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 Wisconsin, you must prove the person who caused the injury was "negligent" - which is a failure to use reasonable care. In Wisconsin, you must prove:
Contributory negligence does not bar your recovery in an action to recover damages for an injury, if your negligence was not greater than the negligence of the person against whom recovery is sought, under Wisconsin comparative negligence law. Any damages that are allowed will be reduced in proportion to the amount of negligence that is attributed to you.
Wisconsin uses a modified comparative fault rule, under which a damaged person cannot recover if he or she is 51% or more at fault, but can recover if 50% or less at fault. Your negligence is measured separately against the negligence of each person found to be negligent. The liability of any person that was less than 51% at fault is limited to the percentage of the total negligence attributed to that person. Any person that is 51% or more at fault is jointly and severally liable for damages, which means that each of the other people who are responsible for your injury, are liable for all the damages awarded in a lawsuit if the others cannot pay.
If you have been injured using a consumer product, the seller of the product may be responsible under a "strict liability" legal theory. Under Wisconsin law, you would need to prove that:
Under Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin, you only have three 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 three-year statute of limitations runs out.
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failure to exercise the great degree of care typical of an extraordinarily prudent person
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