Stephenville traffic patterns and pedestrian activity can create predictable collision scenarios—especially at intersections, near schools, and along routes where commuters and visitors share the roadway.
Common local situations we see after pedestrian injuries include:
- Turning and lane-change crashes where a driver misjudges distance or speed while entering a cross street.
- Crosswalk and signal disputes where the driver claims they didn’t see the person in time, or where visibility was limited by weather, glare, or nighttime lighting.
- After-hours incidents involving pedestrians walking to/from events or parked vehicles where the roadway lighting is less consistent.
- Work-zone and construction-area confusion where lane shifts, signage, or temporary traffic control can affect whether a driver had a clear, reasonable view.
In Texas, the driver’s conduct and the pedestrian’s actions can both be examined under negligence principles. The practical takeaway: evidence and timing matter—especially when insurers try to move blame or reduce the seriousness of injuries.


