If YOU Are at At-Fault in a New York Car Accident – DO THIS!
LAWYER: 5 Secrets to MAXIMIZE Your New York Injury Settlement Claim
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Summary
Attorney Brett Harrison outlines a strategic framework for maximizing personal injury settlements in New York. The material emphasizes that financial recovery depends on five critical factors, including nuances of comparative negligence and the specific injury thresholds required to qualify for pain and suffering damages. Claimants are encouraged to look beyond basic medical bills by documenting the profound life impacts of an accident and identifying all available insurance coverage layers. The guide highlights that meticulous evidence collection, such as using dashcam footage or high-tech medical exhibits, is essential to securing higher payouts from insurance companies. Ultimately, the source serves as a procedural blueprint for victims to protect their legal rights and secure comprehensive compensation through proactive preparation.
FAQs:
What is the New York serious injury threshold?
New York law requires an injury to meet specific criteria, such as a fracture, disfigurement, or 90 days of disability, to qualify for a pain-and-suffering lawsuit. This threshold acts as a legal gatekeeper for motor vehicle accident claims, ensuring that only significant injuries proceed to litigation for non-economic damages.
Can I recover damages if I was partially at fault for an accident in New York?
Individuals can recover compensation in New York even if they are up to 99% at fault due to the state’s comparative negligence laws. The final financial recovery is simply reduced by the percentage of fault assigned to the claimant, meaning a person who is 10% at fault can still recover 90% of their losses.
How do insurance policy limits affect my injury settlement?
The available insurance policy often acts as a ceiling for recovery unless the defendant has other assets or multiple insurance layers are identified. While the New York minimum requirement is $25,000, legal professionals seek additional coverage, such as commercial policies or supplemental uninsured motorist (SUM) insurance, to ensure sufficient funds for serious injuries.
How is “life impact” calculated in a New York personal injury case?
Life impact is measured by economic and non-economic losses, including lost wages, future medical needs, and the loss of ability to enjoy daily activities. Because New York has no cap on pain and suffering awards, legal teams use life care planners and testimony from family and co-workers to quantify the impact an injury has on a person’s future.
What evidence is most effective for a New York injury claim?
High-quality evidence, such as dashcam footage, 4K depositions, and biomechanical data, provides the strongest leverage during settlement negotiations. Other critical pieces of evidence include contemporaneous pain journals, medical records, and electronic data like Fitbit logs or cell phone records to verify the facts of the accident
Transcription of the Video
If you’re injured in New York and think your settlement is just about hospital bills you’re already leaving money on the table. Behind every payout are five hidden factors many victims rarely hear about until it’s too late. In the next few minutes, I’ll explain to you exactly how liability percentages, injury thresholds, and even your own insurance can swing your case from five figures to seven figures. Don’t let an adjuster decide your worth; this video can mean the difference between a rush check and a real compensation check. I’m Brett Harrison, a New York personal injury attorney who has battled plenty of insurance giants for significant wins and significant money. Everything you’re about to hear comes straight from real courtrooms, actual statutes, and hard-won negotiations. My commitment to you: no fluff, no scare tactics, just real words the blueprint I use to make multi-million dollar carriers provide their money.
Are you ready? Let’s unlock the first factor. Factor one: liability. Who owns the blame?. Picture a drunk driver who blasts through a red light and smashes your car. This is crystal clear negligence and it’s settlement rocket fuel. But what if you were also glancing at your GPS or speeding or even using your cell phone?. Welcome to New York’s comparative negligence rule. The positive thing about New York’s being a comparative negligence state is even if you are 90% at fault, you can still recover 10% of your losses.
Here’s an example: one of my clients recently sustained serious injuries in a T-bone accident. Due to the insurance company setting liability at 50/50, instead of being awarded the entire policy of 25,000, he was awarded 12,500. A second example shows the power of percentages: my client Chris was driving home from his job as a New York City public school teacher when a vehicle ran a red light and struck his vehicle. The insurer claimed Chris was partly at fault because there was no proof that their insured ran the red light. We uncovered dashcam footage of the accident clearly showing their insured running the red light. That single video boosted the offer by thousands. Liability battles are won with paperwork, photos, videos, and fast detective work not wishful thinking.
Factor two: severity. How badly were you hurt?. Two rear-ended crashes, two drivers: one walks away with bruises, the other fractures a vertebrae and suffers a brain bleed. Their collisions look identical, yet the second claim could settle for 50 times more because catastrophic injuries pile up economic and non-economic losses. New York’s auto serious injury threshold is the gatekeeper. Fractures, significant disfigurement, dismemberment, or 90 days of substantial disability open the door to sue for both pain and suffering. Severe injuries include invisible ones like traumatic brain injuries where symptoms translate into dollars through neuropsych tests and MRI diffusion scans.
Factor three: life impact. What did that injury steal?. Pain isn’t measured by X-rays; it’s measured by stolen birthdays and derailed careers. New York places no cap on pain and suffering awards, so we paint vivid pictures using video diaries and testimony from co-workers to show the struggle.
Factor four: insurance limits. New York drivers are only required to carry a minimum $25,000 per person in bodily injury coverage. If a minimum policy motorist severely injures you, that limit may be all you see unless you stacked supplemental uninsured motorist (SUM) coverage or the defendant has attachable assets. Commercial defendants or municipalities often carry much higher policies. Avoid assuming the first policy you see is the last.
Factor five: evidence and lawyering. Facts win cases when packaged by a lawyer prepared for trial. We use police reports, drone photography, and biomechanical professionals to tighten the financial noose on the insurance company. Send a spoliation letter within days to lock down data. Technology like Fitbit logs and 3D printing amplifies proof, which converts into higher settlement numbers.
Quick action plan: 1) Photograph everything. 2) See a doctor within 24 to 72 hours. 3) Keep a handwritten pain journal. 4) Save every receipt. 5) Stay off social media. Many cases settle roughly 95% because juries are unpredictable. Information is leverage. Master these levers and you’ll negotiate with skill. I’m Brett Harrison. Stay safe, stay informed, and sign nothing until you know your worth.
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