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After a pedestrian accident, two questions matter most: who is legally responsible, and what compensation can the injured person recover? New York law provides a framework for answering both — but the outcome in any case depends on the evidence, the severity of the injuries, and how fault is allocated.
Brett J. Nomberg represents injured pedestrians throughout New York City and the surrounding area, evaluating liability and pursuing the full range of damages available under the law. This page explains both concepts in plain terms so that victims and their families can make informed decisions after a collision.
In a New York pedestrian accident case, liability is established by proving that another party’s negligence caused the collision and the resulting injuries. Drivers, vehicle owners, employers, municipalities, and property owners can all be held liable depending on the facts.
New York applies a pure comparative negligence standard, meaning a pedestrian’s compensation is reduced — but not eliminated — by their own share of fault. For a full explanation of how fault is determined and what evidence is used, see the Pedestrian Accident FAQ.
Damages in a New York pedestrian accident case fall into two categories: economic damages, which cover measurable financial losses such as medical bills and lost wages, and non-economic damages, which compensate for pain and suffering, emotional distress, and loss of enjoyment of life.
Recovering non-economic damages requires meeting the serious injury threshold under New York Insurance Law § 5102(d). The nature and severity of the injuries sustained directly shapes which damages are available. For a detailed breakdown of common injury types and how they affect the value of a claim, see Pedestrian Accident Injury Types.
Outcomes in individual cases depend on the evidence gathered, the insurance policies available, and the specific facts of the incident. Brett J. Nomberg evaluates each case in detail and works to identify every potential source of compensation before any settlement is discussed.
Brett Nomberg Law offers free consultations with no attorney fee unless you win. If you were injured due to someone else’s negligence, the Top New York Personal Injury Attorney is ready to hear your story. Call anytime — 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
To hold another party liable for a pedestrian accident in New York, the injured person must establish four elements of negligence:
All four elements must be supported by evidence. The strength of a liability case depends on what documentation is available — police reports, witness statements, surveillance footage, and physical evidence from the scene. For guidance on preserving that evidence from the start, see What to Do After a Pedestrian Accident in New York.
Liability is not always limited to the driver who struck the pedestrian. New York law allows claims against multiple defendants when more than one party contributed to the accident. Understanding what caused the accident is the first step in identifying who may be responsible.
Driver negligence is the most common basis for liability in a pedestrian accident. Actionable conduct includes speeding, running red lights or stop signs, failure to yield to pedestrians in a crosswalk, distracted driving, and operating a vehicle while impaired. New York Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1151 requires drivers to yield the right of way to pedestrians in marked and unmarked crosswalks. Violations of traffic law are evidence of negligence and can be used to establish liability.
Under New York Vehicle and Traffic Law § 388, the owner of a vehicle is vicariously liable for the negligence of any person operating that vehicle with the owner’s express or implied permission. This applies whether the vehicle is privately owned or belongs to a business. It means a victim can pursue the owner’s insurance even when the driver has limited or no coverage of their own.
When a driver was operating a company vehicle or performing job duties at the time of the accident, the employer can be held liable under the doctrine of respondeat superior. Employers of commercial drivers — delivery companies, taxi operators, rideshare fleets — may also face direct liability for negligent hiring, supervision, or vehicle maintenance. If a rideshare vehicle or city bus was involved, additional coverage layers and procedural rules apply.
A municipality or public agency can be liable when a defective road condition, absent crosswalk markings, malfunctioning traffic signal, or inadequate pedestrian infrastructure contributed to the accident. Claims against New York City, the MTA, the New York State Department of Transportation, or other government entities require filing a Notice of Claim within 90 days of the accident under General Municipal Law § 50-e. Missing this deadline generally bars the claim entirely. Brett J. Nomberg identifies government defendants early in each case to ensure these procedural deadlines are met.
Property owners in New York have a duty to maintain sidewalks and adjacent areas in a reasonably safe condition. A negligently maintained sidewalk, broken curb cut, inadequate lighting, or unmarked hazard that causes a pedestrian to fall into traffic can support a premises liability claim alongside or instead of a vehicle negligence claim. These cases often require a separate investigation of the property’s maintenance history and prior complaints.
