Bellaire Car Accident Attorney – The Moudgil Law Firm
Empowering Victims: Fighting for Justice and Maximum Compensation After Life-Changing Car Accidents
Have You Been Injured in a Car Accident in Bellaire?
If you’ve been injured in a car accident in Bellaire or anywhere in Texas, The Moudgil Law Firm is here to help. With over 9 years of dedicated experience representing car accident victims in Texas, our team, led by attorney Pulkit Moudgil, has successfully recovered over $14 million in compensation for our clients. We understand the physical, emotional, and financial toll a car accident can take on you and your loved ones, and we are committed to guiding you through every step of the legal process with empathy, expertise, and unwavering trust.
Attorney Pulkit Moudgil brings specialized credentials to every case, including certification as a Texas State Bar member with a proven track record of successfully handling hundreds of car accident cases throughout Texas.
Texas Car Accident Laws: Critical Legal Framework
Statute of Limitations: In Texas, you have exactly two years from the date of the accident to file a personal injury lawsuit under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 16.003. This legal deadline is crucial because missing it may result in losing your right to pursue compensation entirely.
Texas Insurance Requirements: Texas Transportation Code Chapter 601 mandates drivers to hold minimum liability auto insurance: $30,000 per injured person, $60,000 per accident, and $25,000 for property damage.
Modified Comparative Fault Rule: Under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 33.001, Texas applies a “modified comparative fault” rule when victims share fault. A victim’s compensation is reduced by the percentage of fault attributed to them. If you’re over 50% at fault, no compensation is awarded.
Reporting Requirements: Texas Transportation Code Section 550.026 requires immediate reporting of accidents resulting in injury, death, or vehicle damage preventing safe driving to appropriate authorities.
Types of Compensation Available for Car Accident Victims
The amount of compensation depends on various factors, including economic and non-economic damages as defined by the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code:
Economic Damages:
- Medical Expenses: Hospitalization expenses and medical bills – averaging $57,000 per serious car accident according to National Safety Council economic impact data
- Rehabilitation and therapy costs per Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services guidelines
- Lost wages and income loss – with average recovery time of 43 days for serious injuries per Bureau of Labor Statistics
- Property damage and replacement costs according to Insurance Information Institute
- Future medical care and long-term treatment as documented by American Medical Association
Non-Economic Damages:
- Pain and suffering as defined by Texas Supreme Court precedent
- Emotional trauma compensation per American Psychological Association guidelines
- Loss of consortium (companionship) per Texas Family Code
- Reduced quality of life assessments according to established medical guidelines
- Permanent disability and disfigurement compensation under Texas law
Punitive Damages:
In certain instances, punitive damages may be available in Texas under the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, Chapter 41, to penalize misconduct and deter future wrongdoing.
Common Car Accident Injuries and Their Impact
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), car accidents can result in a wide range of injuries with varying degrees of severity:
Physical Injuries:
- Traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) affecting approximately 1.7 million Americans annually per CDC statistics
- Spinal cord injuries including herniated discs and paralysis as documented by the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center
- Broken bones and fractures requiring surgical intervention and extended rehabilitation
- Internal organ damage and internal bleeding requiring emergency medical intervention
Psychological Injuries:
- Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) affecting up to 39.2% of motor vehicle accident survivors according to American Psychological Association research
- Depression and anxiety as documented by the National Institute of Mental Health
- Emotional trauma requiring ongoing therapeutic intervention
How The Moudgil Law Firm Can Help with Your Car Accident Case
The Moudgil Law Firm in Houston offers a comprehensive support system for car accident victims, providing expert legal representation, advocacy, and compassionate guidance. Here’s how our attorney can assist survivors in their journey towards justice and healing:
Expert Legal Representation
Specialized Knowledge: Our attorneys possess deep understanding of Texas’s complex legal landscape concerning car accident cases. This expertise allows us to navigate the intricacies of both insurance claims and civil litigation effectively, ensuring victims’ cases are handled with utmost care and professionalism.
Personalized Legal Strategies: We recognize that each accident victim’s experience is unique. We craft personalized legal strategies tailored to the specific circumstances and needs of each client, aiming for the best possible outcome in each case.
Advocacy and Support
Holistic Approach: Beyond legal representation, we provide holistic support to address the physical, emotional, and financial impacts of serious car accidents. Our empathetic firm offers a safe space for victims to share their experiences and seek justice.
