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Pedestrian Accident Lawyer El Paso

Jaywalking Is Not a Case Killer. A Driver Always Owed You Due Care.
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A pedestrian hit by a vehicle in El Paso can recover compensation for medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and permanent disability. Texas law requires drivers to exercise due care to avoid hitting a pedestrian even when the pedestrian was jaywalking or crossing outside a crosswalk. Your claim survives as long as your share of fault stays at or below 50%. John Aufiero at 915 Injury spent years inside the insurance industry learning exactly how adjusters use jaywalking arguments to deny pedestrian claims. He now uses that knowledge to fight for you.

Most claims go through the at-fault driver's liability insurance. Some also involve a government liability claim against the City of El Paso or TxDOT for dangerous road design or missing crosswalks. Simple soft-tissue cases resolve in 3 to 6 months. Catastrophic claims involving traumatic brain injury (TBI) or government defendants can take 1 to 3 years.

John Aufiero, premises liability attorney at 915 Injury in El Paso
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How Pedestrian Accident Liability Works in Texas

Texas is an at-fault state, which means the driver who caused the pedestrian collision pays for the victim's damages through their liability insurance or personal assets. The legal framework rests on three statutes that interact in every pedestrian case.

Texas Transportation Code §552.008 is the most important provision. The statute reads that every operator shall exercise due care to avoid colliding with a pedestrian on the roadway, give warning by sounding the horn when necessary, and exercise proper precaution when observing a child or obviously confused or incapacitated person. The statute opens with "Notwithstanding another provision of this chapter," which is the critical phrase. It means the driver's duty of care applies regardless of what the pedestrian was doing, including jaywalking, crossing against a signal, or walking in the roadway at night.

Texas Transportation Code §552.003 establishes pedestrian right-of-way at crosswalks. An operator shall stop and yield to a pedestrian in a crosswalk, whether marked or unmarked, when there is no traffic control signal and the pedestrian is on the vehicle's half of the roadway or approaching closely enough to be in danger. Unmarked crosswalks exist at every intersection by default under §552.003, a fact most drivers don't know.

When both the driver and the pedestrian share some responsibility, Texas's proportionate responsibility rule under Civil Practice and Remedies Code §33.001 applies. A claimant cannot recover if they are more than 50% at fault (the 51% bar rule). If the pedestrian is 50% or less at fault, damages are reduced by the pedestrian's fault percentage. A driver who runs a red light and strikes a pedestrian commits negligence per se, meaning the traffic violation itself is automatic proof of negligence.

Insurance companies argue that the pedestrian's own negligence eliminates the claim. They ignore the driver's independent duty under §552.008. Texas law does not allow that argument. The driver always had a legal obligation to watch for pedestrians and take action to avoid the collision.

Can a Pedestrian Be at Fault for an Accident in Texas?

Yes, a pedestrian can share fault for an accident in Texas, but fault does not eliminate the claim unless it exceeds 50% under Texas's proportionate responsibility rule (§33.001). Pedestrian fault is common in El Paso cases, and insurance adjusters raise it in nearly every claim.

Texas Transportation Code §552.005 requires pedestrians to yield to vehicles when crossing outside a marked or unmarked crosswalk at an intersection, or where a tunnel or overhead crossing is provided. Between adjacent signalized intersections, pedestrians may cross only in a marked crosswalk. A pedestrian who violates §552.005 commits negligence per se.

The counter to every jaywalking argument is §552.008. The driver still had an independent duty of care to avoid the collision. A jury weighs both sides. On one side is the pedestrian's decision to cross outside a crosswalk. On the other is the driver's failure to keep a proper lookout, maintain a safe speed, or react in time.

Jaywalking fault allocations in Texas typically range from 10% to 40%, depending on

  • Distance from the nearest crosswalk
  • Visibility conditions
  • Pedestrian intoxication
  • Whether the pedestrian left a place of safety
  • Speed of entry into the roadway

Even at the high end of that range, the pedestrian's claim survives because 40% is below the 51% bar.

For a deeper analysis of pedestrian fault and jaywalking in Texas, the dedicated page covers how juries weigh each factor.

What If I Was Jaywalking When I Was Hit by a Car?

