At Kreger Brodish LLP, our Durham personal injury lawyers have successfully represented thousands of accident victims coping with various injuries. We understand how stressful life can be for people dealing with physical pain while struggling to get back to work and take care of their families. Physically, emotionally, and financially, it can be overwhelming. Our Durham personal injury lawyer is here to help.
Our respected legal team has over a decade of experience in personal injury law. We’ve been helping clients navigate tough personal injury lawsuits. Our lawyers have earned a reputation for taking on big-name insurance companies and securing maximum payments for our deserving clients. With extensive experience working for and against large corporations, we have the knowledge and skills to fight for the justice you deserve.
Contact our Durham personal injury lawyers now for a free consultation. Our trusted North Carolina personal injury attorneys do not charge any fees upfront to start working on your case. You only pay us if we recover money for you.
Types of Cases Our Durham Personal Injury Lawyers Handle
Kreger Brodish LLP represents individuals and families who have been harmed due to someone else’s negligence. We offer services in the following fields:
If you are ready to discuss the details of your case, please reach out. Our attorneys are here to answer your questions and help you understand your legal rights after a serious injury.
Do You Have a Personal Injury Case?
Only some accidents will result in a personal injury lawsuit. However, you will need to be able to show that someone else was responsible for your personal injury accident and that you suffered damages as a result. The value of your Durham personal injury claim depends on various facts unique to you, your injury, and your legal issues.
The following questions will help you determine if you have a strong personal injury claim:
- Was someone else responsible for your personal injury accident?
- What personal injuries do you have?
- Have you received treatment for your injuries? What other medical treatments do you need?
- Will the insurance company cover your injury (for example, another driver’s auto insurance or insurance for a negligent property owner)? What are the policy limits of the insurance coverage?
- Were you at work when you were injured?
- Will your personal injuries result in you missing work or losing income?
- Have your personal injuries resulted in permanent impairment or disability?
- Are your personal injuries affecting your quality of life?
The most brilliant move you can make after any accident is to speak with a trusted Durham personal injury lawyer. At Kreger Brodish LLP, we’ll review your legal case for free without obligation.
How Much Is My Personal Injury Case Worth in North Carolina?
North Carolina law allows accident victims to recover damages from the party responsible for their injuries. Some cracks are available in personal injury cases, and some are only available under limited circumstances.
As part of your case, the personal injury law may entitle you to:
- Compensation for pain and suffering
- Reimbursement for missed paychecks if you had to take time off work to recover
- Payment of your outstanding medical expenses
- Reimbursement of your out-of-pocket expenses, co-pays, and other payments you have made toward your medical treatment
- Payment for permanent injuries, impairment, or disabilities you have suffered as the result of your accident
- Payment for future medical care, physical therapy, surgery, or other treatment
- Reimbursement for medical devices, such as canes, crutches, prosthetics, wheelchairs, wheelchair ramps, or walkers
- The costs to repair your vehicle or compensate you for the total loss of your car if you were hurt in a car accident.
- The costs to replace your personal property that may have been damaged in your accident or injury, such as your cellphone, glasses, laptop, or clothing
- Reduced earning capacity for the future if you cannot return to your previous level of work
- Payment for disfigurement or scars your injuries have caused.
- Compensation for the negligent infliction of emotional, psychological, or cognitive distress or harm caused to you
- Punitive damages, which may be awarded to punish the defendant in personal injury cases of extreme recklessness or negligence
At Kreger Brodish LLP, we focus on maximizing the value of your claim. Our Durham personal injury attorneys will work with industry-leading experts to thoroughly assess your damages and demand the compensation you deserve.
What Factors Can Affect the Value of Your Personal Injury Lawsuit?
The value of your Durham personal injury case depends on the severity and permanence of your injury, the types of medical treatment you have received and will receive in the future, and the overall effect your injury has had on your life and will have on your life going forward.
There is no formula for valuing a claim. A jury determines the value of a claim. When a jury decides how much money to award a Durham personal injury victim, the jury is not given any formula to use. Instead, the jury is given evidence, typically in the form of testimony, regarding the harm done to the victim. Using this evidence, the jury has to decide how much money to award the victim.
However, although there is no formula for a jury to use, insurance providers certainly have an approach to valuing personal injury claims for negotiated settlements. When your insurance evaluates your Durham claim, it compares the circumstances of your injury to injuries that the insurer has previously settled. Then the insurance provider compares the factors in your injury case to other personal injury cases that it has paid for or taken to trial.