Resources and Referrals: We connect accident victims with local resources such as medical specialists, physical therapy providers, mental health counselors, and support groups, ensuring they have access to comprehensive care needed for full recovery.
Navigating the Legal Process
Guidance Through Legal Proceedings: The legal process can be overwhelming, especially for car accident victims dealing with injuries and trauma. The Moudgil Law Firm guides clients every step of the way, from filing insurance claims to representing them in court, making the process as clear and manageable as possible.
Maximizing Compensation: Our law firm is dedicated to securing just compensation for car accident victims, which may include damages for medical expenses, rehabilitation costs, lost wages, pain and suffering, and punitive damages. We meticulously prepare and present cases to ensure the best possible financial outcome.
Raising Awareness and Community Engagement
Community Engagement: We actively engage with the Bellaire community to raise awareness about traffic safety, advocate for accident victims’ rights, and promote preventative measures. Our office participates in educational programs, workshops, and advocacy initiatives to foster safer roadways for all.
Policy Change Advocacy: We work tirelessly to advocate for changes in laws and policies that will better protect car accident victims and prevent future incidents through improved traffic safety measures.
Contact The Moudgil Law Firm Today
Don’t wait to seek the legal representation you deserve. As experienced Bellaire car accident attorneys, we understand that every day counts when building your case and preserving crucial evidence.
Why Contact Us Immediately:
- Evidence preservation is time-sensitive
- Witness memories fade quickly
- Insurance companies begin their investigations immediately
- Medical documentation requires prompt attention
Your initial consultation with our Bellaire car accident lawyers is completely free, and you only pay if we successfully secure compensation for your case. We are available 24/7, 365 days a year to help you navigate the path to justice after a serious car accident in Houston.
Serving Bellaire and All Surrounding Areas: Based in Houston, we represent car accident victims throughout Harris County and Bellaire
Let us handle the legal burden so you can focus on healing. Contact The Moudgil Law Firm today to begin your journey toward justice and recovery with Bellaire’s most trusted car accident attorneys.
Frequently Asked Questions
We believe in keeping our clients fully informed throughout every stage of the legal process, empowering them to make well-informed decisions about their cases.
Recently Asked Topics
Yes, you can file a lawsuit without a police report, though having one strengthens your case.
Other evidence can establish what happened: witness statements, photographs, vehicle damage patterns, medical records, and expert testimony. Texas law doesn’t require a police report to file a civil lawsuit. However, reports provide valuable documentation that’s harder to dispute later.
A traffic citation supports your claim but doesn’t guarantee success in civil court.
Traffic tickets show police believed the other driver violated traffic laws, which helps establish breach of duty. However, defendants can still dispute liability, argue the violation didn’t cause the accident, or claim you shared fault. A citation strengthens your case but isn’t conclusive proof.
If your case goes to trial, you will likely need to testify. You’ll describe the accident, your injuries, and how they’ve affected your life.
Most cases settle before trial, so many plaintiffs never testify in court. Even if your case settles, you may need to give a deposition (out-of-court recorded testimony) during discovery. Your attorney prepares you thoroughly for any testimony.
Discovery is the formal exchange of information between parties. Both sides send written questions (interrogatories), request documents (medical records, accident reports, insurance policies), and conduct depositions (recorded sworn testimony).
Discovery reveals evidence supporting your claim and exposes weaknesses in the defense. This phase typically lasts six months to a year.
Never accept an insurance settlement without consulting an attorney. Initial offers are almost always far below your claim’s true value.
Insurance adjusters know unrepresented claimants often accept inadequate compensation because they don’t understand what their case is worth. An attorney can evaluate the offer against your actual damages and negotiate for fair compensation.
You can still file a lawsuit against an uninsured driver, though collecting any judgment may be difficult.
Your own uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage may provide compensation. Other potentially liable parties—employers, vehicle owners, or maintenance providers—may have insurance that covers your injuries. An attorney can identify all possible sources of recovery.
Yes, Texas allows you to recover damages if you were 50% or less at fault for the accident. Your compensation is reduced by your percentage of fault.
For example, if you’re 25% at fault and damages total $100,000, you recover $75,000. However, if you’re found 51% or more at fault, you cannot recover anything under Texas law.
Most car accident lawsuits take 12 to 24 months from filing to resolution. Simple cases with clear liability may resolve faster through early settlement.
