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Weymouth Β· Norfolk County

Weymouth, MA Personal Injury

Personal Injury legal information for Weymouth, Norfolk County readers. Free first telephone consultation; the intake line is answered 24 hours a day.

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The Weymouth answer in plain language

Weymouth, Massachusetts personal injury claims must generally be filed within three years of the injury under M.G.L. c. 260, sec. 2A. Recoverable damages include medical expenses, lost income, and pain and suffering. Comparative negligence applies, meaning your recovery is reduced by your share of fault and barred entirely if you are more than 50 percent at fault. Jim Glaser Law evaluates your case at no cost. Personal-injury matters are accepted on contingency.

Injuries sustained in Weymouth are evaluated under the same statewide framework: duty, breach, causation, damages, and the M.G.L. c. 260 Β§ 2A clock. Weymouth personal injury matters proceed under the same three-year limitations period, the same comparative-negligence framework, and the same damages categories as injury cases anywhere in Massachusetts. The practical differences lie in venue and in the local adjusters who routinely process claims for Norfolk County.

Forum and venue for Weymouth matters

For readers in Weymouth, the following Norfolk County courts hear this category of matter:

  • Norfolk Superior Court 650 High Street, Dedham, MA 02026 civil suits over $50,000 in controversy
  • Quincy District Court 1 Dennis F. Ryan Parkway, Quincy, MA 02169 civil suits under $50,000

Filing in the wrong forum is a procedural setback rather than a permanent bar, but it costs time. Counsel routes the matter to the correct court at intake.

Weymouth hospitals where treatment records often originate

If you were seen at one of these facilities, the firm requests your treatment records as part of building the documentary record. You do not need to retrieve them yourself; a signed medical authorization at intake gives the firm the access it needs.

  • South Shore Hospital 55 Fogg Rd, Weymouth, MA 02190

Hospital list is illustrative; the firm requests records from any Massachusetts provider on the medical chain regardless of whether listed here.

Engaging the firm from Weymouth

The shortest path between a Weymouth reader and a Jim Glaser Law attorney is the telephone number printed on this page. The intake desk routes the call, the substantive attorney call follows at no charge, and the written fee agreement (if the matter is accepted) governs everything that follows. Nothing in the agreement obligates the client to advance attorney fees on a contingency case before there is a recovery; the agreement also spells out which case-related costs the firm fronts and which it bills back at conclusion.

Weymouth sits in Norfolk County, Massachusetts, with a population of approximately 57,437 per the most recent Census estimate. Norfolk County matters of this category are heard and administered through the appropriate Norfolk County forums and are evaluated under the same Massachusetts framework that applies to every personal injury matter in the Commonwealth.

Weymouth's case mix follows the town's profile as a South Shore commuter community anchored by South Shore Hospital: workers compensation matters from the South Shore Hospital workforce, which is the largest employer on the South Shore; auto-accident matters at the Route 3 / Route 53 / Route 18 interchange that funnels commuter traffic toward Boston; premises-liability matters from the multi-family housing stock concentrated in East Weymouth and South Weymouth; and a steady real-estate docket reflecting the town's role in the Boston-bound housing market. Weymouth was incorporated as a town in 1635 and remains governed as a town despite its city-scale population. The town covers roughly 21 square miles on Boston's South Shore. Weymouth ZIP codes span 02188 through 02191, with East Weymouth at 02189 and South Weymouth at 02190.

Weymouth injury claims are valued against the standard Massachusetts damages categories: medical expenses, lost earnings, pain and suffering, and loss of consortium where applicable. Weymouth's East Weymouth, North Weymouth, South Weymouth, and Weymouth Landing neighborhoods are commonly named in residential premises matters.

Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital - Needham and South Shore Hospital are among the Norfolk County hospitals that serve Weymouth residents. Weymouth personal injury matters of this category proceed in the Norfolk Superior Court at 650 High Street, Dedham, MA 02026. Settlement leverage builds with the strength of the demand package: medical narrative, expert opinion where needed, and demonstrative evidence.

