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Personal Injury Incidents: Accidents With Vehicles or Vessels, Among Other Things


Question: When can I sue for injuries from a vehicle or boating accident in Ontario?

Answer: Empowered Legal Services is a Professional Legal Advocacy Team serving Ontario that can review whether your incident involves an “automobile” claim with limits on suing beyond no-fault accident benefits, or a vessel or machinery incident where negligence claims may be available even for less severe injuries.  They can also help assess potential liability of drivers, owners, or other responsible parties and the best path to compensation.


Liability Risk Arising From Operation of Vehicles and Vessels Among Other Types of Machinery

Injuries arising from an automobile accident, a boating accident, or by some other type of vehicle or vessel, are addressed somewhat differently and by somewhat different systems of law.  Indeed, the right to sue for injury arising from an automobile accident is specifically limited.

Accidents With Vehicles

In Ontario, when a person is injured in an automobile accident, whereas automobile is defined as including cars, trucks, motorcycles, snowmobiles, and any other vehicle designed for the purpose of transporting persons or property, thus excluding devices such as mobile cranes and other machinery designed to perform a primary function other than transporting persons or property, the injuries must be significantly severe before a lawsuit seeking compensation is permitted by law.

Everyone who drives, or otherwise operates, an automobile on public roadways or public places, meaning places other than your own private property, are required to abide by the rules of the road prescribed within the Highway Traffic Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. H.8, and required to carry insurance in accordance to the Compulsory Automobile Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. C.25, among other laws.  When a driver fails to abide by the Highway Traffic Act, among other laws, the driver may be found negligent for failing to drive with the proper degree of care and caution.  If, due to negligence, or worse carelessness or recklessness, a driver causes a vehicle accident resulting in serious injuries, a lawsuit for compensation may arise.

Interestingly, in Ontario, where a statutory insurance system prescribes a no-fault system, the right to sue in tort law, meaning for wrongful operation of an automobile by another driver, is limited to accidents involving serious injuries only.  If injuries arising from the accident fail to qualify as serious enough, then the injury victim may claim compensation under the Statutory Accident Benefits Schedule only.  However, if injuries are serious enough, then the injury victim may claim compensation under the Statutory Accident Benefits Schedule as well as by suing the driver who caused the accident, and possibly the vehicle owner, among others.

To determine whether injuries are serious enough to sue for compensation beyond the compensation beyond that provided within the Statutory Accident Benefits Schedule, contact Empowered Legal Services for assistance.

Accidents With Vessels

Unlike the restriction upon suing for injuries arising from a vehicle accident, where injuries arising from an incident involving a vessel, such as a boat, a canoe, or another waterborne object providing a mode of transportation, motorized or otherwise, the right to sue for compensation is available for relatively minor injuries as well as severe harm including death.

Similar to how the Highway Traffic Act prescribes the rules of the road for operation of automobiles, the Small Vessel Regulations, SOR/2010-91 as a regulation to the Canada Shipping Act 2001, S.C. 2001, Chapter 26, prescribes the rules of the lakes for boats and such.

Interestingly, and unfortunately, in recent years, serious incidents on Ontario waterways have increased significantly and lawsuits arising from the resulting injuries are becoming more common.  The broadly publicized incident involving Linda O'Leary, the wife of celebrity Kevin O'Leary, is just one example.

Accidents With Equipment, among other things

In addition to vehicles and vessels, farm implements, construction machinery, among other things, can be dangerous and cause injuries that lead to litigation that seeks compensation.  Generally, when equipment and machinery is involved in an injury causing accident, unlike vehicles and vessels, the common law relating to negligence applies.

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NOTE: A significant number of online searches featuring terms such as “lawyers close to me” or “top lawyer in” frequently indicate a desire for swift and proficient legal assistance rather than a specific job title.  In Ontario, licensed paralegals are governed by the same Law Society that regulates lawyers and have the authority to represent clients in specified legal disputes.  Advocacy, legal reasoning, and procedural expertise are at the heart of this profession.  Empowered Legal Services provides legal representation within its licensed parameters, focusing on strategic positioning, evidence preparation, and persuasive advocacy designed to achieve prompt and advantageous outcomes for clients.

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