If you were jaywalking when you were hit, your recovery is reduced by your fault percentage. You can still recover as long as your fault stays below 50%. Your attorney uses §552.008 to show the driver had an independent obligation to avoid you, separate from where you were crossing.

The fault allocation depends on the specific circumstances of your jaywalking. Three scenarios illustrate the range.

Scenario Typical Fault Allocation Key Factor
1. Jaywalking 50 ft from crosswalk, daylight 10–20% pedestrian fault Short distance, good visibility for driver
2. Crossing 4-lane arterial, night, dark clothing 30–45% pedestrian fault Poor visibility, high-risk location
3. Mid-block where no crosswalk within 500 ft 5–15% pedestrian fault No reasonable alternative, driver had clear sightlines

The third scenario applies directly in El Paso, where large stretches of arterial roads like Dyer Street and Alameda Avenue lack crosswalks for half a mile or more. Juries recognize that a pedestrian crossing where no crosswalk exists nearby bears less blame than one who ignores an available crosswalk 30 feet away.

Your attorney's job is to prove the driver failed their independent obligation. That means showing they failed to keep a proper lookout, failed to reduce speed, or failed to take evasive action when they had time to avoid you.

Once fault is allocated, the next question is how much the claim is worth.

What Compensation Can You Recover After a Pedestrian Accident in El Paso?

The main factors are injury severity, liability clarity, speed at impact, the driver's insurance limits, and whether the case goes to trial. Government defendants add a separate layer because Texas Tort Claims Act caps limit recovery regardless of actual damages.

Three categories of damages apply to pedestrian accident claims in Texas.

1. Economic Damages

  • Medical expenses: ER visits ($5,000–$150,000+ for pedestrian injuries), surgery, rehabilitation, future care
  • Lost wages: time missed from work during treatment and recovery
  • Lost earning capacity: permanent reduction in ability to earn (common with TBI, spinal cord injuries, amputations)
  • Funeral costs: in wrongful death cases

2. Non-Economic Damages

  • Pain and suffering: Pedestrian cases trend toward the higher end because of injury severity
  • Disability and impaired mobility: permanent limitations from lower extremity fractures, pelvic injuries
  • Disfigurement: scarring from road rash, surgical scars, amputation
  • PTSD: fear of crossing streets, flashbacks, sleep disruption

3. Punitive Damages

  • Requires clear and convincing evidence of fraud, malice, or gross negligence under Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code §41.003
  • Common trigger: DUI driver who hit the pedestrian
  • Cap: 2x economic damages + up to $750,000 non-economic, or $200,000 (whichever is greater). No cap if defendant faces felony charges
  • Government defendants: no punitive damages allowed under TTCA

Government defendant claims face statutory caps under §101.023 regardless of actual damages. The full breakdown is in the government liability section below.

For detailed settlement ranges broken down by injury type, the page on pedestrian accident settlement amounts in Texas covers soft tissue, fracture, TBI, spinal cord, and wrongful death tiers.

Pedestrian settlements trend higher than car-on-car claims because of injury severity.

Why Pedestrian Accident Injuries Are More Severe

Pedestrian accident injuries are more severe than vehicle-on-vehicle crash injuries because pedestrians have zero protection. No seatbelt, no airbag, no crumple zone, no helmet. A car occupant in a 40 mph collision is surrounded by engineered safety systems. A pedestrian at 40 mph absorbs the full force of the impact with nothing between their body and the vehicle.

According to the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, the pedestrian fatality rate climbs sharply with speed. The fatality risk is 10% at 23 mph, 50% at 42 mph, and 90% at 58 mph. For a 70-year-old pedestrian, a collision at 25 mph carries the same fatality risk as a 35 mph collision for a 30-year-old. SUVs, pickups, and vans with a hood height above 40 inches are 45% more likely to cause pedestrian fatalities than passenger cars, according to a 2023 IIHS study. Their higher front-end profile directs force into the torso and head rather than the lower extremities.

Pedestrian collisions follow a three-phase impact pattern.

