Personal injury cases follow predictable economic patterns, and a recurring one is overvaluation by plaintiffs, lawyers, or both. The instinct is understandableโyou’ve been hurt, your life has changed, and the harm feels enormous. But settlement value isn’t a measure of suffering; it’s a function of liability strength, provable damages, jurisdiction, and insurance limits. When those four don’t support the number, the case underperforms expectations and someone ends up disappointed.
Pain and suffering doesn’t multiply infinitely
The classic plaintiff mathโthree times medical bills for pain and sufferingโwas invented by insurance adjusters as a rough negotiating heuristic, not a legal formula. Real settlement values depend on the jurisdiction’s history, the specific facts, and whether the medical bills are themselves justifiable. A defendant who can show that $40,000 of treatment was actually $8,000 of necessary care plus aggressive billing won’t pay a multiplier on the inflated number. Defense counsel knows the going rate for similar injuries in the same county and won’t be moved by claims that ignore comparable verdicts. Plaintiffs who go in demanding three-times-medicals and refuse to come down are usually setting themselves up for a worse outcome at trial.
Liability defects sink otherwise sympathetic cases
A serious injury with weak liability isn’t a great caseโit’s a great loss waiting to happen. If the defendant has a credible argument that the plaintiff was at least 30 percent at fault, comparative negligence rules in most states will reduce the award proportionally, and in a few states will eliminate it entirely. Some plaintiffs and their attorneys mentally separate “they hurt me” from “the law assigns blame,” and the law doesn’t care about that separation. Strong damages with weak liability gets you to a settlement well below sticker price, often well below the medical bills. The cases that pay full value tend to be the ones where liability is essentially conceded, even if the defense files denials in the answer.
Insurance limits are a hard ceiling
In most cases, the practical maximum recovery is the defendant’s insurance policy limit, regardless of how much harm was caused. Going above limits requires the defendant to have personal assets worth pursuingโrare for individual defendantsโor a corporate defendant with deep pockets. A drunk driver with a $25,000 policy and a paid-off Honda is functionally judgment-proof above the limit. Plaintiffs who valued their case at $300,000 and won’t settle for $25,000 are choosing between collecting the limit now or spending two years litigating to a paper judgment they can’t enforce. Realistic case value starts with knowing what’s actually collectible.
The takeaway
Overvaluation costs plaintiffs real money. Cases that should settle in mediation drag to trial; trials produce verdicts below the last settlement offer; clients walk away angrier than they would have been with the early number. Honest case evaluation by an attorney who tells you uncomfortable things early is worth more than the attorney who tells you what you want to hear. If you’re considering a personal injury claim, ask the lawyer for comparable verdicts and settlements in your jurisdiction, not a multiplier number divorced from reality.
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