When you have been injured by someone else's carelessness, it is important to take some initial steps toward making sure your injury claim can be settled fairly and as quickly as possible:
In most cases, in order to collect on an injury claim in Connecticut, you must prove the person who caused the injury was "negligent," which is a failure to use reasonable care. In Connecticut, you must prove:
If you were careless, and your carelessness contributed to your injury, the amount you can recover will be reduced in proportion to your carelessness, under Connecticut's modified comparative negligence law. If you were more careless than all of the other people involved in the accident, you would not recover any damages. Otherwise, you could recover damages in an amount that would be reduced by an amount proportional to your degree of negligence.
In Connecticut, if more than one person is negligent toward you, each person who has been found negligent is responsible for a proportional amount of the total damages. If any amount of your damage award is not paid within one year from when the final judgment was entered, you may seek relief from the court. The court will then re-allocate liability for the remaining balance of the judgment based upon the relative degree of fault of those that contributed to your injury.
If you have been injured using a consumer product, the seller of the product may be responsible under a "strict liability" legal theory. Under Connecticut law, you would need to prove that:
Under Connecticut law, the person who injured you is responsible for:
A lawyer will know what type of expert witness to hire to best prove your damages.
In Connecticut, you only have two years to file a lawsuit against the person who injured you. If your lawyer has not been able to come to an agreement with any involved insurance companies, you will definitely want to file a lawsuit before the two-year statute of limitations runs out.
How Long Do I Have To File A Legal Claim?
Related Web Links:
| General Personal Injury for more help |
failure to exercise the great degree of care typical of an extraordinarily prudent person
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