  1. The primary impact (vehicle bumper strikes the lower extremities)
  2. The secondary impact (body is thrown onto the hood or windshield)
  3. The tertiary impact (body is flung onto the pavement)

This sequence explains why polytrauma (multiple simultaneous injuries) is the norm in pedestrian crashes, not the exception. Bumper injuries are the lower extremity fractures unique to pedestrians. Tibial plateau fractures, femur breaks, and pelvic ring disruption all result from that initial bumper-height strike.

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is common in pedestrian crashes because pedestrians have no head protection. TBI ranges from mild concussion to severe diffuse axonal injury with permanent cognitive deficits. Delayed-onset symptoms may appear days or weeks after the crash, which is why immediate medical evaluation is critical. Catastrophic pedestrian injuries require a Level I trauma center, and UMC El Paso is the only Level I facility within 270 miles.

The page on common pedestrian accident injuries breaks down each injury type, treatment costs, and how severity affects settlement value.

Where in El Paso these crashes happen matters for both your case and your safety.

El Paso Pedestrian Accident Data: Why Location Matters

El Paso County recorded 314 pedestrian accidents in 2025, continuing an increasing trend from 278 in 2023 and 263 in 2024, for a 3-year total of 855 crashes and 57 fatalities (TxDOT CRIS). Nearly 1 in 4 traffic deaths in the county (24.3%) is a pedestrian.

The four deadliest corridors for El Paso pedestrian crashes are roads that most residents cross or walk along daily.

  1. Mesa Street / Alameda Avenue (SH 20): 68 crashes in 3 years, the most dangerous pedestrian corridor in the county
  2. Montana Avenue (US 62): 48 crashes, with long stretches between crosswalks on a 40-45 mph road
  3. I-10 and feeder roads: 44 crashes, where pedestrians attempt to cross access roads near highway on-ramps
  4. Dyer Street (BU 54A): 24 crashes and 3 fatalities (12.5% fatality rate), the highest of any El Paso corridor

All four of these corridors are also Sun Metro Brio rapid transit routes. The Brio lines (Mesa Blue, Dyer Green, Alameda Purple, Montana Teal) place stops roughly 1 mile apart on 40 to 50 mph arterials, forcing riders to cross up to 7 lanes of traffic to reach bus stops. El Paso's fatality rate on 50+ mph roads is 36.2%, compared to 4.2% on 30 mph roads, making high-speed arterials 8.6 times deadlier for pedestrians (TxDOT CRIS, 2023–2025).

The complete dataset, including time-of-day patterns, age breakdowns, and hit-and-run trends, is available on the El Paso pedestrian accident statistics page.

More than 1 in 4 El Paso pedestrian crashes are hit-and-runs, and that number is increasing every year.

Hit-and-Run Pedestrian Accidents in El Paso

When a driver flees after hitting a pedestrian in El Paso, the victim can still recover compensation through uninsured motorist (UM) coverage under Texas Insurance Code §1952.101, even if the driver is never identified. Hit-and-run crashes account for 27.4% of all pedestrian accidents in El Paso County, and the trend is worsening.

Failure to stop and render aid under Texas Transportation Code §550.021 is a felony.

UM coverage follows the person, not the vehicle, so a pedestrian with their own auto policy can file a UM claim even though they weren't in a car. A pedestrian without their own policy may be covered under a household member's auto policy through resident relative coverage.

Insurance companies argue that without an identified driver, the pedestrian cannot prove liability. EPPD's Special Traffic Investigations unit and the city's 150 FLOCK automated license plate reader cameras have changed that equation. Even when the driver is never found, your UM insurer can only dispute causation and damages. They cannot deny the claim solely because the driver was unidentified.

A hit-and-run pedestrian accident lawyer in El Paso can guide you through the UM claim process and coordinate with EPPD's investigation.

Government Liability for Dangerous Crossings and Missing Sidewalks

The City of El Paso and TxDOT can be held liable for pedestrian accident injuries caused by dangerous road conditions under the Texas Tort Claims Act (Civil Practice and Remedies Code Chapter 101). The TTCA waives sovereign immunity for two categories relevant to pedestrian cases. The first is motor vehicle operation by a government employee. The second is condition of real property, which covers missing crosswalks, inadequate traffic signals, absent sidewalks, and defective lighting.

Pedestrian cases frequently involve government defendants because the infrastructure failure, not just the driver's conduct, caused the crash.

