Sachse sits in the middle of a busy commuting corridor, and many injury incidents involve shared blame arguments—for example, claims that a driver “should have seen” another vehicle, that a pedestrian stepped into traffic, or that a property hazard wasn’t the real cause.
Broken bone injuries also tend to be disputed when:
- The fracture diagnosis arrives after the initial visit (common when imaging is delayed or pain is first treated conservatively)
- The insurance company argues the injury was pre-existing or unrelated to the incident
- The opposing side suggests the fracture was caused by something other than the impact/fall described
When liability is contested, the case hinges on documentation and consistency—not just the fact that you have a fracture.


