Weymouth is a mix of residential streets and higher-traffic corridors where drivers may be juggling commuting schedules, rush-hour traffic, and navigation. In many pedestrian cases, the argument isn’t whether the crash happened—it’s whether the driver should have been able to avoid it.
You’ll often see disputes involving:
- Turning and merging near busier intersections where sightlines can be limited by vehicles, weather, or lighting.
- School-area timing, including crossing patterns during drop-off/pick-up windows.
- Evening visibility issues, when glare, darkness, or reflective clothing (or lack of it) becomes a contested factor.
- Construction or changing traffic patterns, which can affect how drivers approach a crosswalk or curb line.
When fault is contested, the details matter—quickly.