Complex cases involving severe injuries, multiple defendants, or disputed liability often take longer. Many cases settle during discovery or after mediation without reaching trial. Cases that go to trial may require additional time for appeals.
The Moudgil Law Firm handles car accident lawsuits on contingency, meaning you pay no upfront costs and no attorney fees unless we recover compensation for you.
We advance all litigation expenses—filing fees, expert witness costs, deposition expenses, and investigation costs. This arrangement ensures everyone can access quality legal representation regardless of financial circumstances.
Texas law provides a two-year statute of limitations for car accident lawsuits. You must file your lawsuit within two years of the accident date or permanently lose your right to sue.
Claims against government entities require formal notice within six months. Don’t wait—starting early gives your attorney time to investigate thoroughly and build the strongest possible case.
Yes, you can pursue claims against both the driver and the trucking company simultaneously.
The driver faces personal liability for negligent driving. The trucking company typically faces vicarious liability for employee actions plus potential direct liability for negligent hiring, training, supervision, or safety practices. Suing both defendants increases available insurance coverage and strengthens your negotiating position.
Beyond standard accident scene photos (vehicle damage, road conditions, injuries), photograph the truck itself—including the trucking company name on the cab, USDOT number, license plates, trailer identification, and any visible damage or defects.
This information helps identify all liable parties, locate federal safety records, and begin evidence preservation before crucial data is lost or destroyed.
Truck accident evidence faces rapid destruction if not preserved immediately. Electronic logging devices may overwrite data within days.
Trucking companies may repair or scrap damaged vehicles. Driver qualification files, maintenance records, and dispatch communications can disappear. Experienced attorneys send spoliation letters immediately after accidents, demanding companies preserve all evidence. Car accident evidence typically doesn’t face such urgent timelines.
Federal hours of service regulations limit how long truck drivers can operate before mandatory rest.
Drivers cannot drive more than 11 hours after 10 consecutive hours off duty, cannot drive beyond 14 consecutive hours after coming on duty, and must take 30-minute breaks after 8 hours of driving. Electronic logging devices now track compliance. Violations indicate driver fatigue and establish negligence in accident cases.
Underride accidents occur when passenger vehicles slide beneath truck trailers, often shearing off the car’s roof and causing catastrophic or fatal injuries to occupants.
Rear underride happens when cars strike trailer backs; side underride occurs during truck turns or lane changes. Federal regulations require rear underride guards, but many fail in real crashes. Side underride guards aren’t federally mandated despite their life-saving potential.
A jackknife accident occurs when a truck’s trailer swings outward from the cab, forming an angle resembling a folding knife.
This typically happens during sudden braking when the trailer’s momentum pushes it sideways while the cab slows. Jackknifing trucks can sweep across multiple lanes, causing catastrophic multi-vehicle accidents. Passenger cars cannot jackknife because they lack articulated trailers.
Several factors contribute to higher truck accident settlements: more severe injuries requiring extensive medical treatment, federal regulations requiring higher insurance coverage (minimum $750,000 vs. $30,000 for cars), multiple liable parties with separate insurance policies, and clear regulatory violations that strengthen liability. However, insurance companies fight harder against larger claims, requiring experienced attorneys to secure fair compensation.
Multiple parties may share liability: the trucking company (for negligent hiring, training, or supervision), cargo loading companies (for improper loading), maintenance providers (for negligent repairs), truck and parts manufacturers (for defective equipment), and government entities (for dangerous road conditions). Each potentially liable party carries separate insurance, increasing available compensation for victims.
Truck accident cases require attorneys with specific experience navigating federal trucking regulations, managing multi-defendant litigation, and preserving time-sensitive evidence.
While any personal injury attorney can handle car accidents, truck accidents benefit from specialized expertise. Look for attorneys who understand FMCSA regulations, have experience deposing trucking company representatives, and have resources to retain trucking industry experts.
Commercial trucks can weigh up to 80,000 pounds—20 times heavier than passenger vehicles.
This massive weight disparity means collisions generate exponentially greater force, causing more severe injuries and higher fatality rates. Additionally, trucks have larger blind spots, require longer stopping distances, and can cause unique crash types like jackknifing and underride accidents that don’t occur in car-on-car collisions.
The Moudgil Law Firm handles wrongful death cases on contingency—you pay nothing unless we recover compensation for you.
We advance all case costs including investigation expenses, expert witness fees, court costs, and other litigation expenses. Our fee comes from the settlement or verdict, never from your pocket. This ensures every family can pursue justice regardless of current financial circumstances.
