How Does a Personal Injury Case Work in Texas?
Most people have a general sense of what a personal injury lawsuit is, but far fewer understand how these cases actually work — the legal framework behind them, what needs to be proven, and what the process looks like from start to finish. There are a lot of misconceptions, and the gap between what people expect and how things actually unfold can cost injured Texans real money. This is a plain-language explanation of how personal injury cases work in Texas — without the legalese.
Where Personal Injury Law Comes From
Texas personal injury law draws from several different sources, which is part of what makes these cases more complex than they first appear. Some of the rules come from statutes — written laws passed by the Texas Legislature and codified in bodies like the Civil Practice and Remedies Code. Others come from what lawyers call common law, meaning legal principles established over time through court decisions rather than legislation. Judges interpreting cases over decades have developed standards for negligence, duty of care, and damages that shape how every new case is handled.
Beyond those general frameworks, specific case types draw from additional bodies of law. A claim against a bar or restaurant for serving an intoxicated driver who later caused a crash involves the Alcoholic Beverage Code. Workplace injury cases intersect with the Texas Labor Code. Truck accident cases may involve federal transportation regulations and the Texas Transportation Code. Knowing which laws apply to a particular claim — and how they interact — is one of the core reasons experienced legal representation makes such a meaningful difference in outcomes.
The Foundation: Negligence and the Right to Bring a Claim
The engine of nearly every personal injury case is negligence — the legal concept that someone failed to exercise the level of care a reasonable person would have exercised under the same circumstances, and that this failure caused harm. The principle underlying the whole system is called equity: when someone’s wrongful conduct causes you real losses, the law provides a mechanism to make you whole again.
Not every harmful act gives rise to a personal injury lawsuit. The conduct has to be legally actionable — meaning it falls within a recognized category of negligence or other wrongdoing that the law treats as grounds for a civil claim. When it does, the injured person has what’s called a cause of action: a set of facts and circumstances that entitle them to file a lawsuit and ask a court to grant relief. The cause of action is the legal theory your case is built on, and choosing the right one — or identifying all of them when multiple theories apply — is a critical early step that shapes everything that follows.
Plaintiffs, Defendants, and Who Bears What Burden
In a civil personal injury lawsuit, the person bringing the claim is called the plaintiff — that’s the injured party who initiates the case by filing a complaint with the court. The complaint lays out the factual allegations and the legal theories that support the claim. The party being sued is the defendant, who must respond to the complaint and, if the case proceeds, present their own version of events and defenses.
The plaintiff bears the burden of proof — meaning the responsibility to demonstrate to the court or jury that the defendant acted negligently and that this negligence was the proximate cause of the injuries claimed. In a personal injury case, the standard of proof is “preponderance of the evidence,” which essentially means more likely than not. That’s a lower bar than the “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard used in criminal cases, but it still requires building a coherent, evidence-supported case that persuades a fact-finder.
What that burden looks like in practice varies considerably depending on the type of case. A straightforward rear-end car accident case has a relatively clear liability structure. A product liability case involving a defectively designed vehicle component requires engineering expert testimony and a more complex causation analysis. A medical malpractice claim involves entirely different standards of care and expert requirements. The plaintiff’s burden shifts in important ways depending on the legal theory involved, which is why practicing personal injury law effectively requires familiarity across a wide range of case types.
Damages: What You’re Actually Recovering
The goal of a personal injury lawsuit is to recover damages — compensation for the losses the plaintiff has suffered as a result of the defendant’s negligence. Economic damages cover quantifiable losses: medical expenses already incurred, future medical costs, lost wages during recovery, and reduced earning capacity if the injury affects the plaintiff’s ability to work going forward. Non-economic damages compensate for things that don’t come with a price tag: pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and in some cases loss of companionship or household services when family members are affected by the injury.
In cases involving particularly egregious conduct — deliberate harm or gross negligence — exemplary damages may also be available. Texas law places caps on exemplary damages in most civil cases, which is one of the many reasons having an attorney who knows the specific limits and how to work within them matters.
From Filing to Resolution
Once a lawsuit is filed, the case enters a discovery phase where both sides exchange information — documents, records, written questions, and depositions of witnesses and parties. This is where the factual picture of the case gets fully developed, and it’s often where cases are won or lost before they ever reach a courtroom. The majority of personal injury cases resolve through settlement negotiations during or after discovery, once both sides have a clearer picture of the evidence and the risks of going to trial.
When a case does go to trial, a jury hears both sides and decides liability and damages. The verdict reflects what twelve ordinary Texans think the evidence proves and what they believe the injuries are worth — which is why understanding how to present a case to a jury is a skill that takes years to develop. Find more information here.
If you’ve been injured and want to understand whether you have a viable claim and what it might be worth, contact our law offices for a free consultation. Our attorneys have represented personal injury clients throughout San Antonio and Texas for many decades. We’re ready to help you understand your options and fight for the recovery you deserve.
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