Should I speak with the store or its claims company before I hire a lawyer?: North Carolina guidance

Woman looking tired next to bills

Should I speak with the store or its claims company before I hire a lawyer? - North Carolina

Short Answer

In North Carolina, you may report the incident and provide basic facts (who, where, when), but you do not have to give a recorded statement or sign broad medical releases before you hire a lawyer. Anything you say can be used to argue you were at fault, and North Carolina’s contributory negligence rule is strict. Preserve your rights, request that video and incident records be saved, and consider talking with counsel before any substantive interview. The general deadline to file a negligence lawsuit is three years from the injury.

Understanding the Problem

You are deciding whether to talk with the store or its claims company now, or wait until you have legal guidance. In North Carolina personal injury cases, an injured shopper must decide if and how to report the incident and what to say. Here, a falling light fixture hit your head, and you sought urgent care the next day for a suspected concussion. The question is what you should share and when.

Apply the Law

Under North Carolina law, you can notify the store or its insurer of your injury, but you are not required to give a recorded statement or unrestricted access to your medical records. North Carolina follows contributory negligence, which means any admission or poorly phrased statement suggesting you were even slightly at fault may be used to deny your claim. Settlement discussions are generally not admissible to prove fault, but your statements can still be used for other purposes. If a claim cannot be resolved, lawsuits are filed in the county civil courts (District or Superior Court depending on the amount), and the general negligence filing deadline is three years from the date of injury.

Key Requirements

  • Notice without detail: Report the incident promptly with basic facts and request the claim number; avoid providing opinions about fault.
  • No duty to give a recorded statement: You may decline or postpone until you are prepared or have counsel.
  • Limit medical releases: Do not sign blanket authorizations; confine any release to relevant providers and dates.
  • Preserve evidence quickly: Ask the store to preserve surveillance video, incident reports, and maintenance records.
  • Contributory negligence risk: Careless wording can be used to argue you were partly at fault, which can bar recovery.
  • Deadline still runs: Talking with an insurer does not extend the lawsuit deadline; calendar the three-year limit.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because a fixture fell and you sought urgent care the next day for a suspected concussion, it is reasonable to notify the store and ask that video and reports be preserved. Decline any recorded statement until you review your medical status, as symptoms and diagnoses may change. Provide only basic facts now and avoid characterizing fault. Keep the three-year filing deadline in mind if negotiations stall.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: The injured customer (or attorney). Where: Send a written notice and preservation request to the store’s risk management or its claims administrator; there is no official form. What: Brief letter/email with date, time, location, description, injuries, and a request to preserve surveillance and incident materials. When: Do this as soon as possible because video may be overwritten quickly; the lawsuit deadline is three years from the injury date.
  2. Claims handling: When contacted by an adjuster, request the claim number and contact info. Share basic facts and current treatment status; politely decline recorded statements and broad medical releases until you are prepared or represented. Expect several weeks for records gathering and initial evaluation.
  3. If unresolved: File a civil complaint in the county where the incident occurred (District or Superior Court depending on the amount in controversy). The court issues a summons; you must serve the defendants and proceed with discovery.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Recorded statements: Seemingly harmless comments can be used to argue contributory negligence; prepare or decline.
  • Overbroad medical releases: Limit scope to relevant conditions and dates to protect unrelated history.
  • Evidence loss: Delay risks overwritten video and missing maintenance records; send preservation requests early.
  • Deadline traps: Settlement discussions do not extend the filing deadline; special rules may apply for minors or incapacitated persons.
  • Incident reports and social media: Inaccurate or casual statements can be used against you; keep communications factual and minimal.

Conclusion

In North Carolina, you may give the store or its insurer a basic notice of your injury, but you do not have to provide a recorded statement or broad medical access before hiring a lawyer. Because contributory negligence can bar recovery, keep communications brief and factual, and ask that video and incident materials be preserved. If the claim does not resolve, file a civil complaint before the three‑year deadline. Next step: send a short written notice and preservation request, then consider legal counsel.

Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney

If you’re dealing with a store injury and an insurer is calling for statements or releases, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Reach out today.

Call (919) 341-7055 or email intake@piercelaw.com.

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.

Categories: 
close-link