Wrongful death claims compensate surviving family members for their own losses—lost financial support, lost companionship, and mental anguish.
Survival claims recover damages the deceased could have claimed if they survived, including their pain and suffering between the accident and death, and their medical expenses. Both claims can be pursued simultaneously, and together they maximize total recovery.
When the at-fault driver’s insurance is insufficient, we identify additional sources of compensation.
Your deceased loved one’s uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage may apply. We investigate whether employers, vehicle manufacturers, government entities, or other parties share liability. We also assess the at-fault driver’s personal assets. Multiple recovery sources often combine to provide adequate compensation.
Yes, wrongful death civil claims are completely independent from criminal proceedings.
Many fatal accidents don’t result in criminal charges, yet families successfully recover substantial compensation through civil lawsuits. Civil cases have a lower burden of proof than criminal cases. Prosecutors’ decisions not to file charges or acquittals don’t affect your right to civil compensation.
Most wrongful death cases resolve within 12 to 24 months, though complex cases involving multiple defendants or disputed liability can take longer.
Insurance company negotiations often produce settlements within months. Cases that proceed to trial require additional time for discovery, depositions, and court scheduling. We keep you informed throughout the process while working efficiently toward maximum recovery.
Texas follows modified comparative fault rules. You can recover damages as long as your deceased loved one was 50% or less responsible for the accident.
If they were 51% or more at fault, you cannot recover compensation. If partially at fault, your recovery is reduced by their percentage of fault. For example, 20% fault reduces a $1 million recovery to $800,000.
Multiple eligible family members—spouse, children, and parents—can all participate in a wrongful death case.
Texas law allows these claims to be filed jointly or separately. Joint claims are typically more efficient and prevent inconsistent verdicts. Any recovery gets divided among eligible claimants, either by agreement or by court allocation based on each person’s relationship and losses.
Yes, you can file a wrongful death claim against the deceased driver’s estate. Their auto insurance policy remains available to pay claims even after the policyholder’s death.
You may also pursue claims against other liable parties such as employers, vehicle manufacturers, or government entities responsible for dangerous road conditions.
You can recover funeral and burial expenses, lost financial support the deceased would have provided, medical bills incurred before death, loss of companionship and consortium, mental anguish and emotional suffering, loss of inheritance, and potentially punitive damages if the defendant acted with gross negligence.
Total compensation varies widely based on the deceased’s age, income, family relationships, and circumstances of the accident.
Texas gives you two years from the date of death to file a wrongful death lawsuit.
Missing this deadline typically bars your claim permanently, regardless of how strong your case might be. Claims against government entities require notice within six months. Starting your case early preserves evidence and ensures you don’t lose your right to compensation.
Accidents involving rideshare or rental vehicles add insurance complexity. Uber and Lyft maintain $1 million liability policies covering accidents during active rides.
Rental car accidents may involve your personal insurance, credit card coverage, or the rental company’s policy depending on your coverage elections. Determining which policies apply requires careful analysis.
Texas law allows compensation when accidents aggravate pre-existing conditions under the “eggshell plaintiff” rule.
Defendants take victims as they find them—you can recover for worsening of prior injuries even if someone without that condition would not have suffered the same harm. Insurance companies cannot deny compensation simply because you had prior health issues.
While you can handle minor accident claims independently, attorney representation typically results in significantly higher compensation—even after attorney fees.
Studies consistently show represented claimants receive larger settlements than unrepresented victims. Attorneys understand insurance tactics, know how to document damages fully, and can take cases to trial if necessary.
Yes, you can file a car accident claim any time within Texas’s two-year statute of limitations, though acting sooner typically produces better outcomes.
Evidence becomes harder to gather as time passes—witnesses relocate, memories fade, and physical evidence disappears. The strongest cases are built with evidence preserved immediately after the accident.
Essential evidence includes police reports, medical records, photographs of injuries and vehicle damage, witness statements, and documentation of lost wages.
Medical records should thoroughly document your injuries, treatment, and prognosis. Keeping a journal of pain levels, limitations, and emotional impacts helps prove non-economic damages. Preserving all evidence from the accident scene strengthens your claim.
Insurance companies typically make low initial settlement offers hoping accident victims will accept before understanding their claims’ full value.
First offers rarely reflect fair compensation for your injuries. Consulting with a car accident attorney before accepting any settlement ensures you understand what your case is truly worth and protects you from accepting inadequate compensation.
