What This Question Usually Means
Most people asking this are trying to figure out whether they have a claim worth pursuing, or whether the accident is “just one of those things.” In plain English, a personal injury case is usually about fault (did someone do something they shouldn’t have done?), proof (can you show it?), and harm (did it cause injuries and losses that matter?).
What to Gather for a Case Review
- Basics of the incident: The date (or date range), what type of accident it was (crash, fall, unsafe property condition, etc.), and the general location (Durham area / county is enough).
- Injury/treatment overview: What body parts were hurt, when symptoms started, and the general types of care you received (urgent care, ER, primary care, PT, imaging), plus whether you are still treating.
- Insurance/claim info (if available): Any claim numbers, adjuster contact info, and the general types of coverage involved (auto liability, UM/UIM, MedPay, health insurance).
- Documents: Photos, any incident or crash report you have, witness contact info, repair estimates (if a vehicle was involved), work notes/restrictions, and wage-loss proof (pay stubs or a simple employer note).
What Happens After the First Call
- Initial screening: We usually identify the legal theory (often negligence) and check for common issues that can make a claim harder—like unclear fault, delayed treatment, gaps in care, or facts that could be argued as your contribution to the accident.
- Document review: We look for items that help prove (1) how the incident happened and (2) whether the medical timeline supports that the incident caused the injuries.
- Next steps: If the claim appears viable, the next steps often include preserving evidence, organizing medical/billing records, and communicating with insurers in a way that keeps the story consistent and supported by documentation (without promising any outcome).
How This Applies
Apply to your facts: Because the accident happened in late [DATE] and you want a follow-up call, the most helpful next step is to pull together a simple timeline (what happened, when symptoms started, and when you first sought care) and any photos or report information you already have. During the follow-up, an attorney can also flag any potential contributory negligence concerns early, because that issue can control whether a case “qualifies” in North Carolina.
Conclusion
An accident may qualify for a North Carolina personal injury case when the facts support fault, the injuries and losses are real, and the evidence ties them together. In Durham and surrounding areas, the contributory negligence rule can be a make-or-break issue, so it helps to spot those arguments early. A practical next step is to write down a short timeline and gather any photos, report details, and treatment dates before your follow-up call with a licensed NC attorney.