Most personal injury cases center on the legal theory of negligence. To obtain a settlement or verdict for your damages, you or your attorney will have to prove someone else’s negligence caused the injury. You will also have to navigate Arizona’s comparative negligence rule, which could place some of the blame for the accident on you. Maximizing your compensation award takes a thorough understanding of Arizona’s negligence laws – and how to navigate them to your greatest advantage.
Establishing negligence is the plaintiff’s duty during a personal injury claim in Arizona. Establishing negligence during an injury claim in Arizona requires four main elements.
The plaintiff will bear a burden of proof to establish that the defendant was negligent and that this negligence caused or contributed to the injuries in question. A lawyer can help with this burden.
Arizona is a comparative negligence state. This means the courts may assign a percentage of fault to the plaintiff, but he or she may still qualify for compensation. Comparative negligence is the opposite of contributory negligence, which is an all-or-nothing law that will bar the claimant from recovery for any amount of contributory fault. Arizona is a pure comparative negligence state. Even if the plaintiff is 99% at fault for negligently causing his or her own injuries, the plaintiff could still recover 1% of a damage award.
Under comparative fault laws, the courts will reduce a claimant’s recovery award by his or her percentage of fault. For example, naming the plaintiff 25% at fault for an accident would lead to that plaintiff receiving 25% less of the original compensation amount, such as $75,000, if the original award was $100,000. The only time the courts in Arizona will bar a plaintiff from recovery is if it finds that the plaintiff was guilty of intentionally causing the injury or death. Navigating the state’s negligence laws take help from an attorney.
This page has been written, edited, and reviewed by a team of legal writers following our comprehensive editorial guidelines. This page was approved by Attorney John Phebus, who has more than 20 years of legal experience as a personal injury attorney.
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