Minneapolis Pedestrian Accident Lawyer
Pedestrian Accident Lawyer Minneapolis, MN
If you’ve been struck by a vehicle as a pedestrian in Minneapolis, you’re probably facing injuries far more serious than what most crash victims deal with. Pedestrians don’t get the benefit of crumple zones or safety glass. The injuries tend to be serious, the recovery long, and the financial pressure immediate. Meanwhile, the driver’s insurance company is already building a case designed to pay as little as possible. Our Minneapolis, MN pedestrian accident lawyer at Bennerotte & Associates, P.A. represents injured pedestrians across Minneapolis and throughout the state. We also offer the insights, resources, and dedication that come with decades of legal experience. Contact us today to schedule your free consultation.
Why Choose Bennerotte & Associates, P.A. For Pedestrian Accident Claims In Minneapolis, MN?
Experience With Minnesota Pedestrian Injury Cases
Thomas R. Bennerotte has been representing injured Minnesotans since 1991. A cum laude graduate of William Mitchell College of Law, he has spent his entire career on personal injury cases, including claims brought by pedestrians struck by negligent drivers. Admitted in Minnesota and North Dakota, he understands how insurers approach pedestrian claims in this state and what it takes to push back effectively.
Tom is a member of the Minnesota Association for Justice and lectures regularly at legal and medical seminars across Minnesota and Wisconsin. As a personal injury lawyer in Minneapolis, MN, he has helped thousands of injury victims recover compensation after accidents that upended their lives.
Results Built On Preparation
Our attorneys have helped clients recover millions of dollars across pedestrian accident cases and other serious injury claims. Those results reflect thorough investigation, aggressive negotiation, and a firm that doesn’t back down when an insurance company makes a low offer.
Thomas Bennerotte is a Life Member of the Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum, a designation reserved for trial attorneys with multimillion-dollar verdicts and settlements. He’s been selected for Super Lawyers multiple times and named to the National Trial Lawyers Top 100. Attorney Wade Rabenhorst holds the AV Preeminent® rating from Martindale-Hubbell, the highest available rating for legal ability and ethics.
No Fees Unless We Win
Pedestrian accident cases at Bennerotte & Associates are handled on a contingency fee basis. Nothing to pay upfront. No retainer. No hourly billing. If we don’t recover compensation for you, you owe us nothing.
What Clients Say
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“I had the best team ever. The care and level of concern they showed my family since the day I walked through the door. My outstanding attorney’s name is Wade Rabenhors he is the best at making sure you get what you deserve. His assistant Shari Anderson is just unbelievable she became my personal vent,cry,listening ear and I just love them for what they did for me and my family. I would use this same team also recommend them to anyone who wants to have a great outcome of there case. Thanks you guys for everything.” — Willar Wilborn
Read more reviews on our Google Business Profile.
Types Of Pedestrian Accident Cases We Handle In Minneapolis
Pedestrian accidents happen in a lot of different ways and involve a lot of different types of vehicles. What they share is that the person on foot almost always bears the worst of it. Here’s what we handle.
- Intersection accidents. Intersections are where most pedestrian accidents happen in Minneapolis. Drivers running red lights, failing to yield on a green turn signal, or simply not checking before pulling through a crosswalk put walkers at serious risk. When a driver violates a pedestrian’s right-of-way at an intersection, that’s a clear basis for a liability claim.
- Parking lot and driveway accidents. Drivers backing out of spaces or pulling through lots are responsible for checking for people on foot. These accidents are common and often dismissed as minor, even when they’re not. A vehicle moving at low speed can still cause real injury, especially to older pedestrians or children.
- Construction zone accidents. Active construction sites in Minneapolis create rerouted foot traffic, reduced visibility, and unpredictable conditions. When a contractor, property owner, or driver fails to maintain safe passage for pedestrians through or around a work zone, they can be held liable for injuries that result.
- Collisions with vehicles. When a motor vehicle strikes a pedestrian, the injuries are almost always significant. We handle claims involving cars, commercial trucks, motorcycles, rideshare vehicles, bicycles, and e-scooters. Each type of vehicle brings its own insurance and liability questions, and we know how to work through all of them.
- Distracted and impaired driving accidents. A driver who was texting, on the phone, or driving under the influence when they hit a pedestrian has done more than make a mistake. That level of conduct can support drunk driving accident claims that go beyond standard compensatory damages and into punitive damages territory, depending on the facts.
- Road hazard and sidewalk defect accidents. Not every pedestrian accident involves a vehicle. Broken sidewalks, missing curb cuts, inadequate lighting, and poorly maintained crosswalks can all contribute to serious injuries. When a city or property owner is responsible for maintaining that infrastructure and fails to do so, there may be a claim worth pursuing.
