By Zane T. Cagle | November 27, 2018 | Car Accidents, Featured, Inattentiveness, Personal Injury
After a warm and rather short autumn, we were launched into winter over the weekend. If you are north of Interstate 70 this weekend, then you got a healthy dose of winter weather. Sunday, as many northern Missourians woke up to blizzard-like conditions, those in St. Louis experienced some relative balmy conditions and a tornado warning around 5 p.m. What gives? So I’m not a scientist and we won’t argue climate change here, but we must prepare for winter weather driving.
Weather Missouri can fluctuate, quickly– one day it may be 60 degrees and then the next day, it’s zero degrees and snowing. We are always guaranteed to have snow and ice in December, January and February. Seemingly, the first snow or ice of the season causes a flurry of motor vehicle crashes. Whether it is because we haven’t adapted our driving or due to inattentiveness, there are just more crashes. In all of the below tips, it should be understood that if you do not absolutely have to drive in inclement weather, then do not!
Over 1,000 flights were cancelled out of the Midwest yesterday (Sunday), typically the busiest travel day in the U.S. and the Missouri Highway Patrol listed 587 crashes with 108 injuries and nine fatalities. There were 86 DWI arrests and 67 drug arrests.. These serious injury and fatal crashes were just the crashes listed on the MSHP records and do not include many county and city policing agencies. Like many Thanksgiving holiday traffic weekends, there were many crashes and the weather on Sunday contributed to many crashes.
No. Many people assume that drivers are not liable on snow-covered or ice-covered roadways, but this would be an incorrect assumption. They question remains after a crash, “Was the driver operating the vehicle with a “reasonable degree of care”?’. Actually the standard is whether or not a driver exercised the same care as that of a “reasonable person”. Thus, if someone was traveling too fast for weather conditions which then contributed to a head-on collision that injured or killed people, then the condition of the roadway would be analyzed in regard to the driver’s use of “reasonable care”. Crashes can sometimes have several contributing factors. When one of the causes of a collisions is a driver not using the appropriate standard of care, then they may be held liable. If no one is hurt, then the only damage is the property damage. However, if someone is injured or worse, then the at-fault driver may be held liable for damages.
No matter the weather, if you have been injured in a motor vehicle crash, you absolutely should contact an expert car crash attorney first. As much as I wish you could rely on an insurance adjuster to look out for your best interest, my experience is that You are Not their Number One Priority. Even if it is your insurance company………you should seek expert legal advice before even speaking with any adjusters.
The Cagle Law Firm serves accident and injury clients throughout St. Louis and the greater St. Louis metropolitan area, including the eastern Missouri and southern Illinois communities. If you or a loved one needs legal assistance with your personal injury case, call The Cagle Law Firm at (314) 276-1681 or use our online contact form to schedule a free consultation.
Schedule your FREE CONSULTATION today by contacting us at (314) 276-1681 or by sending us an email through the online contact form.
Fields marked with an * are required
Copyright © 2024 The Cagle Law Firm. All rights reserved.