Automobile accidents: March 2010 Archives

March 23, 2010

Traffic Tickets: Admissible Evidence in Personal Injury Litigation?

In Indiana auto accident or large truck accident litigation the potential for a traffic ticket to be admitted into evidence at trial is truly a double edged sword. Evidence of a traffic violation issued against the plaintiff, or lack of a ticket to a defendant, which reaches the jury can destroy your client's credibility and ultimately his or her case. Conversely, getting the judge to let in a traffic violation against the defendant in a hotly disputed liability case can tip the scales in a plaintiff's favor. In order to tackle this issue, consider the following two scenarios.

Scenario 1: Keep It Out

Ticket Issued To A Plaintiff

yield.jpgThe presentation of your injured plaintiff's case to the jury has gone well. Your client made a good impression, a witness described a horrendous collision, the doctors described the injury with a clearly understandable precision. Then, the defense calls a police officer to the stand and aks him if he gave out any traffic tickets related to the accident, and the answer is "yes, I cited Mr. Plaintiff for failure to yield." Although you know your client pleaded nolo contendre to the ticket, you can feel the wind go out of your sails as you look at the jury and realize the negative impact a traffic citation has made. While you try to save the day on cross, the jury has already made up their mind that police officers don't give out tickets unless a person broke the law. To them a police officer's testimony about a ticket is the gospel, to you it is the kiss of death for your case.

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