What information do I need to provide to evaluate my pedestrian accident case?

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What information do I need to provide to evaluate my pedestrian accident case? - North Carolina

Short Answer

To evaluate a North Carolina pedestrian accident case, you generally need information that helps answer three questions: (1) who was at fault, (2) whether the pedestrian did anything that could be argued as contributory negligence, and (3) what injuries and losses the crash caused. The most helpful items are the basic crash details (when/where/how), any police report and witness information, and your medical treatment records and bills. Because deadlines apply, it also matters that your accident happened last year.

Understanding the Problem

If you were a pedestrian in North Carolina and you were hit in an accident that happened last year, what information must you give a personal injury attorney so they can evaluate whether you can bring a claim and what issues could affect it?

Apply the Law

In North Carolina, a pedestrian injury claim usually turns on negligence: whether the driver (including a motorcycle rider) failed to use reasonable care and that failure caused your injuries. Pedestrian cases also require a careful look at the pedestrian’s conduct because North Carolina follows contributory negligence rules in many situations, meaning the defense may argue that even a small amount of fault by the pedestrian can bar recovery. Finally, you must prove damages (your injuries and related losses) and you must act within the applicable statute of limitations, which is often a key early screening issue when the crash occurred “last year.”

Key Requirements

  • Clear crash timeline and location: The date, time, and exact place of the collision help identify the correct roadway rules (crosswalk, intersection, traffic signals) and preserve evidence.
  • How the collision happened (liability facts): A step-by-step description of what you and the vehicle did immediately before impact helps evaluate negligence and right-of-way issues.
  • Pedestrian right-of-way and crossing details: Whether you were in a marked crosswalk, an unmarked crosswalk at an intersection, or crossing mid-block can change the legal analysis.
  • Potential contributory negligence issues: Facts about visibility, traffic signals, where you entered the roadway, and whether you were walking along the roadway when a sidewalk was available can become defense arguments.
  • Injury and treatment information: Your diagnoses, symptoms, and treatment timeline help connect the crash to the injuries and evaluate the seriousness of the claim.
  • Proof of losses (damages): Medical bills, time missed from work, and other out-of-pocket costs help document what the crash cost you.
  • Insurance and identity information: The driver/rider’s identity and insurance, plus your own auto insurance (including possible uninsured/underinsured coverage), can affect how a claim is pursued.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because you indicate you were a pedestrian and the collision may have involved a motorcycle, the evaluation will focus on (1) where you were crossing or walking and what the traffic controls showed, (2) what the rider did (speed, lookout, yielding), and (3) whether the defense could argue you failed to yield or otherwise contributed to the collision. Since the accident happened last year, your attorney will also screen for any approaching filing deadline and whether evidence (video, witnesses, scene details) can still be gathered.

Process & Timing

  1. Who provides information: You (and sometimes family members who helped with care). Where: To your attorney’s office (intake meeting, phone, or secure upload). What: A written timeline plus copies/photos of key documents (police report, medical records you have, bills, insurance cards, photos). When: As soon as possible, especially when the crash occurred last year and memories and video footage can fade quickly.
  2. Investigation step: Your attorney typically requests the crash report, contacts witnesses, gathers medical records, and looks for video (nearby businesses, traffic cameras, dash cams). Timing varies by county and provider, and some video may be overwritten in days or weeks.
  3. Claim decision step: After reviewing liability, contributory negligence risks, and damages, your attorney advises whether to pursue an insurance claim, file a lawsuit, or both, and what additional information is needed to strengthen proof.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Contributory negligence arguments: Crossing outside a crosswalk, starting to cross against a signal, stepping into traffic, or walking in the roadway when a sidewalk was available can become central disputes under North Carolina law.
  • Missing scene evidence: Waiting too long can mean lost surveillance video, unavailable witnesses, and unclear roadway conditions (signage, lighting, construction changes).
  • Gaps in medical treatment: Long delays in getting care or inconsistent follow-up can make it harder to prove the crash caused the condition (even when you were truly hurt).
  • Incomplete insurance picture: Not providing your own auto policy information can delay identifying possible coverage that may apply even though you were a pedestrian.
  • Recorded statements: Giving a detailed recorded statement to an insurer before you understand the contributory negligence issues can create problems later if details are unclear or misstated.

Conclusion

To evaluate a North Carolina pedestrian accident case, an attorney needs facts that show fault, address contributory negligence risks, and prove your injuries and losses. Start by gathering the crash basics (date, location, how it happened), right-of-way details (crosswalk/signal), names and insurance information, witness contacts, and your medical records and bills. Next step: provide these materials to an attorney promptly so they can confirm the applicable statute of limitations and preserve time-sensitive evidence.

Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney

If you're dealing with a pedestrian accident and need to know what details matter for a strong evaluation under North Carolina law, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Reach out today.

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.

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