You hit a patch of ice on a West Virginia back road, lost control, and ended up in a ditch. No other vehicle was involved. It’s easy to assume that the weather was the only cause, that there’s nobody to hold accountable, and that you’re stuck paying for everything yourself. That’s not always true. A single car accident due to weather often involves factors that go well beyond the forecast, and another party’s negligence may have played a direct role in your crash. If you’re dealing with injuries and mounting bills after a weather-related accident, call our experienced West Virginia car accident lawyers at 304-842-4300 now for a free consultation. You don’t pay us unless we win.
Weather Alone Rarely Tells The Whole Story
Rain, ice, fog, and snow create hazardous driving conditions across West Virginia every year. But weather alone doesn’t cause most crashes. What causes them is the combination of weather and something else, something a person or entity had a duty to address.
Road conditions that point to someone else’s negligence
Look past the weather itself and ask what made the road unreasonably dangerous.
- Unplowed or untreated roads: If a municipality or the West Virginia Division of Highways (WVDOH) knew a storm was coming and failed to salt, plow, or treat a road in a reasonable timeframe, that failure could constitute negligence.
- Poor drainage: Standing water on a roadway that causes hydroplaning is often a design or maintenance failure, not a weather problem.
- Missing or obscured signage: A sharp curve with no warning sign, or a sign buried behind overgrowth, can be deadly in low-visibility conditions.
- Debris and fallen trees: If a government agency or property owner knew about a hazard and didn’t clear it, they may be liable.
- Road defects: Potholes, crumbling shoulders, and missing guardrails become exponentially more dangerous in bad weather.
If any of these factors contributed to your single-car accident due to weather, you may have a claim against the responsible party.
Government Liability For Dangerous Road Conditions
Government entities, including municipalities, counties, and the WVDOH, have a duty to maintain public roadways. But suing the government in West Virginia isn’t straightforward.
The Governmental Tort Claims Act and its limits
Under West Virginia’s Governmental Tort Claims and Insurance Reform Act (W. Va. Code § 29-12A), political subdivisions are immune from liability for “snow or ice conditions or temporary or natural conditions on any public way or other public place due to weather conditions, unless the negligent act of a political subdivision affirmatively causes the condition.”
That last part is critical. If the government’s own negligence created or worsened the hazard (for example, an improperly designed drainage system that caused flooding on the roadway), immunity may not apply. The distinction between a natural weather condition and a condition the government negligently allowed to develop is where these cases are won or lost.
Claims against political subdivisions must generally be brought within two years after the cause of action arose or after the injury was discovered or reasonably should have been discovered. Strict procedural requirements apply, including notice provisions. Missing a single deadline can end your claim. An attorney with experience in these cases can help you navigate these rules.
Other Parties Who May Be Liable
The government isn’t the only potentially responsible party in a weather-related single-car accident. Consider these possibilities.
- Construction companies: If a road construction project left hazards (uneven pavement, absent lane markings, improper signage), the contractor may be liable for any accident due to weather conditions that those hazards made worse.
- Other drivers: Maybe you didn’t collide with another vehicle, but another driver forced you to swerve. That driver can still be held responsible for your injuries, even if they drove off.
- Property owners: If water runoff from private property flooded a roadway, or if a landowner failed to address a known hazard near a public road, they could share liability.
Identifying all potentially liable parties is essential. It often takes a thorough investigation to determine exactly why you lost control and who should be held accountable.
What If No One Else Is Liable?
Sometimes the weather is the only factor, and no third party bears fault. If that’s the case, your options shift to insurance coverage.
Insurance coverage that may apply
- Collision coverage: If you carry collision insurance on your auto policy, it covers damage to your vehicle regardless of fault. This is your primary coverage in a single-vehicle weather accident.
- Uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage: In certain scenarios (for example, if an unidentified driver forced you off the road), your UM coverage may come into play.
- Medical payments (MedPay) coverage: If included on your policy, MedPay covers your medical expenses regardless of who caused the accident.
Don’t assume that your accident due to weather conditions leaves you without options. Review your policy carefully, or better yet, let an attorney review it for you.
Need help figuring out who’s responsible? Call 304-842-4300 now. We’ll evaluate your case for free.
How West Virginia Assesses Fault In Weather-Related Crashes
Fault matters in every car accident case, including single-vehicle crashes. Under W. Va. Code § 55-7-13a, West Virginia uses a modified comparative fault standard where liability is allocated to each person (including plaintiffs, defendants, and nonparties) in direct proportion to that person’s percentage of fault.
Under W. Va. Code § 55-7-13c, fault attributable to the plaintiff won’t bar recovery unless the plaintiff’s fault is greater than the combined fault of all other responsible parties. In practical terms, this means you can recover compensation as long as you’re 50% or less at fault. Your percentage of responsibility reduces your recovery.
This is where weather-related accidents become complicated. Insurance companies love to argue that you were driving too fast for conditions or should have stayed home. An attorney with experience handling car accident cases can push back on those arguments and build a case that places fault where it belongs: on the entity that failed to maintain a safe road or the driver who forced you to swerve.
West Virginia’s Two-Year Filing Deadline
Under W. Va. Code § 55-2-12, personal injury claims must be brought within two years from the date the right to bring the action accrued. Miss this deadline, and your claim is gone, no matter how strong it is.
Two years sounds like a long time, but evidence in weather-related cases disappears fast. Road conditions change. Maintenance records are lost. Witnesses forget details. The sooner you act, the stronger your case will be.
Don’t wait. Contact Kaufman & McPherson, PLLC now. Call 304-842-4300 for a free consultation. We handle car accident cases throughout West Virginia from our Bridgeport office, and you don’t pay us a dime unless we recover compensation for you. Start your case now.