- Wrongful death. When a pedestrian accident results in a fatality, the victim’s family may have the right to pursue a wrongful death claim against the at-fault party. We handle these cases with the care they require and pursue full compensation for the family’s financial and personal losses.
Minnesota Legal Requirements For Pedestrian Accident Claims
Several Minnesota laws directly affect how pedestrian accident cases work and what injured victims can recover. Here’s what matters most.
No-Fault Coverage And Pedestrians
Minnesota’s no-fault auto insurance law under Minnesota Statutes Chapter 65B applies to pedestrians in a way many people don’t expect. If you’re struck by a motor vehicle while on foot, you may be entitled to Personal Injury Protection benefits, either through the driver’s auto insurance policy or through your own household auto policy if you have one. PIP covers initial medical expenses and a portion of lost wages regardless of who was at fault for the crash. The catch is that accessing these benefits requires knowing where to look and filing correctly. Many pedestrian accident victims don’t realize this coverage exists until an attorney explains it to them.
When You Can File A Direct Liability Claim
No-fault PIP benefits cover initial losses, but they have real limits. When your injuries are serious enough (a permanent injury, lasting disability, significant disfigurement, or medical bills that exceed Minnesota’s tort threshold), you can step outside the no-fault system and file a direct liability claim against the driver who hit you. That means pursuing compensation for pain and suffering, emotional distress, and all other damages that PIP was never designed to cover. For pedestrians, who routinely sustain broken bones, traumatic brain injuries, and spinal injuries in vehicle collisions, this threshold is frequently met. When it is, the case changes significantly, and so does the potential recovery.
Statute Of Limitations
Minnesota Statutes Section 541.05 gives most pedestrian accident victims two years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit. That clock doesn’t stop while you’re recovering or waiting to see how serious your injuries turn out to be. Miss the deadline and the claim is gone. Some exceptions exist (claims involving minors or government entities, for example), but they’re narrow. Don’t wait.
Pedestrian Right-Of-Way Under Minnesota Law
Under Minnesota Statutes Section 169.21, drivers are required to yield to pedestrians in marked crosswalks and at intersections. That duty is clearly established under Minnesota traffic law. When a driver violates it and causes injury, that violation is a central piece of the liability case. Insurance companies will sometimes argue that a pedestrian shares fault for crossing outside a crosswalk or against a signal. Minnesota’s comparative fault rule under Section 604.01 means shared fault reduces recovery but doesn’t necessarily eliminate it, as long as the pedestrian’s share doesn’t exceed 50%.
Claims Against Government Entities
When a poorly maintained sidewalk, a broken crosswalk signal, or inadequate road design contributed to a pedestrian accident, there may be a claim against a city or government agency. These cases involve a different set of procedural rules under Minnesota Statutes Section 466.05, including shorter notice deadlines that don’t apply to standard personal injury claims. If a government entity may be involved in your case, acting quickly is especially important.
What Damages Are Recoverable In A Minneapolis Pedestrian Accident Case?
Economic Damages
Pedestrian accidents tend to produce serious physical injuries, and the economic losses that follow can be substantial. Medical expenses are typically the largest component, covering emergency care, surgeries, hospitalization, physical and occupational therapy, medication, and any future treatment tied to your injuries.
Lost wages account for income you couldn’t earn while recovering. If your injuries affect your capacity to work going forward, lost earning capacity is part of the claim as well. In cases involving catastrophic injuries like traumatic brain injuries or spinal cord damage, economic damages can extend to years of ongoing care, rehabilitation, and home modifications. All of it needs to be carefully documented and presented. We handle that process.
Non-Economic Damages
Pain and suffering. Emotional distress. The loss of activities and relationships that mattered to you before the accident. A serious pedestrian injury changes a person’s life in ways that a medical bill can’t fully capture. Minnesota doesn’t cap non-economic damages in most personal injury cases, which means there’s no artificial ceiling on what you can pursue for these losses. Insurance companies will offer as little as possible on this piece of a claim. Our Minneapolis pedestrian accident attorneys know how to value it accurately and fight for what it’s actually worth.
Punitive Damages
When the driver who hit you was drunk, texting, or otherwise behaving with reckless disregard for the safety of people around them, Minnesota law allows for punitive damages under Minnesota Statutes Section 549.20. Punitive damages aren’t available in every case. But when the conduct warrants them, they can significantly increase total recovery and hold the at-fault party accountable in a way that goes beyond the cost of the injuries themselves.
Contact Bennerotte & Associates, P.A.
If you or someone you love was hurt in a pedestrian accident in Minneapolis or anywhere in Minnesota, we’re here to help. Consultations are free, and we work on contingency, so there are no fees unless we win. Contact us to schedule your free consultation.
