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Although no statute specifically defines the term “catastrophic injury” under Michigan law, our state’s appellate courts have interpreted and applied the term on many occasions. The experienced catastrophic injury attorneys at Vahdat Weisman Law have spent years litigating what does and does not meet that standard. If you or a loved one suffered a severe injury like those described below, put our experience in your corner in your catastrophic injury case.
Michigan statutes do not define the term “catastrophic injury” in the same way they define terms like “serious impairment of body function.” In practice, the label is applied to severe, life-altering harm, such as a traumatic brain injury (TBI), spinal cord damage causing paralysis, loss of limb, severe burns, or any condition that leaves the victim permanently disabled or unable to resume basic daily activities. Because the definition is applied on a case-by-case basis, expert medical documentation is critical when proving the scope of your injury.
Catastrophic injury cases differ from ordinary personal injury cases in that they involve catastrophic injuries. This means they typically involve the following:
In a catastrophic injury case in Michigan, you can seek several types of damages, including the following:
Meticulous documentation of future costs through life care plans and actuarial projections can dramatically influence the settlement value in a catastrophic injury case.
For most personal injury actions in Michigan, including catastrophic injuries that arise outside the medical-malpractice context, you must file within three years of the date of injury (MCL 600.5805(2)). Missing a deadline like this usually bars your claim entirely.
If your injury arose from a motor-vehicle collision, your insurer must first pay Personal Protection Insurance (PIP) benefits, which cover medical care and wage loss, regardless of fault. Once PIP expenses exceed the annual “retention” threshold (about $600,000 in 2025), the Michigan Catastrophic Claims Association (MCCA) reimburses the insurer for additional medical costs (MCL 500.3104). You may also file a separate tort action against the at-fault driver for noneconomic damages if you sustained death, permanent severe disfigurement, or “serious impairment of body function” (MCL 500.3135).
Michigan follows a modified comparative fault rule. Your percentage of responsibility reduces damages proportionally, and if you are more than 50% at fault, you cannot recover noneconomic damages. However, economic losses may still be awarded in proportion to the defendant’s fault (MCL 600.2959). Because fault allocations are fact-sensitive inquiries, early preservation of evidence (vehicle data, surveillance video, and eyewitness accounts) can prevent insurers from overstating your share of negligence.
Yes. For automobile cases, you must prove one of the following:
These threshold elements, which are set forth in MCL 500.3135(1)-(2), are questions of law for judges to decide before trial. But judges should only decide them when the facts are undisputed, so comprehensive medical records and credible physician testimony are essential for your claim to survive summary judgment.
For catastrophic injury cases arising in contexts other than automobile collisions, such as premises- or products-liability cases, no statutory threshold applies. But the severity of your injury still impacts the value of your claim.
Attorneys work with life care planners, vocational experts, and economists to estimate the following expenses:
Projected figures are discounted to present value using accepted economic methodologies. This enables juries to award a lump sum that accurately reflects lifelong expenses.
Accepting an early offer before doctors establish a permanent prognosis risks under-compensation. Once a release is signed, you generally cannot reopen the claim. In catastrophic injury cases, waiting for a stabilized diagnosis or negotiating structured settlements with re-openers for designated complications protects your long-term interests. Always have an attorney review the proposed release language and analyze Medicare set-aside issues before you sign a release.
Every client relies on the team of attorneys at Vahdat Weisman Law for his or her own reason. But the most common reasons clients turn to us include the following:
Catastrophic injuries demand attentive legal counsel and substantial resources. Discuss your options with an attorney who understands the legal, medical, and technical complexities involved in your case. Contact Vahdat Weisman Law at (734) 469-4994 or fill out our online form to schedule a complimentary consultation.
Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every case is unique, and prior results do not guarantee future success.