New York follows a pure comparative negligence rule under CPLR § 1411. Under this standard, a pedestrian’s compensation is reduced by their percentage of fault — but recovery is not eliminated, regardless of how high that percentage is.
Common arguments used to assign fault to pedestrians include:
These arguments reduce the damages available, but do not end the case. A pedestrian found 35% at fault for crossing against the light who proves $300,000 in total damages would recover $195,000. Insurance companies routinely overstate a pedestrian’s share of fault during settlement negotiations.
Having documented evidence — and an attorney who understands how fault is argued and allocated — is important to getting a fair result. For a detailed discussion of how fault disputes play out, see the Pedestrian Accident FAQ.
New York is a No-Fault state. Under New York Insurance Law § 5102, injured pedestrians are entitled to Personal Injury Protection (PIP) benefits from the at-fault driver’s auto insurance policy regardless of who caused the accident. These benefits cover:
No-Fault benefits are the first layer of compensation and are available regardless of fault. However, they do not cover pain and suffering. To recover non-economic damages, the injured pedestrian must establish a serious injury as defined by § 5102(d). The New York Department of Financial Services provides additional information on how No-Fault coverage works and how to file a claim.
To bring a personal injury lawsuit for pain and suffering in New York, a pedestrian accident victim must prove that their injuries meet the serious injury threshold under New York Insurance Law § 5102(d). The statute defines serious injury as any of the following:
Many common pedestrian accident injuries — including fractures, traumatic brain injuries, and spinal cord damage — satisfy this threshold. Soft tissue injuries can also qualify, but typically require more thorough medical documentation to withstand challenge. For a detailed breakdown of which injuries qualify and why, see Pedestrian Accident Injury Types.
Economic damages compensate for the measurable financial losses caused by a pedestrian accident. They include both past losses already incurred and future losses that are reasonably certain to occur.
All reasonable and necessary medical costs attributable to the accident are recoverable, including emergency care, hospitalization, surgery, diagnostic imaging, physical therapy, occupational therapy, prescription medication, and future treatment.
For injuries requiring long-term care — such as spinal cord injuries or traumatic brain injuries — future medical costs can represent the largest single component of a damages claim. Brett J. Nomberg works with life care planners and medical experts to project those costs accurately.
A pedestrian who misses work due to their injuries can recover lost wages for that time. When injuries cause permanent or long-term impairment that limits the victim’s ability to work in their prior capacity, the claim can also include compensation for reduced future earning capacity. This requires expert economic testimony in most cases and is an area where the difference between an adequate settlement and a full recovery is often significant.
Reasonable costs directly caused by the accident and injury — such as transportation to medical appointments, home modifications required by a disability, and hired assistance for tasks the victim can no longer perform — are recoverable as economic damages.
Non-economic damages compensate for harms that are real but not measured in invoices or pay stubs. In serious pedestrian accident cases, these damages often represent the largest portion of total compensation.
New York allows recovery for both past and future pain and suffering. Past pain and suffering covers the physical and emotional distress experienced from the date of the accident through the date of trial or settlement. Future pain and suffering accounts for ongoing or permanent conditions that will continue to affect the victim’s life. There is no statutory cap on pain and suffering damages in New York personal injury cases.
Anxiety, depression, PTSD, and other psychological conditions caused by the accident are compensable when diagnosed and documented by a qualified mental health professional. As discussed in the Pedestrian Accident Injury Types page, psychological injuries following a serious collision are recognized medical conditions, not subjective complaints, and they carry real value in a damages claim.
When injuries prevent a victim from participating in hobbies, physical activities, family life, or other aspects of daily living they valued before the accident, compensation for that loss is available. The more specific and documented the impact on the victim’s life, the stronger the basis for this component of damages.
