When someone is physically
or emotionally injured, or their personal property is damaged,
it is considered in law to be a “Personal
Injury”. The laws covering personal injury allow the injured
party to receive compensation for damages caused by someone else’s
carelessness, negligence, recklessness, or intentional actions.
Personal injury law is also called “tort”
law. States and the Federal government have enacted tort laws for
the protection of your rights. Tort actions have three elements:
there must be a legal duty between the defendant (the one doing the
wrong) and the plaintiff (the person injured); there must be a breach
of that duty; and, damage must occur because of that breach. When
all three elements take place, a personal injury, or tort, has occurred.
The laws of our society places demands on all citizens not to
harm others. This means that not only should people be safe from
harm, but their possessions also. Whenever someone else harms you
or something that belongs to you, they become liable to answer
to the tort laws governing the situation. Liability can be caused
by intentional acts, torts, or by negligence. An intentional act
is one designed to cause harm or injury. The person committing
the act wants to harm you. A negligent act occurs when someone
fails to take appropriate action and you are harmed as a result
of that failure. For instance, if an angry person throws a brick
through your car window, that is an intentional tort (it may also
be a criminal action). On the other hand, if a careless driver
runs into your car, that is a negligence tort. In the first case,
the defendant wanted to cause an injury; in the second case, the
defendant did not want to injure you but failed to take the appropriate
action to prevent injury. In both cases, the defendant had a duty
not to injure you or your property, because our laws and society
create that duty. The duty was breached by the intentional or negligent
actions of the defendant, and damage to your person or property
resulted.
Another form of personal injury
law covers “strict liability”.
Strict liability means that there is responsibility whether or
not negligence was involved. This is usually applied to situations
which are in themselves abnormally or inherently dangerous. This
concept also occurs in the area of product liability. Manufacturers
are charged with the responsibility of assuring that their product
is safe when used as directed. If someone is injured by a product,
under the terms of strict liability they do not have to prove intent
or negligence, only that the product was defective through no fault
of their own, and that harm was done.
Once a personal injury has
occurred, the defendant has a liability to make good the damage
done. “Damages” is the term
for whatever is owed to you to compensate you for your loss. Damages
can be agreed upon by you and the injuring party, through insurance
settlements, or by other means. But often the damages offered to
you may not fully compensate you for your loss. This is especially
true if you have suffered physical injury and have not been able
to work. Personal injury law is the mechanism for determining who
is in the wrong, or in other words, who is “liable”,
and what the liable person should have to pay for the damage caused.
If you are the victim of a personal injury, there are several
things you can do to help yourself. First of all, make sure that
you seek proper medical attention and that you follow up with the
proper authorities and your own insurance company. If you believe
your injury was caused by the carelessness or intentional act of
another, you may want to contact an attorney to discuss this. You
should call as soon as it is convenient to do so and avoid discussing
the matter with strangers and/or insurance representatives who
are not from your own insurance company. You should be cooperative
with the police, your own treating physicians, and your own insurance
company. Most personal injury cases are covered by a statute of
limitations, which means that you only have a certain period of
time in which you can file a lawsuit. |