Classify the case
Crash, property, product, work injury, death, civil rights, malpractice, and government cases all have different proof and timing issues.
Start With The Right Claim Type Before Insurance Controls The File
Tell us what happened, who contacted you, what evidence may disappear, and what injuries changed your life. We will route the facts to the right Michigan claim track and explain the next step.
The first job is not reading every statute. It is identifying the claim track, preserving evidence, avoiding insurer traps, and checking deadlines before a release or statement narrows the case.
Crash, property, product, work injury, death, civil rights, malpractice, and government cases all have different proof and timing issues.
Video, vehicle data, incident reports, product parts, jobsite records, body camera footage, and witness names can disappear quickly.
A Michigan personal injury claim exists when negligence, recklessness, intentional misconduct, a dangerous product, unsafe property, or a rights violation causes legally recoverable harm. The label is broad; the legal rules are not.
A car crash, jail injury, unsafe-store fall, worksite injury, defective product, and fatal case may all involve injury damages, but they do not use the same claim path.
It costs nothing to find out where you stand.
We get the case categorized, documented, and protected before an insurer, company, agency, or defense lawyer turns uncertainty against you.
Crash, unsafe property, civil rights, work injury, product, death, malpractice, employment, or another legal track.
Reports, photos, video, witnesses, products, vehicles, body camera, jobsite records, policies, and medical documentation.
Limitations, No-Fault notice, government notice, probate authority, malpractice notice, policy terms, and record retention.
Insurance, public defendants, commercial policies, UM/UIM, PIP, employer benefits, liens, and collectability.
We listen for the event type, location, involved parties, injuries, records, statements, and immediate evidence risks.
We sort No-Fault, premises, product, civil-rights, work injury, wrongful-death, government, and insurance issues.
We look for notice rules, policy conditions, government deadlines, probate authority, video retention, and medical proof.
If legal help is likely to change the result, we explain the plan. If not, we tell you that plainly.
Past results do not guarantee a future result. They show the range of serious injury and accountability cases our team has handled.
Actual review excerpts about injury representation, communication, medical-bill pressure, and support. The page-specific claim still depends on its own evidence, law, and deadlines.
We have not gone to trial yet, but for the past 2 years I wouldn't choose anyone else to stand behind me and my child. If you want injury lawyers and team members who actually care, CHOOSE Christopher Trainor.
Dealing with insurance companies and medical billing is always a pain in the but and didn’t want anyone taking advantage of me and my situation. This team is number 1 in my book.
I recently had the pleasure of working with Chris Trainor, Amy DeRouin and their dedicated team regarding two personal claims. I cannot recommend them highly enough! From our very first consultation, it was clear that I was in capable and caring hands. I would trust them with any personal legal matter.
You Focus On Healing. We Handle Everything Else.
The calls, the bills, and the pressure start before you have recovered. From day one, that is our job, not yours.
Use this as a practical screen before statements, releases, or deadline assumptions start narrowing the case. No sign-up, no dollar estimate, and your answers stay on this page. The result is general information, not legal advice.
Question 1 of 5
Tell us what happened, where it happened, who contacted you, what medical care you need, and what records exist. We will identify the likely claim track, evidence priorities, deadline issues, and whether hiring us makes sense.
This reference section is intentionally secondary. Use it to understand the issue map, then get claim-specific advice before calculating deadlines or signing anything.
Start broad here, then use the focused page once the facts point to the right legal lane.
No-Fault, serious impairment, UM/UIM, PIP priority, and crash evidence. Start with car accident, motorcycle, pedestrian, or bicycle.
Carrier records, driver logs, maintenance, cargo, route data, and fast preservation. Start with truck accident or delivery truck.
Falls, negligent security, landlord duties, public property, notice, and control. Start with premises liability, slip and fall, or negligent security.
Body camera, jail video, medical neglect, excessive force, unlawful detention, immunity, and federal civil-rights issues may need immediate review. Start with civil rights, police misconduct, or jail injury.
Workers’ compensation, third-party defendants, defective products, equipment, contractors, and product preservation may overlap. Start with workers’ compensation, construction accident, or product liability.
Wrongful-death cases require estate authority, claimant review, insurance, survivor benefits, and exact-date deadline screening. Start with the wrongful death page.
Michigan personal injury claims require claim-type routing before deadline or settlement decisions. Negligence, comparative fault, No-Fault, government notice, civil-rights law, probate, product preservation, workers’ compensation overlap, and policy rules can all change the practical path.
Liability, causation, damages, and MCL 600.2959 comparative fault need evidence-based review. Fault arguments can reduce recovery, especially when the insurer frames the facts first.
Michigan crash cases can include PIP benefits, serious impairment under MCL 500.3135, PIP notice and lawsuit timing under MCL 500.3145, UM/UIM policy review, and commercial coverage.
Road defects, public buildings, state defendants, public employees, jail injuries, and police conduct can involve notice, immunity, federal civil-rights claims, Court of Claims timing, and record-preservation issues.
A fatal case is not safely answered by saying it is three years from death. The underlying claim, death date, injury date, personal representative, first letters of authority, MCL 600.5852, government notice, malpractice procedure, No-Fault, and policy conditions all need review.
Product preservation, jobsite control, third-party liability, workers’ compensation overlap, medical causation, future care, and life-care proof often decide the value and path.
A release can affect defendants who have not been identified, PIP or UM/UIM claims, liens, estate rights, family claims, and future damages. Do not sign one before the claim map is complete.
Early pressure usually focuses on narrowing the story, controlling records, and pushing the case into the cheapest legal category.
Meet by phone, video, or at any of our Michigan offices.
Every case at Christopher Trainor & Associates is a team effort. Our attorneys collaborate on strategy, discovery, and litigation so you get the full strength of the firm behind you—not just a single lawyer. We have built our practice on this collaborative model since 1989.
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