El Paso's own Vision Zero program, launched June 2023, acknowledged 124 pedestrian fatalities between 2016 and 2020, ranking El Paso the 18th deadliest metro for pedestrians nationally. The city secured a $9.9 million SS4A grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation for safety improvements along N. Yarbrough Drive. The program's existence strengthens government liability claims because it documents that the city knew about dangerous conditions.

Types of Pedestrian Accident Claims We Handle in El Paso

Pedestrian accident cases come in distinct forms, each with its own legal framework and defense strategy. 915 Injury handles all of the following claim types across El Paso and the surrounding area.

  • Crosswalk accidents (§552.003): Driver failed to stop and yield to a pedestrian in a marked or unmarked crosswalk. Strongest liability cases because driver right-of-way violation is negligence per se.

  • Jaywalking / outside crosswalk (§552.005): Pedestrian crossed outside a crosswalk, but driver still owed a duty of care under §552.008. Comparative fault applies. Recovery is reduced but not eliminated.

  • Hit-and-run pedestrian accidents (§550.021): Driver fled the scene. Recovery options include uninsured motorist claims and coordination with EPPD investigations.

  • DUI driver hitting pedestrian: Dram shop liability under Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code §2.02 may add the bar or restaurant as a defendant if the driver was visibly intoxicated when served. Punitive damages are available. Contact a drunk driving accident lawyer in El Paso if alcohol was a factor.

  • Child pedestrian accidents: §552.008 imposes heightened precaution when a driver observes a child. School zones in El Paso recorded only 8 pedestrian crashes and zero fatalities (CRIS 2023–2025), but residential streets and parking lots remain high-risk for children.

  • Parking lot pedestrian accidents: These claims fall under premises liability rather than traffic law. The property owner may share liability for poor lighting, absent signage, or blind corners.

  • Fatal pedestrian accidents (§71.001 wrongful death): A surviving spouse, children, or parents may bring a wrongful death action within 2 years of the date of death. A wrongful death attorney in El Paso handles the separate survival action for pre-death pain and medical expenses.

  • Vehicle-on-vehicle causing pedestrian injury: A car accident lawyer in El Paso handles cases where a vehicle collision pushes one car into a pedestrian, creating multiple liable parties.

The attorneys who handle these cases need specific knowledge of pedestrian law, not just general personal injury experience.

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FAQs - Pedestrian Accidents in El Paso

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Can a pedestrian be at fault for a car accident in Texas?

Yes. The fault percentage is not fixed by the police report or the adjuster. It is negotiated. The insurance adjuster's first move in almost every El Paso pedestrian case is to inflate the pedestrian's fault past 51% so the insurer pays nothing. That number is an opening position, not a legal finding. Your attorney counters with §552.008 (the driver's independent duty of care) and the specific evidence from the scene. The final fault split is decided by a jury or through settlement negotiation, not by the adjuster's letter.

What if I was jaywalking when I was hit by a car?

Jaywalking reduces your recovery but does not end your claim. What defeats the jaywalking argument is physical evidence of the driver's conduct. No skid marks means no braking attempt. A phone in the driver's hand at the time of impact means distracted driving. Vehicle speed calculated from the impact damage pattern can show the driver was exceeding the posted limit. Each of these facts shifts fault away from the pedestrian and onto the driver, often enough to keep the pedestrian's share well below the 51% bar.

How long do I have to file a pedestrian accident claim in Texas?

Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code §16.003 gives you 2 years from the date of the accident to file a lawsuit. For wrongful death, the 2-year clock starts on the date of death. If your claim involves a government entity, the deadline is much shorter and the rules are different. You must file a sworn, notarized Notice of Claim by certified mail before you can sue.

How much is a pedestrian accident settlement worth in El Paso?

The single biggest factor most victims can control is timing. Settling before maximum medical improvement (MMI) means the insurer has not seen the full medical picture, and early offers reflect that gap. The second factor is the at-fault driver's insurance limit. Most El Paso drivers carry the $30,000 state minimum, which forces your attorney to locate additional coverage through UIM policies, umbrella policies, or additional liable parties before the claim can settle at its actual value. The third factor is whether a government defendant is involved, because statutory caps limit recovery regardless of actual damages. Settlement ranges by injury tier are on the pedestrian accident settlements page.