Weymouth's smaller-community size shapes its case landscape: a defined courthouse, primary hospital network, and concentrated insurance-carrier presence. Intake for Weymouth injury matters runs through a structured set of fact questions designed to get to a fit determination during the first telephone call without unnecessary follow-up.

Questions Weymouth readers ask most

  • Where are Weymouth personal injury cases heard?

    Norfolk Superior Court (650 High Street, Dedham, MA 02026) for civil suits over $50,000 in controversy. Quincy District Court (1 Dennis F. Ryan Parkway, Quincy, MA 02169) for civil suits under $50,000.

  • What is the filing deadline for personal injury matters originating in Weymouth?

    The deadline is set by Massachusetts law (not by city), generally three years from the date of the incident under M.G.L. c. 260, sec. 2A for civil tort claims. Some matters carry shorter deadlines (workers comp notice, claims against a public entity). Telephone (617) JIM-WINS for the deadline that applies to your facts.

  • Do I need to come to a Boston office to be represented by Jim Glaser Law?

    No. Jim Glaser Law represents clients across Massachusetts, including Weymouth, by telephone, video, and in-person where helpful. The first conversation is by telephone.

  • Is the call to (617) JIM-WINS confidential?

    Yes. Communications with the firm to seek legal services are protected by Massachusetts attorney-client privilege from the start of the call, regardless of whether the firm ultimately accepts the matter.

  • Will my Weymouth matter go to court?

    Most matters do not. The majority resolve through pre-suit negotiation with the carrier or counterparty. Litigation is reserved for cases where a fair pre-suit resolution is not available. The decision to file suit is made jointly by the firm and the client.

How personal injury cases proceed under Massachusetts law

Massachusetts personal injury law is built on the negligence framework: duty, breach, causation, damages. A Weymouth resident injured by another's careless conduct typically proceeds under common-law negligence, often supplemented by specific statutes for specific contexts (auto, premises, medical, products). The same three-year clock under M.G.L. c. 260 sec. 2A applies to most claims, with certain narrow exceptions (medical malpractice has the same period plus a seven-year repose; claims against government entities under the Tort Claims Act have shorter notice requirements).

Modified comparative negligence under c. 231 sec. 85 is the dominant defense. Most Norfolk County personal injury cases involve some allocation of fault to the plaintiff, and the threshold issue is whether plaintiff's share exceeds 50%. Plaintiffs at 50% or less may still recover, with the award reduced proportionally. Plaintiffs at 51% or more recover nothing. This rule shapes how Weymouth cases are evaluated, settled, and tried.

Massachusetts statutes and case law

  • M.G.L. c. 260 sec. 2A. Three-year statute of limitations for tort claims (auto, premises, products, medical except where otherwise specified).
  • M.G.L. c. 231 sec. 85. Modified comparative negligence; 50%-bar rule applies to most personal injury matters.
  • M.G.L. c. 229 sec. 2. Wrongful death statute; recoverable damages and three-year clock from date of death.
  • M.G.L. c. 231 sec. 60B. Medical malpractice tribunal screening; required for any med-mal claim before merits proceed.
  • M.G.L. c. 258. Massachusetts Tort Claims Act; claims against state and municipal entities require pre-suit presentation within two years.
  • M.G.L. c. 152. Workers' compensation exclusivity; bars most tort claims against employers but permits third-party suits.

Common personal injury case patterns in Weymouth

  1. Weymouth fall on dangerous premises (slip-and-fall, trip-and-fall, snow-and-ice): premises liability under Mounsey and Papadopoulos.
  2. Defective product injury (toy, furniture, machinery, vehicle component): products liability with strict liability and warranty theories.
  3. Workplace injury where third-party (contractor, equipment maker, vendor) caused harm: workers comp claim plus parallel tort suit.
  4. Dog bite or animal attack in Weymouth: strict liability under M.G.L. c. 140 sec. 155 against the keeper or owner.
  5. Negligent security at a Weymouth apartment, club, or business: liability where foreseeable third-party crime causes harm to invitee.

