Car Accident Law

Burden of Proof in Georgia Car Accident Cases

The burden of proof determines who must prove what, and to what degree of certainty. In a Georgia car accident case, the plaintiff carries the initial burden, and the...

Proving Negligence in a Georgia Car Accident

Every Georgia car accident claim rests on a single legal framework: negligence. To recover compensation, you must prove the other driver was negligent. That word carries a specific legal...

How Settlement Negotiations Work in Georgia Car Accident Cases

Settlement negotiation is the process that resolves the vast majority of Georgia car accident cases. Only a small fraction of personal injury claims -- industry estimates typically range below...

Hit-and-Run Victim Claims in Georgia

When the driver who caused your accident fled the scene, your recovery path depends on two variables: whether the driver is later identified and whether physical contact occurred between...

When Are Punitive Damages Awarded in Georgia Car Accident Cases?

Punitive damages are not compensation for your losses. They are financial punishment imposed on the at-fault driver for conduct so reckless or intentional that ordinary negligence liability is not...

First-Party vs. Third-Party Insurance Claims in Georgia Car Accidents

After a Georgia car accident, you will hear the terms "first-party claim" and "third-party claim" repeatedly. These are not interchangeable. They describe fundamentally different processes, involve different insurers, carry...

Delayed Injury Claims in Georgia Car Accidents

Some car accident injuries do not manifest immediately. The absence of symptoms at the scene does not mean you were not injured. Delayed onset is medically recognized for many...

Wrongful Death Claims in Georgia Car Accidents

When a car accident takes a life, the legal response divides into two separate claims that serve different purposes, benefit different people, and follow different deadlines. Georgia's wrongful death...

How Speeding Affects Liability in Georgia Car Accidents

Exceeding the posted speed limit is a per se breach of duty under Georgia law, but speed-related liability goes beyond the posted number. Georgia requires drivers to travel at...

What to Do Immediately After a Georgia Car Accident

The first 48 hours after a car accident determine the strength of your claim for months or years to come. Evidence disappears on a schedule measured in hours and...

Georgia Car Accident: Reporting, Hit-and-Run, Mistakes, and Defenses

This page consolidates topics related to accident reporting, hit-and-run claims, common claim mistakes, and defenses used in Georgia car accident cases. Each topic is covered in full on its...

When Must You Report a Georgia Car Accident?

Georgia law under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-273 requires drivers to immediately report any accident that results in injury, death, or property damage exceeding $500 to the nearest law enforcement agency....

When Employers and Vehicle Owners Are Liable for Georgia Car Accidents

When someone is injured by a negligent driver, the driver is not always the only defendant worth pursuing. Employers, vehicle owners, and parents may share liability through legal doctrines...

Common Defenses in Georgia Car Accident Cases

This reference page catalogs the defenses most frequently raised in Georgia car accident litigation. Each defense is explained with its legal basis, the evidence required to support it, and...

Loss of Consortium Claims in Georgia Car Accidents

When a serious car accident injures your spouse, the injury ripples beyond the person who was hurt. The disruption to your relationship, the loss of companionship, the daily routines...

How Police Reports Are Used in Georgia Car Accident Cases

A police report is typically the first formal document created after a car accident, and it becomes the reference point that insurance adjusters, attorneys, and judges return to throughout...

Are Car Accident Settlements Taxable in Georgia?

The short answer for most Georgia accident victims: the core of your settlement, which is money compensating you for physical injuries, is not taxable. But several components of a...