Why are pedestrian accident injuries so severe?

Pedestrian accident injuries are more severe because the human body absorbs the full force of a vehicle with no protection. What this means for your case is that pedestrian claims almost always exceed the at-fault driver's minimum liability policy of $30,000. When that happens, your attorney must pursue underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage, identify additional defendants, or stack insurance policies to find enough recovery to cover your damages.

Can I sue the city if there was no crosswalk?

Yes, under the Texas Tort Claims Act (Chapter 101), if city-maintained infrastructure contributed to your crash. The hardest part of these claims is not the lawsuit itself. It is the sworn Notice of Claim you must file before you can sue. Miss the deadline and the claim is gone regardless of how strong the evidence is. That deadline is why you need an attorney the same week as the crash.

What should I do immediately after being hit by a car as a pedestrian?

Call 911 first. Do not move if you suspect a spinal injury. Ask witnesses to stay and provide statements. Photograph the scene, the vehicle, your injuries, and your clothing (clothing damage is evidence unique to pedestrian cases). Do not give a recorded statement to any insurance company before speaking with an attorney. The page on steps to take after a pedestrian accident in El Paso covers the full 72-hour evidence preservation timeline.

What not to tell your insurance company after a pedestrian accident?

Do not say "I'm fine" or "I feel okay" because adrenaline masking (a stress response that suppresses pain signals) can hide serious injuries for hours or days. Do not admit fault, apologize, or speculate about what happened. Do not agree to a recorded statement without your attorney present. Adjusters use these statements to argue that your injuries are minor or that you caused the accident.

 

What evidence do I need to prove a pedestrian accident claim?

The core evidence includes the police crash report (TxDOT CRIS, $8 certified copy), photographs of the scene and your injuries, medical records from the ER and all follow-up treatment, witness statements, and any available CCTV or dashcam footage. Preserve your clothing and shoes from the crash, as damage patterns can demonstrate speed at impact and point of contact. FLOCK ALPR cameras may capture the vehicle's license plate even in a hit-and-run.

 

What happens if a driver hits a pedestrian and drives away in Texas?

Leaving the scene is a felony under §550.021. You recover through your own UM/UIM policy (§1952.101), but filing a UM claim is not like filing a regular insurance claim. Your own insurer assigns a separate adjuster who treats you as an adversary. They hire an independent medical examiner to dispute your injuries. They argue your condition was pre-existing. They delay payment hoping you will accept less. Treating a UM claim like a routine process is the most common mistake hit-and-run victims make. Your attorney files the UM demand, handles the adversarial adjuster, and coordinates with EPPD's investigation to identify the driver.

What is the minimum sentence for a hit and run involving a pedestrian in Texas?

The penalty depends on injury severity. If the victim died, the charge is a second-degree felony (2 to 20 years, $10,000 fine, mandatory 120 days jail even with probation). Serious bodily injury is a third-degree felony (2 to 10 years, $10,000 fine). Any other injury is a state jail felony (up to 5 years or 1 year in county jail, $5,000 fine). These are criminal penalties under §550.021. The civil claim for your injuries is a separate proceeding.

What makes El Paso pedestrian accident cases different from other cities?

Two factors set El Paso apart. First, the City's sprawling geography and limited pedestrian infrastructure create evidence gaps. Many crash locations have no nearby CCTV cameras, and EPPD's FLOCK system covers only major corridors. Your attorney must move quickly to preserve whatever footage exists. Second, government liability claims are more common here because key corridors lack adequate crosswalks despite years of documented crash data.

Does El Paso's Vision Zero program affect how much you can recover in a pedestrian accident lawsuit?

 

Vision Zero does not change your damage calculation, but it can change whether you win the government liability claim at all. The difference is in how your attorney uses the program at trial. Vision Zero published corridor-specific crash data, ranked the most dangerous intersections, and set public timelines for safety improvements. When the city documented a dangerous pedestrian corridor in 2019 and still had not installed a crosswalk or signal by the date of your crash, that gap between knowledge and action is the evidence your attorney presents. The city cannot argue it did not know about the danger when its own program said it did. That is how Vision Zero converts a "we didn't know" defense into a losing argument for the government.

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