English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

9 answers

depends on what was wrong, and how pathetic the laywer can make it sound. Your lawyer will take 30% of whatever they get for you, but if most of the $$ is testing and chiropracters, you're not likely to get much.

2007-02-07 07:48:30 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous 7 · 0 0

There is no way to answer that question with the information provided. Your medical is irrelevant...let me explain why

$2956 could be 1 ER visit with a catscan. You could have been diagnosed with a headache (I have seen it happen)

$2956 could be the treatment for minor break in your arm that required splinting.

$2956 could be for a couple of months physical therapy for whiplash to your neck.

The above are all very different injuries and are worth very different amounts.

I will say this with the lawyer you are not likely to get much. He will take 35% of your settlement and that includes 35% of the medical. So if you have to pay back the medical you will have to take 35% of your pain and suffering settlement and apply it to the bills. I just hope you come ahead with a couple hundred dollars when all is said and done. Good luck!

2007-02-07 13:34:40 · answer #2 · answered by mamatohaley+1 4 · 1 0

Depends.

When you settle, the insurance company makes a determination of what THEY want to pay you. You can either accept it or not.

Usually, they'll pay your medical expenses and maybe a tad more. Pain and suffering is kept to a minimum, unless there it's clear that you really suffered.

Your lawyer should be able to help you determine if the offer if fair or not.

2007-02-07 07:46:42 · answer #3 · answered by Jay 7 · 0 0

Police do not ensure fault, and neither does she. keep in ideas, what you're entitled to, is going to be determined by which state the twist of destiny surpassed off in, and how a lot coverage she has. Many states, smooth tissue (ie, bumps & bruises that self heal on their very own) injures are not to any extent further compensable. this is remarkable that you wracked up $6,000 in clinical charges, for NO important injuries. You demanded all this unnecessary attempting out - you okay might want to correctly be on the hook for it. you'll likely ought to get an lawyer, in case you pick more effective than $1K in P&S. keep in ideas, the lawyer receives 40% of the entire bill, so if he receives you $5K in P&S, he will be earning himself, 40% of $11,000 - and also you may finally end up with $500 - after your clinical charges are paid. Your call. The more effective he receives, the bigger his decrease, and it contains the clinical charges paid. Hiring an lawyer is going to do no longer something yet eat away on the clinical charges they're paying.

2016-10-17 05:53:42 · answer #4 · answered by latassa 4 · 0 0

So you have a soft tissue injury that would heal on its own w/in 6-8 weeks with you just taking ibuprofen? And then you let some lawyer & doctor suck you in, promise you all kinds of money and THEY, both of them together, charge way more than reasonable "office visit" visit charges for what? Hot packs & cold packs you could have done at home with a heating pad & ice cubes???? Gimme a break. We (bodily injury adjusters) base your settlement on the value of the claim....not what your medical bills say. Hate to break the news to you but your claim has little value...you'd be lucky to get $1000 in your pocket.

2007-02-07 14:10:27 · answer #5 · answered by bundysmom 6 · 0 0

There is really no 'compensation for pain and suffering'.
You should add up all the expenses that arose to you because of the incident:
1. Lost work
2. Additional transportation expenses
3. Trips to doctors and physical therapy
4. Any related, provable expense you have had.
Typically, your expenses are the basis of your settlement, and they account for about a third of the total.
Your lawyer gets a third, and you get the last third.
This is a ballpark figure.

2007-02-07 07:51:20 · answer #6 · answered by flywho 5 · 0 0

Since this is a negotiated settlement, as opposed to being argued in court, the amount you get is the amount you and the insurer agree to. There is no table for this kind of loss. However the amount of your medical bills seem relatively small (unless you have fantastic insurance), so I wouldn't be overly optimistic about the amount.

2007-02-07 11:31:36 · answer #7 · answered by Gambit 7 · 0 0

that really depends on what happened to you. i was in an accident 2 weeks ago where someone rearended me and did over $4000 in damage to my car but i wasn't hurt. i had a sore back for a few days and it went away. they paid me $500 pain and suffering, plus lost wages for the time of accident and time away from work to repair car, etc... pain and suffering is not usually going to get you much. if this was an auto accident i would be more worried about collecting time away from work and diminished value of my auto.

2007-02-08 04:02:09 · answer #8 · answered by Queen B 6 · 0 0

I think most attorneys figure it to be about 1.5 times the medical, but it can go higher or lower, or none at all.

2007-02-07 07:56:36 · answer #9 · answered by BMW BFD 5 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers