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Personal Injury Laws

Personal injury can be a physical, financial or a mental injury caused by another person, object or company. A person can sue and claim for personal injury compensation if he has been a victim of slip and fall injuries, nursing home abuse, car accidents, defective product injury, exposure to toxic materials, medical malpractices, wrongful death (due to negligence), drug injury, dog bite, job injuries, and so on.

Each state in the US has its own personal injury laws. Oregon has some strict personal injury laws. These come under both federal laws as well as state laws. Personal injury law is also known as "Tort Law". A tort is simply any injury caused to a person by another. Anybody can claim for damages under this law for physical or emotional injury as well as for property damages. In case of death, the family members of the deceased can claim for damages.

Tort Law provides for four main objectives: 1) To win compensation for victims of personal injury; 2) To legally obligate the person who harmed the victim to pay punitive damages; 3) To prevent the recurrence of similar reckless or negligent action in the future and 4) To defend the victims' legal rights. Personal injury cases under the Torts Law can be based on three grounds: strict liability, negligence and intentional wrong. Strict liability is generally against product manufacturers whose product may have caused some injury; negligence is against anyone who could have prevented the injury while intentional wrong is against anyone or anything that has intentionally caused the injury e.g. domestic battery. The Torts Law covers most personal injuries under these three grounds.

There are many personal injury lawyers in Oregon. Information about these lawyers and law firms can be obtained through the yellow pages, or by seeking the advice of your attorney, friends or family members. The Internet is a very good source for finding good Oregon Personal injury lawyers.


 Personal injury law is about torts - civil wrongs recognized by law as grounds for a lawsuit. These wrongs result in an injury and are the basis for a claim by the injured party. The basic principle of tort law is to provide relief for the damages incurred by the injured person and deter others from committing the similar harms. The injured person may sue for damages he or she has endured.
 
Negligence torts, on the other hand, comprise most of the cases under this law. In general, the law imposes a duty on every citizen to behave at least as carefully as a reasonable, ordinary, prudent person in a similar situation. This is known as the reasonable person standard. If the defendant's actions fall short of the reasonable person standard, then the defendant can be found negligent.

If a plaintiff sues under the theory of strict liability, he or she contends that the defendant is liable regardless of fault. The issue of the defendant's negligence is irrelevant. The defendant is liable if the defendant's activity in any way caused the plaintiff's injury.
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