Every year, nearly five thousand
pedestrians die in traffic accidents, and another 78,000 are injured, according
to the National Highway Traffic Safety Association (NHTSA). Thousands of
pedestrian accidents that do not involve a motorized vehicle also occur
annually--often as a result of substandard property maintenance, construction,
defects in sidewalks and parking lots, and debris on walkways.
A pedestrian may be entitled to
compensation for damages if a moving vehicle or property defect causes his
accident or injury if he can prove that someone was negligent. Under the law,
someone can be considered negligent if he fails to take reasonable action to
protect others from foreseeable harm. A pedestrian injured in an accident can
often prove the negligence of the defendant if the latter owed a legal duty to
the victim, failed to fulfill that duty, caused an injury, and harmed the
victim in the process.
Courts deciding such cases look
carefully at the facts of the accident. More than one party may be liable for
the accident. Those who are potentially liable include:
Drivers who hit pedestrians with
their cars
The agency or individual responsible
for sidewalk, road, or lot maintenance where the accident took place
The pedestrian himself
Pedestrian/Car Accidents
Drivers and pedestrian must obey the
rules of the road and exercise reasonable care for the safety of others. It may
seem intuitively obvious that one or another party was negligent, but courts
examine negligence as it is defined by the law. Someone who is negligent in the
way he drives his car or other vehicle may end up having to pay damages for
injuries and property damage resulting from that negligence.
Driver’s Duty of Care
Drivers of motorized vehicles must
exercise what the law deems “reasonable care under the circumstances.” Failure
to do so may result in a verdict of negligence. The following factors
contribute to negligence in a driver:
Driving while intoxicated or
influenced by drugs or alcohol
Ignoring adverse traffic or weather
conditions
Failing to signal a turn
Failing to obey traffic signs or
lights
Failure to yield to pedestrians who
are crossing at designated crosswalks
Exceeding the speed limit
Being pre-occupied or inattentive
Driver’s Special Duty to Children
Children age’s five to nine are at
the highest risk of being hit by a car or other motor vehicle. This is partly
because they are smaller, less visible, and their behavior can be
unpredictable. United States law says that drivers must exercise extra caution
when driving in the vicinity of children. If you see one or more children, you
should immediately exercise even more care and attention to prevent accidents.
This principle particularly applies when one is driving past a school, playground,
or residential neighborhood where children are likely to be present.
Pedestrian’s Duty of Care
United States law says that
pedestrians, too, must take reasonable steps to ensure their own safety. A
pedestrian can be found guilty of contributing to an accident if he did not
take those reasonable steps.
Here are some of the reasons a
pedestrian can be found to have contributed to the accident:
Crossing against the “don’t walk”
sign
Entering a stream of vehicular
traffic and disrupting the flow
Failing to use designated crosswalks
when crossing streets
Darting in front of a vehicle
Other Pedestrian Accidents
In most states, property owners have
some degree of responsibility to maintain their premises in good working order
so that they do not pose a danger to pedestrians and to warn people of dangers
that cannot be remedied.
When someone is injured while
walking across another’s property, the injured person must prove that the
property was dangerous in some way and that the property owner knew of the
hazard in order to win damages. A dangerous condition is defined under the law
as something that represents an unreasonable risk, but not an obvious one. The
property owner can be deemed knowledgeable of the danger if he created it, knew
about it but failed to correct it, or the condition persisted for so long that
it should have been discovered and fixed before an accident occurred.
Private property owners are usually
not responsible if a pedestrian falls and injures himself on a public sidewalk
located outside his property. Some business owners, however, have been found
liable when their customers exclusively use that sidewalk.
What To Do If You Are In a Pedestrian Accident
If you have been hurt in a
pedestrian accident, you should know that other parties may try to blame you
and claim that you caused the accident through your own negligence. If you are
involved in a pedestrian accident, you should:
● Call
the police right away
● Stay
on the scene of the accident until help arrives
● Ask
witnesses for names and telephone numbers
● Make
no statements to anyone, including drivers or insurers
● Call a qualified
accident or personal
injury lawyer in Toronto