Yes, Texas comparative fault law allows compensation recovery if you were less than 51% responsible for the accident.
Your compensation reduces proportionally by your fault percentage—if you were 30% at fault, you recover 70% of your total damages. Being partially at fault does not bar recovery entirely under Texas law.
When at-fault drivers lack insurance, you may still recover compensation through your own uninsured motorist (UM) coverage, which Texas insurers must offer.
UM coverage pays for your injuries when the responsible driver has no insurance. You can also pursue the at-fault driver personally, though collecting from uninsured individuals often proves difficult without substantial personal assets.
Car accident compensation timelines vary from a few months to several years depending on case complexity.
Simple cases with clear liability and minor injuries may settle within three to six months. Complex cases involving serious injuries, disputed liability, or multiple defendants typically take one to three years. Reaching maximum medical improvement before settling ensures accurate damage calculation.
Car accident compensation in Texas varies based on injury severity, available insurance coverage, liability allocation, and impact on your life.
Compensation covers medical expenses, lost wages, property damage, pain and suffering, and future care needs. Texas has no cap on personal injury damages in most car accident cases, allowing full recovery of all proven damages.
If a defective car part caused your accident, you may have a product liability claim against the manufacturer in addition to any claim against another driver.
Texas strict liability law holds manufacturers responsible for unreasonably dangerous defects regardless of whether they exercised reasonable care.
Yes, you can sue government entities for accidents caused by poor road conditions including potholes, missing signage, inadequate guardrails, and dangerous construction zones.
Texas requires filing notice of claims against government entities within six months, making prompt legal consultation essential.
You prove distracted driving through cell phone records showing usage at crash time, witness observations of phone handling, traffic camera footage, the driver’s admissions, and post-crash behavior like immediately reaching for a phone.
Expert witnesses can analyze phone data to establish exact usage timing.
If the at-fault driver lacks insurance, you may recover compensation through your own uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage, or by pursuing a direct lawsuit against the driver personally.
Texas requires drivers to carry liability insurance, but many violate this requirement.
You should not accept an insurance settlement offer without attorney review because initial offers typically undervalue claims significantly.
Insurance adjusters work to minimize payouts, not ensure you receive fair compensation. An experienced Houston car accident attorney evaluates your full damages before advising whether offers are adequate.
Texas law requires filing car accident lawsuits within two years of the injury date.
This statute of limitations applies strictly, and missing the deadline typically eliminates your right to compensation entirely. Some circumstances may toll or extend this deadline, but you should consult an attorney immediately to protect your rights.
After a Houston car accident, collect the other driver’s insurance and contact information, photograph the scene and all vehicles, obtain witness contact information, seek immediate medical attention, and preserve the damaged vehicle.
Report the accident to police and request a copy of the crash report.
Texas’s modified comparative fault law reduces your recovery proportionally to your fault percentage and bars recovery entirely if you were more than 50% responsible.
If you were 20% at fault and your damages total $100,000, you recover $80,000. If you were 51% at fault, you recover nothing.
When multiple factors cause your Houston car accident—such as a speeding, distracted driver hitting you during a rainstorm—you can pursue claims against all responsible parties.
Texas comparative fault law allocates responsibility among all parties who contributed, and multiple causes often strengthen your case by showing the other driver’s severe negligence.
Yes, you can recover compensation when weather contributed to your accident if another driver failed to adjust their driving for conditions.
Texas law requires drivers to exercise reasonable care based on actual conditions, meaning maintaining excessive speed or inadequate following distance during poor weather constitutes negligence.
You prove another driver caused your accident through evidence including police reports, witness statements, traffic camera footage, cell phone records, vehicle data recorders, and expert accident reconstruction.
Texas law requires showing the other driver breached their duty of care and that breach directly caused your injuries.
Distracted driving is the most common cause of car accidents in Houston, with cell phone use accounting for the largest share of distracted driving crashes.
Texting while driving is illegal in Texas and dramatically increases collision risk by diverting visual, manual, and cognitive attention from driving simultaneously.
Car accident case value depends on multiple factors that our attorneys carefully analyze during your free consultation. The primary factors include:
Injury severity and permanence: Minor soft tissue injuries typically result in settlements between $15,000-$75,000, while catastrophic injuries like traumatic brain injuries or paralysis can result in multi-million dollar settlements. Permanent disabilities that affect your ability to work or enjoy life significantly increase case value.
