Yes—until you sign it. In North Carolina, a settlement release is a contract. Before anyone signs, you can negotiate edits to its terms. After it’s signed, changes require a new written agreement (or a valid legal reason to undo the deal, such as fraud, duress, or mutual mistake). Special approval rules can apply if the claim involves a minor, an incompetent adult, or a wrongful death.
You’re resolving a North Carolina personal injury claim and an attorney will email a draft release. You want to know if you can change the wording before it becomes final, especially since the opposing party’s concern is lingering back pain. This turns on whether the release has been signed and whether any special approval rules apply.
Under North Carolina law, a settlement release is a contract. No one is bound until there is agreement on material terms and the document is signed. You may propose edits to scope (what claims are released), lien and indemnity handling, confidentiality, and other provisions before signing. After signing, modifications typically require a new agreement supported by mutual consent; limited defenses like fraud, duress, or mutual mistake may permit rescission in narrow circumstances. If multiple potential defendants exist, the wording of a release can affect rights against others. Court approval is required in certain categories (for example, many minor settlements and wrongful death compromises).
Apply the Rule to the Facts: You have an agreed-on amount and a draft release is coming by email. Because nothing is signed, you can request edits—such as clarifying the scope of claims, handling of medical liens, and terms addressing future care for lingering back pain—before execution. Once you sign, any change would require a new written amendment both sides accept, or a narrow legal basis to unwind the agreement.
In North Carolina, you can modify a personal injury release before it’s signed by negotiating changes to its terms. After signatures, the release is generally final unless both sides agree in writing to an amendment or a narrow defense applies. Be precise about scope, protect your rights against other parties, and deal with medical liens up front. Next step: have your lawyer redline the draft release and send proposed edits before you sign.
If you’re reviewing a draft release and want to protect your future medical and legal rights, our firm can help you negotiate clear terms and timelines. Call us today to discuss your options.
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.