What Must Be Shown Under North Carolina Law
Most pedestrian injury claims are built on negligence. That means you generally need to show the driver had a duty to use reasonable care, the driver failed to do that, the failure caused the collision, and you suffered real harm.
Key Requirements
- Duty: Drivers must use reasonable care to avoid harming others on the road, including pedestrians.
- Breach: You must show the driver did something unsafe (for example, failing to keep a proper lookout, speeding, or not yielding when required).
- Causation: You must connect the unsafe driving to the impact and to your injuries (not just that you were hurt at some point afterward).
- Damages: You must show losses such as medical bills, lost income, and pain and suffering.
Evidence That Commonly Helps
- Documents: The police crash report can help identify the parties, list witnesses, capture the officer’s observations, note road/weather/lighting conditions, and document diagrams or measurements. It may also note whether any citations were issued. Keep in mind: a report can include mistakes or incomplete information, and it is not automatically treated as the final word on fault.
- People: A witness statement helps most when it is specific and based on what the person actually saw (where the pedestrian was, the vehicle’s path, the traffic control device, speed estimates stated carefully, and what happened immediately before impact).
- Data: Photos/video of the scene, nearby surveillance footage (if it exists), 911/dispatch information, and the timing of EMS transport and early medical records can support the “what happened” story and the injury timeline.
How to Use a Police Report Effectively (Without Overrelying on It)
- Use it as a roadmap: The report often tells you what evidence exists (witness names, diagrams, listed points of impact) so you can request or preserve it quickly.
- Check it for accuracy: Compare the report to photos, your own notes, and the witness’s account. If something is wrong (like the location, direction of travel, or who was driving), that can be addressed with follow-up documentation rather than hoping the insurer “figures it out.”
- Understand its limits: Some parts of crash reporting are administrative (including insurance/financial responsibility details) and are not meant to be used as proof of negligence in a civil trial. The practical takeaway is that the report helps, but your claim should not depend on one document alone.
How to Build a Strong Witness Statement
- Get the basics clearly: Date/time, where the witness was standing, what they could see, and how long they observed the events.
- Focus on facts, not conclusions: “The car did not stop before the crosswalk” is more useful than “the driver was reckless.”
- Capture details that insurers test: Lighting, visibility, traffic signals, whether the pedestrian was in a crosswalk area, and whether anything blocked the driver’s view.
- Preserve it early: Memories fade. A prompt statement can prevent later confusion and reduce the risk of inconsistent details.
Common Defenses & Pitfalls
- Contributory negligence (North Carolina): North Carolina follows a strict contributory negligence rule in many cases. If the insurer argues you contributed to the crash (even a little), it may try to deny the claim. That makes careful, consistent evidence—especially neutral witness observations—more important than in many other states.
- Inconsistent stories: Differences between what you told EMS, what the report says, and what the witness says can slow a claim down or create disputes.
- Overstating what the report proves: Officers often arrive after the impact and may rely on what people told them. Treat the report as helpful support, not a substitute for independent proof.
- Driver vs. policyholder confusion: When the driver is not the policyholder, insurers often scrutinize identity and permission issues. The police report and witness statement can help confirm who was driving and what happened, but you still want other documentation (photos, admissions, follow-up communications) to match.
How This Applies
Apply to your facts: Because you were a pedestrian with EMS transport and later treatment for a fracture and shoulder injury, the early timeline (police report + EMS/hospital records) can help connect the collision to the injuries. The witness statement can be especially important if the insurer disputes how the impact happened or suggests you stepped into traffic unexpectedly. Since the driver was not the policyholder, the report and witness details identifying the driver and vehicle can also help keep the claim focused on the correct people and events.
What the Statutes Say (Optional)
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-166.1 (Crash reports and investigations) – explains reporting/investigation requirements and addresses how certain accident reports may (or may not) be used as evidence.
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-279.11 (Matters not to be evidence in civil suits) – limits using certain financial responsibility/insurance-related accident report information as evidence of negligence or due care.
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-139 (Burden of proof of contributory negligence) – places the burden on the party asserting contributory negligence to prove it.
Conclusion
A police report and witness statement can strengthen a Durham injury claim by clarifying who was involved, preserving early observations, and supporting a consistent story about how the collision happened. They work best when they line up with photos, scene details, and the timing of EMS and medical records. One practical next step is to gather the report, identify the witness, and write down your own timeline while details are still fresh, then review everything for consistency before you submit it to the insurer.