Medical expenses: Both past and future medical costs factor into your settlement. This includes emergency room visits, hospital stays, surgery, physical therapy, prescription medications, medical equipment, and projected lifetime care costs for permanent injuries. Cases with $100,000+ in medical bills often settle for $500,000-$2 million.
Lost wages and earning capacity: If your injuries caused you to miss work, you’re entitled to compensation for lost income. More importantly, if your injuries permanently reduce your ability to earn income in the future, economic experts calculate your lost lifetime earning capacity, which can add hundreds of thousands to your settlement.
Fault determination: Clear liability (like rear-end collisions or drunk driving cases) results in higher settlements. When fault is disputed, insurance companies pay less. Texas comparative negligence law reduces your compensation by your percentage of fault if you’re less than 51% responsible.
Insurance coverage available: Your settlement is limited by available insurance coverage. If the at-fault driver has only minimum coverage ($30,000 per person in Texas), your settlement may be capped unless you have underinsured motorist coverage or can pursue other liable parties.
Impact on quality of life: Non-economic damages like pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, emotional distress, and permanent disfigurement significantly affect case value. Courts typically use a multiplier of 1.5-5x economic damages based on injury severity.
Strength of evidence: Cases with strong evidence—police reports citing the other driver, witness statements, traffic camera footage, and clear accident reconstruction—settle for higher amounts because insurance companies know they’ll lose at trial.
Most Houston car accident settlements range from $15,000 to $750,000, but catastrophic injury cases can exceed $5 million. Contact us for a free case evaluation where attorney Pulkit Moudgil will review your specific circumstances and provide an honest assessment of your case value based on our experience with similar Houston car accident cases.
You have exactly 2 years from the accident date to file a lawsuit under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 16.003. This deadline, called the statute of limitations, is strictly enforced by Texas courts. If you miss this deadline, you lose your right to compensation forever, regardless of how strong your case is or how severe your injuries are.
Important exceptions and considerations:
Minor victims: If the injured person was under 18 at the time of the accident, the 2-year clock doesn’t start until their 18th birthday, giving them until age 20 to file a lawsuit.
Delayed discovery: In rare cases where injuries weren’t immediately apparent, the statute of limitations may begin when you discovered or reasonably should have discovered the injury. However, courts interpret this exception very narrowly.
Government entities: If your accident involved a government vehicle (city bus, county maintenance truck, police vehicle), you must file an administrative claim within 6 months under the Texas Tort Claims Act before you can file a lawsuit. This much shorter deadline catches many victims off guard.
Wrongful death cases: If your loved one died in a car accident, the 2-year statute of limitations begins on the date of death, not the accident date (if they survived for a period before passing).
Why you shouldn’t wait:
While you have 2 years legally, waiting damages your case because:
- Evidence disappears: Surveillance footage is typically deleted after 30-90 days. Skid marks fade, debris is cleared, and accident scenes change. Physical evidence that proves your case vanishes quickly.
- Witnesses forget: Memory fades over time. Witnesses may move, become unreachable, or forget crucial details about what they saw. The longer you wait, the less reliable witness testimony becomes.
- Medical record gaps: If you wait months before seeking treatment or hiring an attorney, insurance companies argue your injuries weren’t serious or weren’t caused by the accident.
- Insurance company advantage: The longer you wait, the more time insurance companies have to build a defense, interview witnesses with leading questions, and construct narratives that minimize their liability.
You can still recover damages even if you were partially at fault for the car accident under Texas’s modified comparative negligence law (also called proportionate responsibility). Texas follows a 51% bar rule, meaning you can recover compensation as long as you’re less than 51% responsible for the accident. Your compensation is reduced by your percentage of fault.
How comparative negligence works in practice:
Example 1: You’re making a left turn at an intersection and the other driver runs a red light and hits you. However, you turned slightly before the light turned green. A jury determines you’re 20% at fault and the other driver is 80% at fault. Your total damages are $100,000. You can recover $80,000 (your damages minus your 20% fault).
Example 2: You’re texting while driving and drift into the next lane, causing a sideswipe collision. However, the other driver was speeding significantly over the limit. A jury finds you 55% at fault. Because you’re more than 51% responsible, you cannot recover any compensation under Texas law, even though the other driver was also negligent.
Example 3: You’re rear-ended while stopped at a red light, but your brake lights weren’t working. You’re found 10% at fault for not maintaining your vehicle. If your damages are $50,000, you can recover $45,000.
