Many pedestrian injuries in West Springfield don’t become clear-cut cases right away because the fight is usually about what happened in the final seconds:
- Was the driver paying attention near a crosswalk?
- Did the pedestrian step into the roadway unexpectedly, or was the driver supposed to yield?
- Were visibility and lighting reduced by glare, rain, snow, or street conditions?
- Did a turn—especially at intersections—cut across the pedestrian’s path?
In Massachusetts, fault can be shared. Even if you believe the driver was careless, insurers may argue comparative negligence to reduce compensation. That’s why early documentation and a careful reconstruction of events matters more than most people expect.


