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Ann Arbor Personal Injury Lawyers

Washtenaw County injury lawyers for US-23, I-94, M-14, car, truck, wrongful death, civil rights, and police misconduct cases.

Quick Answer

Do I need a Ann Arbor personal injury lawyer?

A Ann Arbor personal injury lawyer helps people hurt in Washtenaw County preserve local evidence, identify every liable party and insurance policy, and protect Michigan-specific deadlines. Our Ann Arbor office serves Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti, Saline, Chelsea, Plymouth, Canton, Monroe, Milan, and Dexter.

Ann Arbor Office

5 (8)
  • 2723 S State St UNIT 150, Ann Arbor, MI 48104
  • Open 24/7
  • (734) 882-2646
Map showing the Ann Arbor office location
Office map Ann Arbor Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors
01

Why Serious Injury Cases in Ann Arbor Need Local Proof

Ann Arbor cases often involve university traffic, regional commuters, US-23 and I-94 crashes, downtown video, campus-related evidence, and treatment through a major academic medical system.

The legal work is practical: prove how the injury happened, preserve the local evidence, identify the right court and medical records, and make sure Michigan deadlines are not missed while the client is focused on treatment.

Roads and incident locations

US-23, I-94, M-14, State Street, Washtenaw Avenue, Stadium Boulevard, and downtown Ann Arbor all create local evidence issues. Crash, fall, civil-rights, and wrongful-death cases can turn on details at a specific intersection, business, jail, trail, parking lot, or road project.

Courts and venue

Washtenaw County Circuit Court, Ann Arbor district courts, Monroe County courts, and federal court may be involved depending on the defendants. Venue and defendant identity can change the litigation strategy, especially when a government agency, employer, commercial carrier, or out-of-county defendant is involved.

Medical documentation

University of Michigan Health, Trinity Health Ann Arbor, and regional rehabilitation providers. Emergency, imaging, surgery, rehabilitation, and follow-up records often decide whether an insurer can minimize the injury.

02

What We Do From The Ann Arbor Office

Our first job is to take control of the evidence and communications. We request police, EMS, medical, employer, insurer, and agency records; identify video sources; interview witnesses; and send preservation demands before records are overwritten, vehicles are repaired, or memories fade.

We move quickly on AAPD, Washtenaw County, campus-area, business-video, medical-record, and insurer evidence before it becomes harder to obtain.

Evidence preservation

We look for business cameras, dashcam or bodycam video, vehicle data, ELD or maintenance records, dispatch notes, road-agency files, incident reports, and witness accounts while they are still available.

Insurance mapping

A local injury case may involve PIP, liability, UM/UIM, commercial coverage, workers compensation, homeowner coverage, dramshop coverage, or a government defendant. We map those sources early.

Client protection

We coordinate insurer communication, deadline calendars, document requests, medical proof, and settlement or litigation strategy so the client is not left managing the legal process alone.

03

Michigan Law And Deadlines That Matter In Ann Arbor

The same statewide statutes apply across Michigan, but the local facts decide which rules become urgent. Motor-vehicle claims can involve No-Fault PIP notice, serious-impairment proof, comparative fault, commercial coverage, and UM/UIM issues. Premises, civil-rights, and wrongful-death claims use different legal frameworks.

No-Fault and serious impairment

Motor vehicle cases often have two tracks: PIP benefits from the proper insurer and a third-party claim when the injury satisfies MCL 500.3135. PIP timing under MCL 500.3145 should be reviewed immediately.

Government road and vehicle claims

MCL 691.1402 is the highway duty and exception source. Highway-defect claims can require written notice within 120 days under MCL 691.1404. State claims can involve separate Court of Claims timing under MCL 600.6431.

Wrongful death and probate

Fatal crashes, falls, police encounters, and other incidents can require a personal representative, estate procedure, and careful coordination under Michigan wrongful-death law.

Civil rights and police misconduct

Federal civil-rights claims under 42 U.S.C. 1983 require proof of state action, a constitutional violation, causation, and damages. Qualified immunity, Monell liability, and state-law immunity must be evaluated early.

04

Cases We Handle From Ann Arbor

Our Ann Arbor office handles car accidents, truck accidents, motorcycle crashes, bicycle and pedestrian injuries, premises liability, construction injuries, burn injuries, traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord injuries, wrongful death, police misconduct, civil rights, and employment-related injury or retaliation matters where the facts support a claim.

The goal is direct: preserve the record, prove liability and damages, protect deadlines, and pursue the full recovery Michigan law allows.

Serving Ann Arbor and Surrounding Communities

Our Ann Arbor office handles personal injury, car accident, wrongful death, and civil rights cases for clients throughout the region. We serve clients from:

  • Ann Arbor
  • Ypsilanti
  • Saline
  • Chelsea
  • Plymouth
  • Canton
  • Monroe
  • Milan
  • Dexter

No matter where you are in the region, consultations are free, available 24/7, and we come to you when needed.

Local Courts

  • Washtenaw County Circuit Court
  • 14A-1 District Court (Ann Arbor)
  • Monroe County Circuit Court

Nearby Trauma Centers & Hospitals

  • University of Michigan Health (Level I Trauma Center)
  • Saint Joseph Mercy Ann Arbor
Common Questions

Ann Arbor Personal Injury FAQs

What should I do after a serious accident in Ann Arbor?

Call 911, get medical care, photograph the scene if you can do so safely, identify witnesses, and avoid recorded statements until you have legal advice. Then call us quickly so evidence from vehicles, businesses, agencies, and insurers can be preserved.

How long do I have to file a claim in Washtenaw County?

Most Michigan injury lawsuits have a three-year limitations period, but No-Fault PIP timing, government notices, dramshop claims, employment retaliation, probate issues, and policy deadlines can be shorter. Highway-defect claims can require written notice within 120 days under MCL 691.1404.

Which courts handle Ann Arbor injury cases?

Cases may involve Washtenaw County Circuit Court, Ann Arbor district courts, Monroe County courts, and federal court may be involved depending on the defendants. The right court depends on where the incident happened, who the defendants are, damages, venue rules, and whether a state or federal claim is involved.

Do local hospital records matter for my Ann Arbor injury claim?

Yes. Records from University of Michigan Health, Trinity Health Ann Arbor, and regional rehabilitation providers and follow-up providers help prove diagnosis, causation, treatment, impairment, future care, and damages. We build the claim from the full medical chain, not a short adjuster summary.

Can your Ann Arbor office handle truck, wrongful death, and civil rights cases?

Yes. The office handles serious personal injury, wrongful death, police misconduct, civil rights, and commercial vehicle cases. Those claims often involve different defendants, evidence, deadlines, and courts, so early review is important.

What if a government agency, police department, or public road was involved?

Government involvement can trigger immunity, notice, and forum rules. Road-defect claims should be reviewed for MCL 691.1402 and the 120-day notice rule in MCL 691.1404. State claims may involve the Court of Claims and different timing.

Do I have to come to the Ann Arbor office for a consultation?

No. Consultations are free and available by phone, video, or in person. When injuries make travel difficult, we work around the client and the medical situation.

How much does it cost to hire a Ann Arbor personal injury lawyer?

The consultation is free, and personal injury cases are handled on contingency. That means no attorney fee unless we recover compensation for you. Call (734) 882-2646 any time.

Injured in Ann Arbor? Call Us Now.

Free consultations available 24/7. No fee unless we win your case.