What Must Be Shown Under North Carolina Law
Most injury claims from car crashes are based on negligence. In plain English, that means showing the other driver failed to use reasonable care, that the failure caused the collision, and that the collision caused actual harm. A hit-and-run charge may support the overall story, but the civil claim still turns on proof of fault, causation, and damages.
Key Requirements
- Duty: Drivers in North Carolina must operate their vehicles with reasonable care and follow traffic laws.
- Breach: A breach happens when a driver acts carelessly, such as failing to yield, speeding, driving distracted, or leaving the scene after a crash.
- Causation: You must connect the driver's conduct to the collision and connect the collision to your injuries and losses.
- Damages: You must show actual harm, such as medical expenses, lost income, pain and suffering, property damage, or future care needs if supported by the evidence.
Evidence That Commonly Helps
- Documents: Crash report, photographs, repair records, medical records, billing records, and any citation or charging information. A law enforcement report can be useful, but it is not the only proof and does not decide the case by itself.
- People: Witnesses who saw the crash, the vehicle, the driver, or what happened immediately after impact. Clear, consistent witness accounts often matter.
- Data: Video footage, phone photos, vehicle damage patterns, and the timing of medical treatment. Prompt and consistent medical documentation can help show the injuries were related to the crash rather than something else.
Common Defenses & Pitfalls
- North Carolina follows contributory negligence. That means if the defense proves the injured person was also negligent and that negligence helped cause the crash, recovery can be barred in many cases.
- A criminal charge for leaving the scene is separate from the civil injury claim. The charge may help identify the driver, but it does not replace proof of negligence and damages.
- Preexisting conditions do not automatically defeat a claim. But the evidence usually needs to separate the prior condition from any worsening caused by the crash.
- Delays in treatment, missing records, inconsistent statements, or social media posts can create avoidable disputes.
How This Applies
Apply to the facts provided: If the other driver in the Durham-area hit-and-run was later identified and charged, that can remove one major obstacle: knowing who to pursue. But the claim still depends on showing that driver's conduct caused the crash and that the crash caused the reported injuries, including any aggravation of a preexisting condition. Ongoing treatment records, the timing of symptoms, and documentation of vehicle damage may all matter. It is also important not to assume an insurer will automatically pay simply because charges were filed.
What the Statutes Say (Optional)
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-166 – North Carolina requires drivers involved in a crash to stop, provide information, and render reasonable assistance.
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52 – Many North Carolina personal injury and property damage claims are subject to a three-year limitations period.
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-139 – A party asserting contributory negligence has the burden of proving that defense.
Conclusion
Yes, a later identification and charge can still leave the door open to a North Carolina personal injury claim after a hit-and-run. But the charge is only part of the picture. The real focus is proving fault, linking the crash to the injuries, and avoiding contributory negligence issues. One practical next step is to gather the crash report, photos, and current treatment records and have them reviewed promptly by a licensed North Carolina attorney.