What Money Damages Are Available In A Personal Injury Claim?
If you were a law student taking the bar exam the correct answer would be:
- The injured person is entitled to be put back into the position he was in before the injury occurred to the extent that can be done with money.
- The law cannot replace a severed leg or remove pain.
- The injured party is not entitled to a profit.
- Rather the injured party is entitled to be compensated for his losses.
Compensation comes in six categories.
1. Property damage.
For example, you are entitled to the
full repair or replacement cost of your
vehicle.
2. Medical expenses to date.
If someone else has been paying your
medical bills, like your health
insurance plan, you do have to pay them
back. That’s called subrogation and
there are circumstances where we can
avoid the payback, but that’s a detail
we don’t have to deal with now.
The basic rule is: you are entitled to
have your medical bills to date paid in
full.
3. Future medical expenses.
You are entitled to a sum of money which
will be sufficient to pay future medical
bills.
We could design a number of different
systems. For example, we could have a
system where you keep your receipts and
submit them for payment at the end of
each year, but insurance companies want
to have claims closed once and for all.
So instead, you get a one time lump sum
payment for all future medical care.
That means you need to get an estimate
of the cost of future care like you
would get an estimate for the cost of
fixing a car except the human body is
much more complicated.
We have to obtain from a doctor a
diagnosis (what is the injury), a
prognosis (what is likely to occur in
the future), a treatment plan (what
specific medical care will more likely
than not be needed in the future) and
then convert that to a dollar figure
representing future medical care.
It’s a bit complicated, but we do it all
the time.
4. Lost wages to date.
Relatively easy to prove, it’s just a
matter of data collection.
5. Lost future earning capacity.
If you are temporarily or permanently,
partially or completely unable to work,
you are entitled to a lump sum
representing the difference between the
amount you could have earned before the
injury and the amount you can earn now.
That’s easy if you have a long term,
full time job, you can no longer do. It
is harder if you are a fisherman, or a
realtor, or self employed. It is also
harder if you suffer only a partial
loss.
We take your medical records to experts
in physical capacity evaluation and
vocational rehabilitation, quantify the
impact of the injury on employment, and
then obtain a written opinion from an
economist, an expert in economic loss.
In sum, you are entitled to a lump sum
representing the difference between the
amount you could have earned before the
injury and the amount you can earn now.
6. The last, and most difficult
item to evaluate, is general damages for
pain, suffering, disability, and
disfigurement.
The other 5 items of damages are easy to
add up:
- Property damage
- Medical expenses to date
- Future medical expenses
- Lost income to date
- Lost future earning capacity
You can buy all those things, but there
is no market for pain.
You could put a thousand people up
against a wall and ask “How much would I
have to pay you to be run over by a
truck and have your back broken? Nobody
is going to volunteer for a thousand
dollars or a hundred thousand dollars.
People won’t volunteer for a life
changing injury for a million dollars.
But you are entitled to be compensated
for a life changing injury. Your lawyer
will have to convince a jury, or the
insurance company of the impact of the
injury on your life. That is a difficult
assignment, but it is one we have
successfully completed on many
occasions.
So to summarize:
You are entitled to be put back into the
position you were in before the injury
occurred – to the extent that can be
done with money.
That involves full recovery in 6
categories:
- Property damage
- Medical expenses to date
- Future medical expenses
- Lost income to date
- Lost future earning capacity
- General Damages: for pain, suffering, disability and disfigurement.
I hope that answers your question in
general.
If you want an estimate on how much your
injury is worth, our website has a
free
claim evaluation form.


