In many Greenville pedestrian cases, the dispute isn’t just “who hit whom.” It’s whether a driver acted reasonably in the specific traffic environment—especially around busy commuting routes, multi-lane roads, and intersections with changing light cycles.
Common Greenville-area patterns we see include:
- Turning movements at high-traffic intersections where drivers may misjudge distance or fail to yield at the last moment.
- Night or early-morning visibility issues (headlights glare, darker sidewalks, limited lighting near certain crosswalk approaches).
- Construction and detours that move traffic lanes closer to where pedestrians naturally walk.
- Pickup-and-dropoff crowding near schools, offices, and retail areas where foot traffic suddenly increases.
When insurance questions your account, the best cases typically come down to timing and visibility—what the driver could see, what you were doing, and whether braking time existed.


