Can I consolidate my bodily injury and property damage claims with one law firm?

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Can I consolidate my bodily injury and property damage claims with one law firm? - North Carolina

Short Answer

Yes. In North Carolina, you can hire one law firm to handle both your bodily injury and vehicle property damage from the same crash, and both claims can be pursued together in one lawsuit if needed. This approach helps keep facts, deadlines, insurers, and releases coordinated. Most negligence claims for injury and vehicle damage must be filed within three years, so watch the clock.

Understanding the Problem

You want to know if one North Carolina personal injury firm can manage both your injury and your car damage from the same rear-end crash. As the passenger, your insurer assigned you 50% fault based on a police report it did not review, and you now need help fixing the property damage claim alongside your injury case.

Apply the Law

North Carolina’s civil rules allow you to bring all claims you have against the same defendant in one case. In a car wreck, that means bodily injury (medical bills, pain, wage loss) and property damage (repair, total loss, diminished value) can be joined in a single lawsuit if settlement fails. Where you file depends on the dollar amount: small claims for modest property-only disputes, District Court for mid-range cases, and Superior Court for larger claims. The general deadline to sue for negligence causing injury or property damage is three years from the crash. You start a court case by filing a complaint and civil summons with the Clerk of Superior Court and serving the defendant under Rule 4 of the Rules of Civil Procedure.

Key Requirements

  • Join both claims in one case: North Carolina civil procedure lets you bring all claims arising from the same wreck against the at-fault party in one lawsuit.
  • Pick the right forum: Property-only claims up to the small-claims limit can go to a magistrate; larger combined claims go to District or Superior Court based on the total amount sought.
  • Mind the statute of limitations: Most injury and vehicle damage negligence claims must be filed within three years of the crash; wrongful death has a shorter two-year deadline.
  • Use proper service: After filing, serve the civil summons and complaint on the defendant by sheriff, certified mail, or another Rule 4 method.
  • Watch release language: A property damage settlement should not waive your bodily injury claim unless that is your intent.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because both your injury and your vehicle damage come from the same rear-end crash, one North Carolina firm can manage them together and, if needed, file one lawsuit that includes both claims. As a passenger, the insurer’s 50% fault assignment from an unreviewed report does not control your rights; your lawyer can develop evidence on liability and damages. Keeping both claims with one team helps avoid a property-damage release that accidentally waives your injury claim and keeps the three-year deadline in view.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: You (through your attorney). Where: Clerk of Superior Court, Civil Division, in the county where the crash happened or a defendant lives. What: Civil Summons (AOC‑CV‑100) and a Complaint stating bodily injury and property damage claims; small property-only claims may use the magistrate’s small claims forms posted on the N.C. Judicial Branch site. When: File before the three-year statute of limitations runs.
  2. Serve the defendant under Rule 4 (e.g., sheriff or certified mail). After service, the case proceeds through pleadings, discovery, and mediation; local timing can vary by county and case complexity.
  3. Resolve by settlement or trial. If settled, ensure any property-damage release is limited so it does not waive your pending bodily injury claim unless that is intended.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • North Carolina’s contributory negligence rule can bar recovery if you were negligent; as a passenger, this usually only matters if you independently contributed to the harm.
  • Broad “general releases” in property settlements can waive bodily injury—insist on release language limited to property damage if your injury claim is ongoing.
  • Wrongful death claims have a shorter two-year deadline and different approval steps.
  • Claims involving government entities or uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage may have special notice or contractual requirements—raise these early with your attorney.

Conclusion

Yes—you can consolidate your North Carolina bodily injury and vehicle property damage claims with one firm, and both claims may be joined in a single lawsuit if settlement fails. Choose the proper court based on the amount at stake and serve the case correctly. Most negligence claims must be filed within three years of the crash, so the next step is to have your attorney add the property damage claim to your representation and file, if needed, before the deadline.

Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney

If you're dealing with injury and vehicle damage from the same crash and want one firm to handle both, 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.

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