Many pedestrian cases don’t stay “simple,” even when the driver seems obviously at fault. In practice, insurers frequently question details that matter—especially where pedestrians were positioned, when the driver first saw you, and whether the driver had enough time and distance to stop.
In Pompton Lakes, common friction points include:
- Commuter traffic patterns: Roads that see rush-hour volume can create fast-moving, time-pressured driving.
- Intersection and turning-lane incidents: Turning drivers may claim they looked but didn’t see you in time.
- Low-visibility conditions: Morning and evening glare, seasonal rain, and early darkness during fall/winter can affect what drivers should reasonably have noticed.
- Construction and changing traffic flow: When lanes shift or signage is temporary, the “what should have been visible” argument changes.
When a claim turns into a credibility battle, the early decisions you make—what you say, what you document, and which records you collect—can influence how strongly your case is viewed.