When a serious injury affects the relationship between the injured pedestrian and their spouse, the spouse may bring a separate claim for loss of companionship, affection, and support. Loss of consortium claims are derivative — they depend on the success of the primary injury claim — but they can add meaningful value to a case involving severe or permanent injuries.
When a pedestrian dies as a result of accident injuries, surviving family members may bring a wrongful death action under New York Estates, Powers and Trusts Law § 5-4.1. Recoverable damages include the decedent’s lost future earnings, medical expenses incurred before death, funeral and burial costs, and the value of services the deceased would have provided to the family. Wrongful death claims must be filed within two years of the date of death. For more information, see Wrongful Death Claims in New York.
Punitive damages are available in New York personal injury cases only in rare circumstances — when the defendant’s conduct was intentional, reckless, or so grossly negligent as to constitute willful disregard for the safety of others.
A driver who struck a pedestrian while driving at extreme speed, street racing, or knowingly operating a vehicle with failed brakes may face a punitive damages claim. These awards are uncommon and are decided entirely by a jury. Brett J. Nomberg assesses whether the facts of a case support a punitive claim during the initial case evaluation.
The practical limit on recovery in most pedestrian accident cases is the available insurance coverage. New York law requires drivers to carry minimum liability coverage of $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident, but serious pedestrian injuries routinely produce damages that far exceed those limits.
Additional sources of coverage include:
Identifying every available policy is one of the first steps Brett J. Nomberg takes when a new case is opened. Leaving an available policy unexamined can mean leaving significant compensation on the table.
Brett Nomberg personally handles every single case from trial through appeals. Speak directly to your lawyer—even on weekends. No attorney fee unless we win.
Liability depends on who acted negligently. The driver is most commonly at fault, but vehicle owners, employers, municipalities, and property owners can also be liable depending on the circumstances. More than one party can share responsibility for the same accident. For more on how fault is determined, see the Pedestrian Accident FAQ.
Injured pedestrians in New York may recover economic damages — medical bills, lost wages, and reduced earning capacity — and non-economic damages such as pain and suffering, emotional distress, and loss of enjoyment of life. Recovering non-economic damages requires meeting the serious injury threshold under New York Insurance Law § 5102(d).
New York’s pure comparative negligence rule under CPLR § 1411 reduces a pedestrian’s compensation by their percentage of fault but does not bar recovery entirely. A pedestrian found 40% at fault for crossing against a traffic signal would recover 60% of their total proven damages. Insurance companies routinely overstate a pedestrian’s share of fault — having an attorney evaluate the evidence early is important.
New York’s No-Fault law requires the at-fault driver’s insurer to pay for a pedestrian’s medical expenses and up to 80% of lost wages — capped at $2,000 per month — regardless of fault. To recover compensation for pain and suffering beyond No-Fault limits, the pedestrian must meet the serious injury threshold. The New York Department of Financial Services explains how to file a No-Fault claim.
New York Insurance Law § 5102(d) defines serious injury to include any fracture, significant disfigurement, permanent loss or limitation of a body organ or member, and medically documented conditions preventing substantially all normal daily activities for 90 of the 180 days following the accident. This threshold must be met to pursue a personal injury lawsuit for pain and suffering in New York.
Yes, but a Notice of Claim must be filed within 90 days of the accident under General Municipal Law § 50-e. Missing this deadline typically bars the claim. If a city vehicle, MTA bus, or defective road condition was involved in the accident, contact Brett J. Nomberg immediately to protect your right to file.
Cases with clear liability and documented injuries may settle within several months. Cases involving disputed fault, catastrophic injuries, multiple defendants, or government entities can take two to four years or longer. There is no standard timeline. For more on the claims process, see the Pedestrian Accident FAQ.
Liability and damages in a pedestrian accident case are rarely straightforward. Insurance companies act quickly to limit their exposure, and the evidence that supports a full recovery can disappear fast. Brett J. Nomberg represents injured pedestrians throughout New York on a contingency fee basis — no fee unless you recover. Call 212-808-8092 or use the contact page to schedule a free consultation.
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