Should vehicle damage be included when evaluating a bodily injury settlement?
Should vehicle damage be included when evaluating a bodily injury settlement? - North Carolina
Short Answer
In North Carolina, vehicle damage is a separate claim from bodily injury. When you evaluate a bodily injury settlement, focus on injury-related losses (medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering), available insurance coverage, and required lien repayments. Property damage is usually handled and paid under a different coverage and should not inflate or dilute the bodily injury value, though crash damage can be evidence of injury severity.
Understanding the Problem
You want to know if property damage should factor into whether a bodily injury settlement offer is fair under North Carolina personal injury law. Here, the offer excludes vehicle damage. The core decision is whether the bodily injury amount alone reasonably compensates your injuries under North Carolina rules.
Apply the Law
North Carolina treats bodily injury and property damage as separate parts of an auto claim. Insurers typically handle them under different coverage limits. The bodily injury evaluation turns on liability, causation, documented injury losses, and available insurance. Settlements must also account for statutory medical liens and other reimbursement claims before you can calculate your true net recovery. If settlement is not reached, a lawsuit is filed in the appropriate North Carolina trial court within the limitations period.
Key Requirements
Liability without contributory negligence: You must show the other driver was at fault, and your own negligence does not bar recovery.
Causation: Medical records should connect the crash to the whiplash, shoulder, and back injuries.
Damages: Document medical expenses, lost income, and pain and suffering; property damage is a separate claim.
Coverage and limits: Bodily injury and property damage usually have separate insurance limits; policy terms and any additional at-fault policies or UM/UIM matter.
Liens and reimbursements: Perfected medical provider liens and some benefit payors must be paid from the settlement, and attorney’s fees are addressed before provider liens.
Deadline to sue: Personal injury and property damage claims generally must be filed within three years if negotiation fails.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because the offer excludes vehicle damage, you should judge the bodily injury number on its own. Weigh liability risk, the medical proof linking the crash to whiplash, shoulder, and back injuries, and the documented costs and impacts. Your net share being less than half after fees and liens is not unusual in North Carolina because perfected medical liens must be addressed from settlement funds. Online “whiplash” ranges are not controlling; your records, recovery course, and coverage limits drive value here.
Process & Timing
Who files: The injured person (or their attorney). Where: Present a written demand to the at‑fault insurer(s) in North Carolina; if unresolved, file a civil complaint in the county’s District or Superior Court. What: A demand package with liability proof, medical records/bills, wage documentation, and a release limited to bodily injury when settling BI. When: Aim to settle or file suit within three years of the crash.
Negotiate bodily injury separately from property damage. Request a separate property damage payment and release. Allow time for lien verification and reductions; timing varies by insurer and provider responsiveness.
On settlement, sign the appropriate release(s), resolve perfected liens consistent with North Carolina law, and receive the net injury proceeds. If negotiations fail, proceed with litigation before the limitations period expires.
Exceptions & Pitfalls
Contributory negligence: Any fault on your part can bar recovery, affecting the viability and value of the bodily injury claim.
Global releases: Do not sign a single release that unintentionally waives both bodily injury and property damage unless you intend to settle both; ask for separate releases.
Liens: Ignoring perfected medical provider liens or benefit reimbursements can delay payment and reduce your net; confirm amounts and seek permissible reductions before finalizing.
Coverage limits: The bodily injury settlement cannot exceed available limits unless additional policies or UM/UIM apply; verify all potential coverage early.
Deadlines: Waiting for protracted negotiations can risk the three‑year filing deadline; file suit on time if needed.
Comparable values: Online averages for “whiplash” are not evidence; North Carolina carriers weigh your specific records, recovery, and liability facts.
Conclusion
In North Carolina, evaluate a bodily injury settlement on injury losses and coverage, not on vehicle damage, which is a separate claim. Focus on liability, causation, documented medical and wage losses, available policy limits, and required lien payments. If negotiations stall, protect your rights by filing suit in the proper North Carolina court within three years. Next step: request separate handling and releases for property damage and bodily injury, and verify liens before deciding.
Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney
If you're dealing with a bodily injury offer that excludes property damage and want to know if it’s fair, 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.