Many factors can influence how the insurance carrier values your injury claim, such as:
- The severity of your injury
- The type and amount of your medical expenses
- Whether you have any permanent injuries or scarring
- How has the injury affected your employment and lifestyle
- Whether you will make a good witness
- Whether the person who caused the accident will make a good witness
- Whether your doctor will make a good witness
- Whether you failed to follow your doctor’s medical advice
- Whether you received unnecessary medical treatment
The insurance provider will also consider whether you have an experienced personal injury attorney prepared to go to trial. Litigation is time-consuming, risky, and expensive for these companies. Therefore, reaching a full settlement is usually in their best interests rather than letting a jury decide.
If you’d like to talk more specifically about the value of your claim, please contact us today for a free consultation with a Durham personal injury lawyer.
What to Expect in the Personal Injury Claims Process
The personal injury claim process can seem complex. But our Durham personal injury lawyers handle all the details of your legal case from start to finish. Here’s what you can expect:
- We will start by notifying the insurance carrier that we represent you. We will ask them to direct all of their communications to our personal injury attorneys.
- We will then investigate and assess your personal injury claim. Typically, we will call witnesses, visit the scene of your accident, and obtain medical records and bills, wage loss records, and other documentation of damages.
- Our team of personal injury lawyers will consult with you to evaluate your personal injury claim and decide an amount to demand from the insurance.
- We’ll then send a demand to your insurance provider and attempt to negotiate a settlement of your personal injury claim.
- If we cannot reach a fair personal injury settlement, we’ll file a lawsuit and prepare for a trial.
Your role during this entire process is to continue treatment and focus on your recovery. A personal injury lawyer should take care of the rest.
Statute of Limitations for Personal Injury Lawsuits in Durham, North Carolina
In North Carolina, you generally have three years to settle your personal injury claim or file a legal claim. However, there are different statutes of limitations, so it is essential to contact a North Carolina personal injury attorney as soon as possible.
After an accident, a personal injury attorney will want to investigate your case immediately to preserve the evidence and handle all communication with the insurance companies. It takes time and a lot of legal legwork to craft a case, so the sooner you speak with a lawyer, the better off you will be.
What You Need to Know About Personal Injury Lawyer Fees
Like most North Carolina personal injury attorneys, our law firm works on a contingency fee basis. This means that we earn a percentage of your recovery (i.e., we only make a fee if we get you a winning verdict at trial or a negotiated settlement). Our contingency fee varies and is set case by case. It is typically one-third, but it depends on how your issue is resolved.
In addition to our contingency fee, there are certain costs, such as expert witness fees, court filing fees, or medical examination fees, that we will pay for and only be reimbursed if we get you a winning settlement or verdict for your pain and suffering. Most legal fee arrangement rules are set by the North Carolina state bar association.
If you have any questions regarding our fee structure, please contact us. We’ll be happy to answer your questions.
Can I talk to Kreger Brodish LLP about my case for free?
Yes. We offer free consultations on all injury matters. If you want to talk to our legal team, just call us or contact us online. Our personal injury attorneys can do phone consultations, email consultations, or in-person consultations. We handle personal injury cases throughout the state of North Carolina and are available to meet with you wherever is most convenient.
Dealing with the Insurance Carrier After an Accident in Durham
Dealing with insurance providers after an accident is tricky. Remember, the insurance adjuster’s job is to minimize the value of injury victims’ pain and suffering or deny it altogether if they can. Here are some of the questions people typically ask about talking to an insurance adjuster.
Should I speak to an insurance adjuster after my accident? Should I agree to give the insurance adjuster a recorded statement?
No. The insurance adjuster is seeking information that can weaken your legal claim (such as your failure to describe all of your injuries adequately) or information that can lead to a denial of your legal case. By speaking to you and gathering information about you, the insurance adjuster and the company they represent are gaining leverage on you. They are learning about your prior personal injuries, accidents, where you work, and live, marital status, version of what happened in the incident that caused your damage, etc.
The flow of information is entirely one-sided. Your insurance won’t answer any of your or your Durham personal injury attorney’s questions, such as the at-fault party’s insurance limits, etc.
You are not obligated to cooperate with an adjuster from someone else’s insurance. (The same is not valid if the adjuster calls from your insurance, though.) You should avoid speaking to an insurance adjuster until you decide how to handle your legal claim.
