Holding Someone Liable for Personal Injury

·4 min read
Holding Someone Liable for Personal Injury

Learn how to hold someone liable for personal injury. Step-by-step plan, statute of limitations, evidence, damage categories, and free legal aid. Arslan Advocaten explains.

Suffered personal injury? Holding someone liable is the first step towards compensation. In this guide from Arslan Advocaten, you will learn how to do this carefully — with explanations about evidence, deadlines, and free legal assistance.

Holding someone liable for personal injury

Have you been the victim of an accident or incident in which another person is responsible for your injury? In many cases, you are entitled to compensation. The first step is to hold the responsible party liable (or their insurer). Below, we explain how to approach this carefully, what deadlines apply, and what damages you can claim — with references to our in-depth articles.

What does holding someone liable mean?

With a liability claim, you officially inform the other party that they are responsible for your damages. This is done through a written liability letter to the opposing party or their insurer. In this letter, you briefly describe the circumstances, why the other party is liable, and that you want your damages (current and future) compensated. Our lawyers ensure this letter is legally complete and that no deadlines are missed. See also our 10-step plan for personal injury.

Statute of limitations: how long do you have?

  • 5 years – in most cases, from the moment you know you have suffered damage and who is liable;
  • 3 years – for direct claims against the insurer (e.g., WAM claim in traffic accidents).

Do not wait until everything is clear. File a liability claim in time (if necessary pro forma) to prevent the statute of limitations from expiring. Useful checklist: What is my personal injury amount?.

Step-by-step plan: how to hold someone liable

1) Collect evidence

Photos of the incident, witness details, police report, medical information, and receipts/cost overviews. In workplace accidents: reporting obligations and risk assessments play a role. Read more: Reporting a workplace accident: what are the rules?.

2) Send a liability letter

We draft the letter and send it by registered mail to the opposing party/insurer. This formally records that you are claiming full damages. In traffic cases, you can often directly approach the WAM insurer; see Personal injury after a traffic accident.

3) Investigation & acknowledgment

The insurer assesses the liability. Sometimes additional fact-finding or a medical process follows. If liability is acknowledged, we start the claims settlement and arrange advance payments.

4) Inventory of damages

We map out all damage items. In-depth reading:

5) Finalization and payment

After negotiations, we formalize the settlement. The insurer pays your damages and — when liability is acknowledged — also the costs of legal assistance.

Free legal assistance: upon acknowledgment, we recover our costs from the liable insurer. You pay nothing for our services.

Specific situations

Traffic accident (car, bicycle, scooter)

Thanks to the WAM (Motor Insurance Liability Act) and protection rules for vulnerable road users, you can often receive (partial) compensation. Want to know more about whiplash complaints and claims? See Whiplash after a collision.

Workplace accident

Employers have an extensive duty of care. In practice, the employer is often liable unless they can demonstrate they did everything to prevent the accident. Read more: Workplace accident: what now? and Falls from height.

Common mistakes (and how to prevent them)

  • Filing a liability claim too late: prevent the statute of limitations from expiring (see also our step-by-step plan);
  • Incomplete or incorrect liability letter;
  • No or insufficient evidence of the circumstances and damages;
  • Negotiating with the insurer yourself without legal protection.

Example from practice

An employee was injured after a fall from height. The employer rejected liability. We collected facts, witness statements, and medical evidence. Result: acknowledgment of liability, full compensation for loss of earning capacity and pain and suffering.

Conclusion

"Holding someone liable" seems simple, but requires legal precision and strict deadline management. With Arslan Advocaten, you avoid costly mistakes and claim all damage items — including future damages and pain and suffering compensation.

Free legal advice?

Want to know if you can hold someone liable for your personal injury? Contact Arslan Advocaten today for a no-obligation consultation. We help you immediately — free of charge for victims.



Frequently asked questions

Hoe lang heb ik om iemand aansprakelijk te stellen?
Meestal vijf jaar vanaf het moment dat u weet dat u schade heeft en wie aansprakelijk is. Bij een directe claim op de verzekeraar geldt vaak een termijn van drie jaar. Stel daarom tijdig aansprakelijk om verjaring te voorkomen.
Moet de aansprakelijkheidsbrief aangetekend worden verstuurd?
Dat is sterk aan te raden. Met een aangetekende brief kunt u bewijzen dat en wanneer u de tegenpartij aansprakelijk heeft gesteld, wat belangrijk is voor de verjaring en uw bewijspositie.
Welke schade kan ik claimen bij letselschade?
U kunt onder meer medische kosten, verlies van inkomen, smartengeld, reiskosten en kosten voor hulp en aanpassingen claimen, zowel de schade die u al heeft als toekomstige schade.
Moet ik de advocaatkosten zelf betalen?
Vaak niet. Als de aansprakelijkheid vaststaat, kunnen de redelijke kosten van rechtsbijstand op de aansprakelijke partij worden verhaald. Laat uw zaak vooraf beoordelen om hier zekerheid over te krijgen.
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