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Should
I hire a lawyer?
If you
have suffered any bodily injury, sickness or disease
resulting from libel, slander, malicious prosecution,
someone else's neglect, false arrest or false
imprisonment you need to consult with a lawyer
right away. You should also consult with an attorney
if a relative or other loved one died as a result
of libel, slander, malicious prosecution, someone
else's neglect, false arrest or false imprisonment.
Don't suffer
financially and or mentally, use the State Lawyers
Directory to find a qualified personal injury
lawyer right away. |
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Personal Injury falls under Tort Law, and
involves civil law cases where you are trying to obtain compensation
for an injury you sustained to your person. Physical injuries to
your person could arise from being involved in an automobile accident,
a railroad accident, airline or other common carrier accident, a
construction or other workplace accident, being injured as a result
of a dangerous or otherwise unsafe product and other injury-causing
situations. However, personal injuries don't even necessarily have
to be physical-they could be psychological. Psychological personal
injuries are typically caused by psychological trauma associated
with life-threatening and/or disfiguring physical injuries, or as
a result of witnessing trauma in others, or following personal escape
from serious injury following a traumatic event. Before you can
collect an award, your personal injury lawyer will have to prove
that the defendant is liable. To prove liability, the attorney must
also establish negligence.
If there is any failure on your part to exercise
reasonable care to prevent injury or damage then there may be comparative
(or contributory) negligence, where you and the other party both
are at some degree of fault. If you win, you may receive money (an
award) to compensate for medical costs, lost wages and lost future
earnings as well as possibly for pain and suffering and punitive
damages.
What is a Tort?
A tort is a civil wrong recognized by law as grounds
for a lawsuit. Torts fall into three general categories: intentional
torts (e.g., intentionally hitting a person); negligent torts (causing
an accident by failing to obey traffic rules); and strict liability
torts (e.g., liability for making and selling defective products).
These wrongs result in an injury or harm constituting the basis
for a claim by the injured party (tort litigation). While some torts
are also crimes punishable with imprisonment, the primary aim of
tort law is to provide relief for the damages incurred and deter
others from committing similar harms. The injured person may sue
for an injunction to prevent the continuation of the tortious conduct
or for monetary damages. Among the types of damages the injured
party may recover are: loss of earnings capacity, pain and suffering,
and reasonable medical expenses. They include both present and future
expected losses. |