If you are considering speaking with an adjuster, discuss your case with a North Carolina personal injury attorney first to get some counseling on what questions and answers to avoid.
So if I’m going to avoid speaking to the insurance adjuster, what should I say when an adjuster calls me?
First, regardless of what you say, always be polite and civil. Although the insurance adjuster is not trying to help you in your legal case, the adjuster is the one with whom you will ultimately have to try to settle. So now is not the time to make an enemy.
Our suggestion is to simply thank the insurance adjuster for calling and let them know that you:
- Haven’t decided on whether you’ll hire a personal injury attorney
- Haven’t decided on whether you’ll give the insurance adjuster a recorded statement
- Are focusing on recovering
- You will call the insurance adjuster when you have any updates
If you are receiving calls from an insurance adjuster and are having difficulty getting the calls to stop, talk with a North Carolina personal injury attorney about your options.
Should I sign the medical authorization forms that the insurance adjuster is asking me for?
No. These medical authorization forms are comprehensive and allow the insurance provider to obtain all of your prior medical records (from your visits to the doctor long before you were injured). Giving the insurance adjuster your old medical records is terrible because they may see previous injuries you sustained and suggest that your new damage was not caused by your recent accident. (Therefore, the adjuster will argue you shouldn’t be compensated for your injuries.)
The insurance adjuster needs to obtain all of your medical records and bills specifically related to your injury, though, so you will have to hand those over. A North Carolina personal injury lawyer can help you provide a medical release that limits the insurance access to specific medical providers and only bills and medical records related to your particular injury.
Personal Injury FAQs
First, use your own health insurance policy to pay your medical bills. If you are receiving medical bills and are not sure what to do with them, contact your doctor’s office or speak with a North Carolina personal injury attorney about your options. The last thing you need is for your medical bills to end up in collections.
Ultimately, either you or your health insurance company will typically get reimbursed for the payment of your medical bills when your personal injury case is resolved.
If you were hurt in an auto accident, you can also call your own car insurance company and ask if you have Medical Payments coverage. If you do, submit your medical bills to your own auto insurance company as well. (Your auto insurance premiums will not increase due to your using your Medical Payments coverage.)
Sometimes, yes. Many attorney advertisements suggest that you will always get more money if you hire a lawyer, but that’s not always true. In some cases, you can get more money by handling your own case and avoiding having to give 25% to 40% of your award to an attorney.
An example of a case you can do just fine handling yourself is one where you had very minor injuries, very limited medical treatment, were fully recovered upon your release, and there is no dispute regarding who is at fault. Paying an attorney to negotiate on your behalf really isn’t going to increase the amount of money you are able to recover, as the total value of your claim typically isn’t very high and is not the subject of a significant dispute.
The more severe or complex your injury, or the more uncertainty around who is liable for your injury, the more value you will get out of hiring an attorney.
If you are wondering whether you need an attorney for your case, we’d be happy to guide you through the process. Just contact us for a free consultation, and we’ll give you our thoughts on your case.
Most cases take time to resolve. So unfortunately, you’re going to have to have some patience. In terms of a time frame, we typically split the phases of your personal injury case into three categories:
- The medical treatment phase
- The negotiating phase
- The trial phase
Once you have finished your medical treatment, we’ll prepare a demand to send to the person liable for your injuries (or their insurance company). Following our demand, we’ll negotiate to see if we can reach a settlement on your case. This negotiating phase can be very quick (if our demand is met or if it becomes apparent that our demand will never be met), or it can take several months.
If we reach an impasse negotiating and can’t reach a settlement, then we will move to the trial phase. This phase can take about two years from the filing of your lawsuit to the end of your trial, and this time frame can vary depending on your case and the court docket.
Reach Out to an Experienced Durham Personal Injury Lawyer Today
By choosing Kreger Brodish LLP to handle your personal injury case, you can keep your focus on your medical treatment and recovery. We’ll be staying in touch to give you updates on the status of your personal injury claim and to get updates on the quality of your medical treatment and your healing process. Otherwise, you won’t spend much time working on or worrying about your legal claim.
We offer free consultations for all of our prospective personal injury clients. So there’s no risk in getting the legal advice you need. So contact our personal injury lawyer now to get started.
Our Durham personal injury attorneys advocate for accident victims throughout Durham, Raleigh, Greensboro, Cary, and the surrounding areas.