How insurance companies exploit comparative negligence:
Insurance adjusters routinely try to shift blame to accident victims to reduce payouts. Common tactics include:
- Claiming you were speeding without evidence
- Alleging distracted driving based on phone records showing you received a call (even if you didn’t answer)
- Arguing you could have avoided the accident by braking sooner or swerving
- Pointing to any traffic violation regardless of whether it contributed to the crash
- Highlighting any delay in seeking medical treatment as proof injuries weren’t serious
How we protect you against comparative negligence defenses:
Our attorneys aggressively counter fault-shifting tactics by:
- Gathering strong evidence early: Police reports, witness statements, traffic camera footage, and accident reconstruction analysis that clearly establish the other driver’s negligence
- Documenting traffic violations: Citations issued to the other driver, their history of traffic violations, and evidence of impairment or distraction
- Expert testimony: Accident reconstruction experts who testify about vehicle speeds, impact angles, braking distances, and reaction times to demonstrate the other driver could have prevented the accident
- Challenging bad faith arguments: When insurance companies make unfounded comparative negligence claims, we push back with evidence and prepare for trial if necessary
When comparative negligence commonly applies:
- Left-turn accidents: Turning drivers are often assigned partial fault even when they had a green light
- Lane change collisions: Both drivers may share responsibility depending on who failed to check blind spots
- Parking lot accidents: Determining fault in parking lots is complex, often resulting in shared liability
- Intersection crashes: When both drivers claim they had the right of way
- Rear-end collisions with sudden stops: The rear driver is usually at fault, but sudden, unnecessary braking may create shared liability
The determination of fault percentages is ultimately decided by a jury if your case goes to trial, or negotiated during settlement discussions. Our experience with Harris County juries and local insurance adjusters helps us accurately predict fault allocation and negotiate maximum compensation even when you bear partial responsibility. Don’t let partial fault discourage you from pursuing compensation—contact us at (832) 476-3209 for a free evaluation of your case.
Most Houston car accident cases settle within 8-16 months from the accident date, though this timeline varies significantly based on injury severity, treatment duration, liability disputes, and insurance company cooperation. Complex cases requiring litigation typically take 18-24 months or longer to resolve.
Typical car accident case timeline:
Months 1-2: Initial case development
- Hiring an attorney and signing representation agreement (Week 1)
- Initial investigation and evidence gathering (Weeks 2-8)
- Sending preservation letters to protect evidence
- Obtaining police reports and accident scene documentation
- Beginning medical treatment and documentation
Months 2-12: Medical treatment phase
- Continuing treatment until reaching maximum medical improvement (MMI)
- Documenting all medical expenses and treatment
- Following up with specialists as needed
- Building medical evidence for your claim
- You should never settle before completing treatment and reaching MMI
Months 8-14: Demand and negotiation phase
- Preparing comprehensive demand package (Month 8-10)
- Submitting demand to insurance company
- Initial settlement negotiations
- Multiple rounds of offers and counteroffers
- Most cases settle during this phase
Months 12-24+: Litigation phase (if necessary)
- Filing lawsuit in Harris County District Court (if settlement fails)
- Discovery process: depositions, interrogatories, document requests
- Expert witness reports and testimony preparation
- Mediation attempts (court-ordered or voluntary)
- Trial preparation
- Trial (typically 3-7 days for car accident cases)
- Verdict and post-trial motions
Factors that speed up your case:
- Clear liability: Rear-end collisions, drunk driving cases, or accidents where the other driver was cited have faster resolutions
- Minor injuries: Cases with soft tissue injuries that heal within 3-6 months settle quickly
- Cooperative insurance companies: Some insurers settle fairly without excessive back-and-forth
- Strong evidence: Compelling evidence makes insurance companies settle faster
- Client compliance: Following medical advice, attending appointments, and providing requested documents promptly
Factors that slow down your case:
- Severe injuries: Catastrophic injuries requiring extensive treatment, multiple surgeries, or permanent disability take longer to evaluate fully
- Disputed liability: When fault is contested, investigation and expert analysis takes additional time
- Multiple defendants: Truck accidents, rideshare crashes, or multi-vehicle pile-ups involve multiple insurance companies, complicating negotiations
- Low insurance offers: When insurance companies make unreasonably low offers, litigation becomes necessary
- Complex medical issues: Pre-existing conditions, delayed symptom onset, or disputed causation require additional expert evaluation
- Bad faith insurance tactics: Some insurance companies deliberately delay processing claims hoping you’ll accept lowball offers
Why waiting until treatment is complete is crucial:
Many clients want to settle quickly to receive compensation, but settling before reaching maximum medical improvement (MMI) is a critical mistake. Once you settle and sign a release, you cannot recover additional compensation even if:
- Your injuries worsen
- You need additional surgery
- Complications develop
- You discover permanent limitations
Insurance companies know this and pressure accident victims to settle quickly while they’re financially desperate. We protect you from accepting inadequate settlements by ensuring your treatment is complete and all future damages are properly calculated before negotiating.
