Covers Georgia injury and accident law, including car accidents and injuries suffered by individuals as a result of someone else's negligence.
Showing posts with label reasonable care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reasonable care. Show all posts
Monday, August 11, 2014
Automobile Accidents are the Number One Source of Personal Injury Lawsuits
Automobile accidents are the number one source of personal injury lawsuits. A person is liable to the injured person if he was negligent in causing the accident. Persons who act negligently do not intend to cause an injury to another person or to their property. Nonetheless, liability for the injures comes from the failure to act like a reasonable person would have acted. Every driver has a duty is to use reasonable care to avoid injury to anyone that he or she meets on the road. If a driver fails to use reasonable care and, as a result of that failure, injures you, then that driver is liable to you for those injuries.
Location: 411 N. Michigan St., Toledo, Ohio 43604
411 North Michigan Street #300, Toledo, OH 43604, USA
Thursday, August 7, 2014
What are the Grounds for Personal Injury Lawsuits?
Personal injury lawsuits will compensate a plaintiff injured because of someone else's act or failure to act. If you can prove that the defendant was liable for damages, and the nature and extent of damages, the court will award money damages.
There are generally three (3) grounds for personal injury lawsuits:
1. Negligence is the basis for liability in most personal injury lawsuits. For instance, the driver who operates his car carelessly, the doctor who fails to follow accepted medical procedures or the store owner whose poor maintenance causes a customer to fall. Individuals or companies are liable if they were negligent in causing an injury. Their liability stems from careless or thoughtless conduct or a failure to act when a reasonable person would have acted. Conduct becomes "negligent" when it falls below a legally recognized standard of taking reasonable care under the circumstances to protect others from harm. A driver has a duty to use reasonable care to avoid injuring anyone he meets on the road. If he fails to use reasonable care and injuries to another are a result of this failure, he is responsible (or liable) for those injuries.
2. Strict liability holds manufacturers strictly liable for injuries from defective products without the need to establish negligence. Rather, the plaintiff must show the product was designed or manufactured in a manner that made it unreasonably dangerous when used as intended.
3. Intentional wrongs are the basis for holding a defendant liable for assault, battery, false imprisonment or intentional infliction of mental distress.
There are generally three (3) grounds for personal injury lawsuits:
1. Negligence is the basis for liability in most personal injury lawsuits. For instance, the driver who operates his car carelessly, the doctor who fails to follow accepted medical procedures or the store owner whose poor maintenance causes a customer to fall. Individuals or companies are liable if they were negligent in causing an injury. Their liability stems from careless or thoughtless conduct or a failure to act when a reasonable person would have acted. Conduct becomes "negligent" when it falls below a legally recognized standard of taking reasonable care under the circumstances to protect others from harm. A driver has a duty to use reasonable care to avoid injuring anyone he meets on the road. If he fails to use reasonable care and injuries to another are a result of this failure, he is responsible (or liable) for those injuries.
2. Strict liability holds manufacturers strictly liable for injuries from defective products without the need to establish negligence. Rather, the plaintiff must show the product was designed or manufactured in a manner that made it unreasonably dangerous when used as intended.
3. Intentional wrongs are the basis for holding a defendant liable for assault, battery, false imprisonment or intentional infliction of mental distress.
Labels:
assault,
battery,
car accident,
injuries,
intentional tort,
mental distress,
personal injury,
reasonable care,
slip and fall,
strict liability
Location: 411 N. Michigan St., Toledo, Ohio 43604
411 North Michigan Street, Toledo, OH 43604, USA
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