Typical timeline for a Weymouth personal injury matter

Initial intake through medical stabilization is the first six to twelve weeks. The Weymouth client gets evaluated, treatment begins, and the firm opens any first-party files (PIP for auto, medical insurance billing, workers' comp first-report-of-injury). Documentary evidence is preserved: photos, witness statements, incident reports, surveillance video subpoenas where available.

Pre-suit negotiation phase runs from medical-treatment plateau through settlement or filed-suit decision, typically months six through twelve. A demand letter sets out liability, damages, and available insurance. Most Norfolk County personal injury matters resolve in this window when liability is clear and treatment is documented.

Litigation phase runs from filed complaint through trial or pre-trial settlement, typically twelve to twenty-four months. Discovery, depositions, expert disclosures, and dispositive motions fill that window. Most filed cases still resolve before trial; about three to seven percent actually try to verdict in Norfolk County.

What can be recovered in a personal injury case

  • Past and future medical expenses (treatment, surgery, therapy, prescriptions, durable medical equipment).
  • Past lost wages and future lost earning capacity.
  • Pain and suffering (physical pain, mental anguish, loss of life's enjoyment).
  • Disfigurement and scarring (separate damages category in Massachusetts).
  • Loss of consortium (spouse, child, parent claim where applicable).
  • Punitive damages (rare in Massachusetts; available only by statute in specific contexts like wrongful death with gross negligence).

More questions Weymouth residents ask about personal injury

  • What is the deadline to file a Weymouth personal injury claim?

    Most Massachusetts personal injury claims must be filed within three years of the injury under M.G.L. c. 260 sec. 2A. Some claims have shorter deadlines: claims against state or municipal entities under the Tort Claims Act require presentment within two years. Workers' compensation has its own notice and filing rules. The clock generally runs from the date of injury, but the discovery rule can extend it where the injury or its cause was not reasonably knowable at the time.

  • How does Massachusetts comparative negligence affect my Weymouth case?

    Massachusetts uses modified comparative negligence with a 50% bar under c. 231 sec. 85. If your share of fault is 50% or less, you can still recover, but your award is reduced by your percentage of fault. For example, if a Norfolk County jury finds you 30% at fault and your damages are $100,000, you recover $70,000. If they find you 51% at fault, you recover nothing.

  • Will I have to go to court for my Weymouth personal injury case?

    Most personal injury matters resolve through pre-suit negotiation. The Norfolk County matters that do require litigation typically take twelve to twenty-four months from filing, and most still settle before trial. About three to seven percent of filed personal injury cases in Massachusetts try to verdict. The decision to file suit is made jointly by the firm and client based on whether the at-fault carrier is offering a fair pre-suit resolution.

  • What does it cost to hire Jim Glaser Law for a Weymouth personal injury case?

    The first telephone consultation is offered without charge. Personal injury matters accepted by the firm are handled on contingency, which means no attorney fee is owed unless and until the matter resolves with a recovery to the client. Case-related costs and expenses (medical-record requests, expert opinions, court filing fees, deposition costs) are addressed in the written fee agreement and are typically advanced by the firm and reimbursed from any recovery.

  • What if my Weymouth injury was caused by a government entity?

    Claims against state or municipal entities in Massachusetts proceed under the Tort Claims Act, M.G.L. c. 258. The statute requires written presentment of the claim to the appropriate executive officer within two years of the injury, and limits recovery against state or municipal defendants to $100,000 per claimant. Specific notice procedures and shortened timelines make early counsel particularly important in cases involving public roads, sidewalks, schools, or transit.

This sub-entry constitutes legal information, not legal advice. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Attorney advertising under Mass. R. Prof. C. 7.1 to 7.5. Responsible attorney: Jim Glaser, Massachusetts.