA registration. Many termite bonds also require annual re-inspections and provide free re-treatment if termites return during the bond period.

Talk to an Orkin Termite Lawyer Today

If you’re looking for an Orkin termite lawyer to hold a termite company responsible for untreated damage, turn to Termite Tom. Campbell Law, P.C. has spent more than 25 years litigating and arbitrating termite cases against the industry’s biggest companies — including Orkin. While past results don’t guarantee future outcomes, we have the experience required to hold termite treatment and repair companies liable for their failures. Call 877-327-8511 or contact us online to schedule an initial consultation.

Contact Termite Tom today.

Birmingham Office

5336 Stadium Trace Parkway Suite 206
Birmingham, Alabama 35244

Mobile Office

1106 Dauphin Street
Mobile, Alabama 36604

 

 

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