In North Carolina, a left-turn driver usually must yield to oncoming traffic before turning. To prove fault, you typically build evidence showing (1) you had the right-of-way, (2) the other driver turned left anyway, and (3) that unsafe turn caused the crash and your injuries. The strongest proof often comes from the crash report, photos/video, witness statements, vehicle damage patterns, and consistent medical documentation.
If you were driving in North Carolina and the other driver turned left and T-boned you, the key question is whether you can show that the left-turn driver failed to yield when they had a duty to wait. Here, one important fact is that the impact was a T-bone that pushed your car into a second vehicle, which often helps clarify how the collision happened.
North Carolina traffic law generally requires a driver who intends to turn left to yield the right-of-way to oncoming traffic that is already in the intersection or close enough to be an immediate hazard. In an injury claim, “fault” usually means negligence: the other driver failed to use reasonable care (for example, by turning left when it was not safe), and that failure caused the crash and your injuries. North Carolina also follows contributory negligence rules in most ordinary car-wreck cases, meaning the insurance company may look for any evidence that you contributed to the crash (even slightly), so clean, objective proof matters.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: A T-bone crash after a left turn often lines up with a failure-to-yield scenario: the turning driver entered your path and struck the side of your vehicle. The fact that your car was pushed into a second vehicle can also support a straightforward impact sequence (first collision, then secondary impact), which helps when insurers argue the injuries or damage came from “something else.” Your ER visit, imaging, referral for follow-up care, and missed work are the kinds of records typically used to prove the injury and loss part of the claim, even when imaging is clear.
To prove the other driver was at fault for a left-turn T-bone in North Carolina, you generally need evidence that you had the right-of-way, the other driver failed to yield before turning left, and that unsafe turn caused your crash and injuries. The most persuasive proof usually includes the crash report, photos/video, witness statements, and consistent medical and work records. As a next step, order the crash report from the investigating law-enforcement agency as soon as possible so you can preserve and organize the key evidence.
If you're dealing with a left-turn T-bone crash and the insurance company is disputing fault, an attorney can help you gather the right records, preserve time-sensitive evidence, and present a clear, consistent claim. Reach out today.
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.