New York Rear-End Collision Settles for $625,000
One driver was rear-ended by another driver, who claimed the first driver cut him off and stopped short. The injured driver had prior back injuries and surgeries, and argued the accident aggravated his condition, requiring further surgery. The defense argued the plaintiff's symptoms were from prior and subsequent incidents. No income was claimed.
Case Information Updated: October 2025
About Lumbar Disc Injury Injuries
Lumbar disc injuries affect the lower back (L1-L5 and S1), which bears significant body weight and is particularly vulnerable to trauma. These injuries can cause debilitating pain and functional limitations.
Case Outcome
- Outcome
- Settlement
- Amount
- $625,000
- County
- Nassau County, NY
- Resolved
- 2022
Injury & Accident Details
- Injury Type
- Lumbar Disc Injury
- Accident Type
- Rear-end
- Case Type
- Motor Vehicle Negligence, Rear End Collision
Settlement Context
This settlement of $625,000 is above the median of $93,000 for lumbar disc injury cases resolved by settlement. The typical range is $30,000 to $450,000, based on 103 cases in our database.
Case Overview
A 2018 motor vehicle accident led to a negligence claim by the plaintiff driver against the defendant driver. The plaintiff, 59, contended the defendant rear-ended his vehicle, causing an aggravation of prior injuries. The defendant countered that the plaintiff suddenly changed lanes and stopped short immediately before the impact. A non-party passenger in the defendant's vehicle supported this account, testifying that the plaintiff abruptly switched lanes. The plaintiff denied changing lanes and maintained the defendant caused the collision by following too closely.
The plaintiff had a history of lumbar and cervical herniations from a 2009 motor vehicle accident, which led to fusion surgeries in 2009 and 2010 at the same spinal levels later requiring intervention. He asserted that the 2018 accident severely aggravated these conditions, necessitating lumbar surgery after conservative treatment failed. The defendant attributed the plaintiff's symptoms primarily to the earlier accident and a subsequent work-related fall where the plaintiff sustained additional lower back injury. The plaintiff made no claims for lost income.
The case settled prior to trial for $625,000. The defendant carried $1,000,000 in insurance coverage.
Understanding This Case
- About 90% of lumbar disc herniations improve with conservative treatment. However, those requiring surgery may face permanent work restrictions and ongoing pain management needs.
- This case was resolved through a settlement, avoiding the uncertainty and expense of a trial. Settlements typically resolve faster and provide guaranteed compensation.
- This case was resolved in Nassau County, Texas. Local jury tendencies, judge assignments, and regional economic conditions all influence case outcomes in this jurisdiction.
- Resolved in 2022, this case reflects the legal and economic conditions of that period, including medical costs, insurance practices, and jury award trends at the time.
VerdictlyTM Score
This outcome significantly deviates from similar cases
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A rear-end collision occurred in Norwood, Ohio, on November 14, 2017, involving the plaintiff and an at-fault driver. The plaintiff sustained a C5-6 disc injury, requiring fusion surgery approximately ten months after the crash, and an L4-5 injury, which led to a microdiskectomy in December 2018. Medical bills for these treatments totaled $80,739. The at-fault driver's insurer settled for its $25,000 policy limits without a lawsuit. Following the initial settlement, the plaintiff filed an underinsured motorist (UIM) action against their own insurer, seeking compensation for medical expenses and pain and suffering. The plaintiff's insurer disputed the extent of damages, presenting testimony from a defense orthopedic expert who concluded the plaintiff's treatment course was unrelated to the crash, citing a thirteen-year history of similar symptoms. The defense also raised a $1,000 medical expense threshold defense. The case proceeded to a two-day jury trial in Florence, focusing on causation and damages. The jury first determined the plaintiff met the $1,000 medical threshold. They then awarded the plaintiff $80,939 for medical expenses and an additional $195,000 for pain and suffering, totaling $275,939. A judgment was entered for $240,739, accounting for the underlying policy limits and personal injury protection (PIP) coverage. The defense had made an $18,000 offer of judgment.
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