If the at-fault driver doesn’t have insurance, you may still recover compensation through your own uninsured motorist (UM) coverage. Texas law allows you to pursue compensation from your own insurance company when the at-fault driver is uninsured or cannot be identified (hit-and-run cases). We help maximize your UM/UIM benefits while exploring all available recovery options.
Texas uninsured driver statistics:
According to the Insurance Research Council, approximately 14.1% of Texas drivers are uninsured despite mandatory insurance laws. In Houston and Harris County, uninsured rates are even higher, particularly in lower-income areas. This means roughly 1 in 7 Houston drivers illegally operates without insurance, putting you at risk of being in an accident with an uninsured motorist.
We believe that everyone deserves access to top-quality legal representation, regardless of their financial situation. That’s why we operate on a contingency fee basis. This means you won’t pay any upfront fees or hourly rates. Our compensation is contingent upon securing a favorable settlement or verdict for you. In other words, we only get paid if you do, aligning our interests with yours and ensuring we’re fully committed to your case.
No, Texas is not a no-fault state for car accidents. Instead, Texas follows a “fault” or “at-fault” system when it comes to dealing with car accidents. This means that the person who is found to be legally at fault for causing the accident is responsible for compensating any injured parties for their damages, which can include medical expenses, lost wages, and pain and suffering. Under this system, the injured party has the option to file a claim with their own insurance company, file a claim directly with the at-fault driver’s insurance company, or file a lawsuit in court to seek compensation for their losses.
Texas has a statute of limitations under Texas Revised Statutes 484E.10 that says you must file an SR-1 Report of Traffic Accident within ten days of a car accident. You must make the report if anyone is hurt or killed in the crash or if there is apparent damage of $750 or more. But if the police respond to the accident scene and make their own report, you don’t have to file a police report.
Car accidents can result in a wide range of injuries:
- Spinal cord injuries (paralysis, nerve damage)
- Broken ribs
- Other broken bones (arms, legs, pelvis, etc.)
- Internal bleeding
- Herniated disc
- Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
- Knee trauma (ligament tears, dislocation)
- Soft tissue injuries (sprains, strains)
- Chest trauma (bruising, organ damage)
- Facial injuries (fractures, lacerations)
- Dental injuries (broken teeth, jaw fractures)
- Emotional trauma (anxiety, depression)
- Amputation or loss of limb
- Seat belt injuries (bruising, internal injuries)
- Airbag injuries (abrasions, burns)
- Eye injuries (corneal abrasions, retinal detachment)
- Possible wrongful death
- Hand & Foot Injuries
I notice this content references “Texas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD)” and “LVMPD area command,” which appears to be an error. LVMPD stands for Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department in Nevada, not Texas.
For filing police reports in Texas, the process varies by jurisdiction – you’d contact the specific city’s police department (Houston PD, Dallas PD, Austin PD, etc.) or the Texas Department of Public Safety for highway incidents. Each department has its own online reporting system and procedures.
In Texas personal injury cases, you may recover compensation for medical expenses (past and future), lost wages and earning capacity, property damage, and loss of household services. Non-economic damages include pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, and loss of consortium for spouses. Punitive damages are available in cases of gross negligence or malice, capped at the greater of $200,000 or two times economic damages plus non-economic damages up to $750,000. Most personal injury cases have no caps on pain and suffering, except medical malpractice claims, which limit non-economic damages per provider.

Success Stories
At The Moudgil Law Firm, our commitment to excellence, our individualized approach, legal acumen, transparency, and unwavering advocacy combine to set us apart as a leading force in the field of personal injury law.
We approach each case with compassion, dedication, and a relentless pursuit of justice, working tirelessly to secure the compensation and closure our clients deserve.
