In most North Carolina car-accident claims, you should be very cautious about signing any settlement paperwork labeled a “release” before your injuries are evaluated, because a release can permanently end your right to seek money for bodily injury from that crash. The safer approach is to confirm in writing that any payment you accept is for property damage only (vehicle repair/total loss) and does not resolve injury claims. Also keep the three-year deadline to file a lawsuit in mind while you get medical care and gather records.
If you were in a North Carolina car accident and you initially felt fine but later developed left arm pain, the key question is whether you can accept money to wrap up the vehicle reimbursement without accidentally signing away your right to pursue a separate bodily-injury claim later. This usually comes up when an insurance adjuster sends “final paperwork” and you are not sure whether it is only for the car or also for your injuries.
Under North Carolina law, a written settlement agreement can limit or end claims depending on what it says. North Carolina also has a specific rule for motor-vehicle crashes: settling the property-damage part of the claim does not automatically release bodily-injury claims unless the written settlement terms specifically say it is a full settlement of all claims arising from the crash. Separately, most personal-injury lawsuits based on negligence must be filed within three years, so you cannot “wait forever” to see how you heal.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Here, the insurance process is moving toward finalizing vehicle reimbursement, and you have not signed anything resolving injury claims. Because you later developed left arm pain, signing a broad “release” now could cut off your ability to pursue compensation for medical care, pain, or other injury-related losses from the crash. North Carolina law allows property-damage settlement without automatically releasing injury claims, but only if the paperwork is truly limited to property damage and does not say it settles “all claims.”
In North Carolina, you should be cautious about signing any settlement or release before your injuries are evaluated because a broad release can permanently end your bodily-injury claim. You can often settle vehicle/property damage without releasing injury claims, but only if the written agreement clearly limits the settlement to property damage. Your key deadline is usually three years to file suit, so your next step is to obtain and review the proposed settlement document and confirm—before signing—that it does not release bodily-injury claims.
If you're dealing with a car-accident property damage payout while you still have untreated or newly appearing symptoms, an attorney can help you identify whether the paperwork is a property-damage-only settlement or a full release, and help you protect important deadlines and insurance rights. Reach out today at [CONTACT NUMBER].
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.