Motorcycle accidents, unfortunately, often result in serious and catastrophic injuries. Some of the reasons are obvious, such as that motorcycles don't have the surrounding metal cage, the safety designed interior padding, seat belts and air bags that protect auto drivers. Some of the reasons are less obvious, such as the "inattentional blindness" that impairs many auto drivers' ability to "see" the oncoming motorcycle often leading auto drivers either to pull out into intersections from side streets or turn left directly into the motorcyclists' path.
Motorcyclists may suffer quadriplegia, paraplegia, other spinal cord injuries, traumatic brain injury, TBI, debilitating internal injuries, catastrophic orthopedic injuries and limb amputations. Our serious injury motorcycle accident lawyers will discuss two of those categories of cases, involving TBI and spinal cord injuries. However, every serious injury motorcycle accident case is "complex litigation," much more complicated than "who ran the red light," and so it is very important that the seriously injured client obtain the representation of qualified lawyers, highly experienced in the preparation and presentation of complex litigation, motorcycle accident attorneys capable of competently presenting to the settlement judge and jury the full measure of the motorcyclist's general and special damages.
We'll contrast the ordinary and serious injury motorcycle accident case without in any way discounting the importance of the ordinary case, because every motorcycle accident case is important for the client and should likewise be important for the attorney. However, it would be inaccurate to say that the preparation or presentation of "general damages," "past and future medical expense" or "past and future loss of earnings" is similar.
For many motorcycle accident lawyers the term "general damages" means "pain a suffering"; but for the true serious injury motorcycle accident attorney, the most persuasive general damage evidence is what we call "loss of enjoyment of life damages." This is commonly the way our seriously injured clients see it. And it can be presented poignantly by juxtaposing the evidence of what the client enjoyed most in his life before the accident, through the testimony of friends, family, home videos and photographs, against a professionally produced "Day in the Life" film, demonstrating the courage of the serious or catastrophically injured client as he confronts and overcomes the challenges of his post accident daily life.
In the ordinary motorcycle accident case the Motorcycle Accident Attorneys might have to present some evidence of past medical expense, but presenting future medical expenses for the seriously injured motorcyclist is hugely more complex. For a more general discussion of motorcycle accident litigation you may consider >"How Motorcycle Accident Lawyers Present Liability Evidence". The presentation of the motorcyclist's future medical expenses commonly requires a number of treating doctors as well as medical experts engaged by the serious injury motorcycle attorneys, and then perhaps most importantly, a life care planner and forensic economist.
In the briefest summary, the life care planner, under the direction of the lawyer will consult with the treating doctors and other medical experts first to derive the client's post accident "life expectancy," and then identify all of the medical expenses, such as additional surgeries, rehabilitation expenses, anticipated convalescent home costs, replacement prostheses, wheel chairs, all the way down to the cost of the medical supplies and sundries that the injured motorcyclist will likely require over the remainder of his anticipated life expectancy.
The serious injury motorcycle accident lawyers will then present the life care planner's report to the forensic economist who will increase the individual medical costs over by the anticipated date they will be required by use of medical cost inflation government statistics, and then with use general inflation statistics to reduce that number to "present value." There is no other proper way to present future medical expense, and if not properly prepared, the Court will likely not permit the evidence to be presented.
Author Biobr> Raymond L. Henke, Principle trial Motorcycle Accident Lawyer with the California Motorcycle Accident Attorneys & Medical Malpractice Lawyers Group.