In North Carolina, you can prove lost wages with any reliable records that show what you earned before the injury and what you missed because of it. If pay was irregular, use multiple sources—tax returns, 1099s, bank deposits, client invoices, schedules, and a doctor’s work restrictions—to build a reasonable, well-documented estimate. Courts look for credible, businesslike records and a calculation tied to the injury period.
You’re asking whether you can prove lost wages in North Carolina when your pay wasn’t a steady paycheck. This comes up in personal injury claims when income came through withdrawals, gigs, tips, or contract work rather than regular payroll. Here, you were treated at multiple facilities and had inconsistent payroll withdrawals, and an accountant could not verify the fluctuations for a wage claim.
Under North Carolina law, a plaintiff seeking lost wages must show, with reasonable certainty, (1) earnings before the injury, (2) time missed or reduced capacity due to the injury, and (3) a reliable method tying the dollars lost to that period. For irregular income, courts accept business records and third-party documents if they are trustworthy and properly authenticated. The main forum is the civil trial court (filed with the Clerk of Superior Court); personal injury claims generally must be filed within three years of the injury unless an exception applies.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because your income came through inconsistent payroll withdrawals, you can show pre-injury earnings with tax returns, 1099s, bank deposits, and client invoices instead of standard pay stubs. Your treatment at multiple facilities helps establish when and why you could not work; obtain provider notes stating work restrictions for those dates. If the accountant could not verify fluctuations, broaden the proof: use third-party records and averages over a representative period, focusing on net income where you had business expenses. A pre-demand verification that lines up treatment dates, missed work, and a well-supported calculation strengthens negotiations.
In North Carolina, you can prove lost wages—despite irregular pay—by combining credible business records to show pre-injury earnings, linking medical work restrictions to time missed, and using a reasonable, well-documented calculation (net income for self-employment). The key next step is to collect tax returns, bank/processor statements, invoices, and employer verifications, and file your civil complaint with the Clerk of Superior Court within three years of the injury.
If you're dealing with an injury and irregular income, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today at 919-341-7055.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.