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Resolution Before Trial: Settlement
The majority of legal claims arising from accidents or injuries do not reach a civil court trial -- most are resolved earlier through a negotiated settlement among the parties. An informal settlement can even take place before any lawsuit is filed. Through settlement, the plaintiff in a personal injury case agrees to give up the right to pursue any further legal action in connection with the accident or injury, in exchange for the payment of an agreed-upon sum of money from the defendant or an insurance company. In rare cases, instead of paying money the defendant will agree to perform (or cease performing) a certain action.
If you are considering settling a legal claim after an accident or injury, or if you have received a settlement offer, you should talk to your attorney and receive his or her thorough assessment of the case and the prospects for settlement. Consider the following points:
- Amount he or she thinks the case is worth in a range of dollar amounts.
- Verdicts and settlements in similar cases.
- Chances of winning at trial.
- Unfavorable publicity for either side (civil court trials are open to the public and media scrutiny).
- Amount of personal information that could be revealed at trial or through further discovery.
- Possible disclosure of business information or trade secrets.
- When the case is likely to be called for trial.
- Practical difficulties in trying the case.
- Weaknesses in your evidence.
- Weaknesses in your opponent's evidence.
- The amount of the defendant's insurance coverage.
- The defendant's own monetary resources.
- The defendant's lawyer's negotiation tactics (your lawyer may have negotiated with the lawyer before, or has talked to other lawyers to get an idea of what to expect).
- The extent to which your opponent is likely to play "hardball."
- If you are the plaintiff, ask how much of the settlement proceeds will be applied to your lawyer's fee and your expenses.
- If you are the plaintiff, ask how the settlement payments will affect your federal and state income taxes.
- Talk about what you're willing to concede in order to get the case settled.
- Discuss the minimum amount you will accept.
- Consider the possibility of a partial settlement, that is, settling the easy issues first while you continue to negotiate the more contentious issues.
- If you are the plaintiff, consider accepting a remedy other than money.
See also:
FAQs
- A security guard in a store suspected me of shoplifting and detained me. I have heard about something called false imprisonment. Do I have an action for that?
- What kind of legal fees should I expect in a personal injury case?
- We got behind on our bills and a bill collector has been stopping by and calling us day and night. The bill collector intimidates us, calls us names, and threatens to destroy our credit record. We are nervous wrecks. What may we do?
- Would I be liable if a trespasser were injured on my property?
- Isn't battery a crime?
Accident and Injury Resources
- Checklist: Steps to Take After an Injury
- Case Intake Form: Injury
- Quiz: Emotional Distress
- Sample Attorney Agreement: Injury Case
- Sample Medical Records Release Form
- Worksheet: Damage Estimate
- Find Personal Injury Lawyers in UK
- The FindLaw Accident, Injury and Tort Law Blog
- Find Chicago Personal Injury Lawyers
- Find Personal Injury lawyers in all locations
TotalInjury.com - How much is Your Personal Injury Case Worth? Personal Injury Tools.
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