Personal Injury Law in the U.S.: Legal Framework and Foundations
Personal injury law governs the legal rights of individuals who suffer physical, psychological, or financial harm due to the conduct of another party. Rooted in the broader U.S. tort law and personal injury system, this body of law establishes who bears legal responsibility for harm, what compensation is available, and through what procedural mechanisms claims are resolved. Understanding its framework is essential for anyone navigating civil litigation, insurance disputes, or regulatory compliance in the United States.
Definition and scope
Personal injury law is a subset of civil tort law, distinct from criminal law in that its primary purpose is compensating injured parties rather than punishing wrongdoers. The Restatement (Third) of Torts, published by the American Law Institute, provides the most widely cited scholarly framework defining tortious conduct, harm, and causation standards applied across U.S. jurisdictions.
The scope of personal injury law encompasses claims arising from negligence, intentional misconduct, and strict liability in personal injury — three legally distinct theories of recovery. Negligence-based claims require proof of four elements: duty, breach, causation, and damages. Intentional tort claims, such as assault or battery, require proof of deliberate harmful conduct. Strict liability claims, most common in product liability personal injury contexts, impose liability regardless of fault or intent.
Personal injury law operates almost entirely at the state level. Each of the 50 states maintains its own statutory and common-law framework governing elements such as statutes of limitations, damage caps, and fault-allocation rules. Federal jurisdiction applies in limited circumstances, including claims under the Federal Tort Claims Act (28 U.S.C. §§ 1346, 2671–2680), which waives sovereign immunity for certain claims against the U.S. government.
How it works
A personal injury claim moves through a structured sequence of legally defined phases, each with distinct procedural requirements.
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Injury and documentation — The injured party documents the harm, including medical records, photographs, witness statements, and any relevant physical evidence. This phase establishes the factual foundation for all subsequent steps. Detailed guidance on evidentiary requirements appears at personal injury documentation and evidence.
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Duty and breach analysis — Liability hinges on whether the defendant owed a duty of care to the plaintiff and whether that duty was breached. The reasonable-person standard, derived from common law and elaborated in the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 283, governs most negligence assessments.
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Causation — Plaintiffs must establish both actual cause (but-for causation) and proximate cause (foreseeability). The causation in personal injury claims framework requires that the defendant's conduct be a legally cognizable cause of the harm, not merely a background condition.
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Damages calculation — Recoverable damages fall into two primary categories: compensatory damages, which include economic losses (medical bills, lost wages) and non-economic losses (pain and suffering); and punitive damages, which courts award in cases of egregious or malicious conduct. The U.S. Supreme Court in BMW of North America, Inc. v. Gore, 517 U.S. 559 (1996), established constitutional guideposts limiting the ratio of punitive to compensatory damages.
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Pre-litigation resolution — The majority of personal injury claims resolve through negotiation and settlement before trial. This phase typically involves a personal injury demand letter, insurer response, and structured negotiation.
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Litigation — If settlement fails, the claimant files a formal complaint initiating civil litigation. Phases include pleadings, discovery, motions practice, and — in a minority of cases — trial before a judge or jury.
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Resolution and collection — Resolution occurs through settlement, trial verdict, or alternative dispute resolution such as mediation. Post-resolution matters include liens on settlements and subrogation claims by insurers or government payors such as Medicare.
Common scenarios
Personal injury law applies across a broad taxonomy of harm-causing events. The most frequently litigated categories include:
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Motor vehicle accidents — Governed by state traffic codes and insurance regulations, these claims represent the largest single category of personal injury filings in the U.S. civil court system. See motor vehicle accident personal injury claims.
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Premises liability — Property owners owe varying duties of care to entrants depending on the entrant's legal status (invitee, licensee, or trespasser). Slip and fall premises liability law constitutes the most common premises liability subcategory.
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Medical malpractice — Claims arise when licensed healthcare providers deviate from the applicable standard of care. State legislatures in 30 states have enacted damage caps specifically targeting medical malpractice non-economic awards, according to structural survey data compiled by the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL). See medical malpractice personal injury.
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Product liability — Manufacturers, distributors, and retailers face liability under negligence, strict liability, or breach of warranty theories. The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) tracks injury data through the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS).
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Workplace injuries — While workers' compensation systems provide the primary remedy for on-the-job injuries in all 50 states, third-party tort claims remain available in defined circumstances. The workplace injury and personal injury intersection governs these dual-track scenarios.
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Intentional torts — Assault, battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and false imprisonment fall within intentional torts personal injury and are analytically distinct from negligence claims.
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Wrongful death — When tortious conduct causes death, designated statutory beneficiaries may pursue wrongful death claims under state-specific survival and wrongful death statutes.
Decision boundaries
Not every harmful event gives rise to a cognizable personal injury claim. Several threshold determinations govern whether a claim can proceed.
Fault allocation models create the most significant variation across jurisdictions. The contrast between contributory negligence and comparative fault rules illustrates the stakes:
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Pure contributory negligence — Applied in Alabama, Maryland, North Carolina, Virginia, and Washington D.C. (as of doctrine established through common law), this rule bars recovery entirely if the plaintiff bears any degree of fault. See contributory negligence states.
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Pure comparative fault — Adopted in 13 states including California and New York, this model permits recovery proportional to the defendant's share of fault regardless of the plaintiff's fault percentage.
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Modified comparative fault — The majority rule, applied in approximately 33 states, bars recovery when the plaintiff's fault reaches a defined threshold — either 50% (the "50% bar") or 51% (the "51% bar"), depending on state statute. See comparative fault rules by state.
Statutes of limitations define the window within which claims must be filed. Personal injury statutes of limitations range from 1 year (Kentucky, Tennessee) to 6 years (Maine, North Dakota) depending on the state and claim type, per NCSL tracking data. Missing the filing deadline operates as an absolute bar to recovery in the absence of a recognized tolling doctrine.
Government entity claims require compliance with additional procedural prerequisites. Tort Claims Acts at both the federal level (28 U.S.C. § 2675) and state level impose notice-of-claim requirements and reduced limitations periods. Failure to file a timely administrative claim under the Federal Tort Claims Act extinguishes the right to sue, as established in McNeil v. United States, 508 U.S. 106 (1993).
Damage caps — Statutory ceilings on non-economic or total damages apply in a majority of states for at least one category of personal injury claim. These caps range from $250,000 for non-economic damages in medical malpractice claims under California's Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act (MICRA, Cal. Civ. Code § 3333.2, as amended by A.B. 35 effective 2023) to uncapped regimes in states such as Texas for general personal injury (outside medical malpractice).
Special plaintiffs — Claims involving minors are governed by tolling rules that typically suspend the limitations period until the minor reaches the age of majority, creating distinct procedural timelines.
References
- American Law Institute — Restatement (Third) of Torts
- Federal Tort Claims Act — 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346, 2671–2680 (via Cornell LII)
- National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) — Tort Reform
- [Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) — NEISS Data](https://www.cpsc.gov/Research--Statistics/NEISS