Springfield IL Car Accident Lawyer | Phillips Law Offices

Car Accident lawyer Springfield

Springfield IL Car Accident Lawyer

Hit by a distracted, drunk, or hit-and-run driver in Springfield? Phillips Law Offices has handled Illinois car-accident cases since 1945. Free consultation. No fee unless we win.

A car crash on I-55 heading toward downtown, on I-72 east of the Capitol, or on a busy Springfield arterial like MacArthur Boulevard, Stevenson Drive, Wabash Avenue, or Veterans Parkway can change a family’s life in seconds. If you or someone you love was hurt in a car accident in Springfield, Chatham, Sherman, Rochester, Riverton, or anywhere across Sangamon County, the lawyers at Phillips Law Offices are ready to investigate, lock down the evidence, and pursue every dollar of compensation the law allows. Call (312) 346-4262 for a free, confidential case review.

Insurance companies start working a car-accident claim within hours of the crash. Their adjusters and investigators are paid to minimize what they pay you. Phillips Law Offices has been on the other side of those negotiations since 1945, recovering significant verdicts and settlements for injured Illinois drivers, passengers, pedestrians, and families. We do not bill by the hour and we do not get paid unless we recover compensation. Our attorneys handle the carrier, the medical lien negotiation, the comparative-fault dispute, and the court filing – so you can focus on healing.

Springfield car accident lawyer - Phillips Law Offices
Phillips Law Offices represents Springfield-area drivers and families after serious car crashes.

Recognized for results in Illinois personal-injury law

Eight decades of trial work has put the firm and its lawyers on the lists that matter. A sample of the recognitions on file:

Super Lawyers

Personal Injury – Plaintiff

Million Dollar Advocates Forum

Member

Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum

Member

Best Lawyers in America

Personal Injury Litigation – Plaintiffs

AV Preeminent

Martindale-Hubbell peer rating

Illinois Trial Lawyers Association

Member in good standing

American Association for Justice

Member

Chicago Bar Association

Member

No aspect of these advertisements has been approved by the Supreme Court of Illinois. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.

Car crashes in Springfield and Sangamon County: where and why they happen

Springfield sits at the convergence of three interstates – I-55 running north-south between Chicago and St. Louis, I-72 cutting east-west between Quincy and Champaign, and I-155 connecting to Peoria. Inside the city, MacArthur Boulevard (Route 4), Stevenson Drive, Wabash Avenue, South Grand Avenue, Veterans Parkway, and Dirksen Parkway carry the bulk of commuter and commercial traffic. With the State Capitol complex, HSHS St. John’s Hospital, Memorial Medical Center, the University of Illinois Springfield campus, and a steady flow of state-government and lobbying traffic, downtown intersections and the I-55 / Stevenson Drive interchange see consistent crash volume year-round.

Crashes in the Springfield area are tried in the Seventh Judicial Circuit (Sangamon County) and, where federal jurisdiction applies, the U.S. District Court for the Central District of Illinois sitting in Springfield. Phillips Law Offices is admitted in all Illinois state and federal courts and represents injured clients across central Illinois, traveling for depositions, mediation, and trial when the case demands it.

Common causes we see in Springfield car crashes

  • Distracted driving – texting, phone use, and infotainment screens. Illinois bans hand-held mobile phone use behind the wheel under 625 ILCS 5/12-610.2.
  • Drunk and impaired driving – DUI per-se at 0.08 BAC under 625 ILCS 5/11-501, plus drugged-driving cases involving cannabis and prescription medication.
  • Speeding and aggressive driving on I-55, I-72, Veterans Parkway, and MacArthur Boulevard.
  • Following too closely – rear-end and chain-reaction crashes on I-55 and Veterans Parkway during rush hour.
  • Failure to yield on left turns across oncoming traffic at intersections along MacArthur Boulevard, Wabash Avenue, and Stevenson Drive (625 ILCS 5/11-902).
  • Running red lights and stop signs at busy crossings like MacArthur and Wabash.
  • Hit-and-run – leaving the scene of a personal injury or property-damage crash in violation of 625 ILCS 5/11-401 and 5/11-403.
  • Drowsy and fatigued driving on late-night I-55 and I-72 trips and early-morning commutes.
  • Bad weather – snow, ice, fog, and reduced visibility on Stevenson Drive and South Grand Avenue.
  • Vehicle defects – brake, tire, airbag, or fuel-system failures that turn a routine collision into a catastrophic injury.

Injuries that bring families to a car accident lawyer

  • Whiplash and cervical spine injury
  • Traumatic brain injury and concussion
  • Herniated discs (lumbar and cervical) and spinal cord damage
  • Orthopedic fractures – wrist, ankle, ribs, pelvis, femur
  • Internal organ injury and internal bleeding
  • Burns and lacerations from broken glass or airbag deployment
  • Psychological injury – anxiety, PTSD, fear of driving
  • Wrongful death of a spouse, parent, or child

Who is liable in a Springfield car crash

Identifying every defendant is how we unlock the layered insurance coverages that make full recovery possible.

  • The at-fault driver – for the operational negligence that caused the crash.
  • The vehicle owner if different from the driver (family-purpose or permissive use).
  • An employer if the at-fault driver was on the clock or running a work errand (respondeat superior).
  • A bar or liquor licensee in a dram-shop claim where a visibly intoxicated patron was over-served, under 235 ILCS 5/6-21.
  • A vehicle or component manufacturer for defective brakes, tires, airbags, fuel systems, or seat-belt restraints.
  • A government entity in narrow circumstances – for example a dangerous roadway condition – subject to the strict notice and limitations rules of the Tort Immunity Act, 745 ILCS 10/8-101.
  • Your own auto insurer for UM/UIM benefits when the at-fault driver is uninsured, underinsured, or fled the scene.

The Illinois law that drives a car crash case

  • Statute of limitations – personal injury: two years from the date of the crash under 735 ILCS 5/13-202.
  • Wrongful death: two years under 740 ILCS 180/2.
  • Property damage: five years under 735 ILCS 5/13-205.
  • Modified comparative fault (50% bar): 735 ILCS 5/2-1116.
  • Mandatory auto insurance and UM/UIM: 215 ILCS 5/143a.
  • Duty to report and remain at the scene (hit-and-run): 625 ILCS 5/11-401 and 5/11-403.
  • DUI per-se at 0.08 BAC: 625 ILCS 5/11-501.
  • Hand-held mobile prohibition: 625 ILCS 5/12-610.2.
  • Duty to yield on left turn: 625 ILCS 5/11-902.
  • Tort Immunity (1 year + notice for local-government defendants): 745 ILCS 10/8-101.

What to do in the first 72 hours after a Springfield car crash

  1. Get medical attention first. Concussions, internal injuries, and soft-tissue damage often present hours or days later. Go to HSHS St. John’s Hospital, Memorial Medical Center in downtown Springfield, or an urgent care, and follow up with your primary doctor.
  2. Call 911 and make sure a written crash report is generated. the Springfield Police Department, Sangamon County Sheriff, and, on the interstates, Illinois State Police District 9 handle most local roads and the interstates in this corridor.
  3. Photograph everything you can – vehicle positions, debris field, skid marks, traffic signals, road conditions, license plates, all visible damage, and your own injuries.
  4. Get names and contact info for the other driver, every passenger, every witness, and the responding officers. Note the report number before you leave.
  5. Do not give a recorded statement to the other driver’s insurer. They call within 24 to 48 hours specifically because they know you are still in shock. You are not required to talk to them.
  6. Call a Springfield car accident lawyer right away. Surveillance video, traffic-signal data, and event-data recorder (EDR/black-box) downloads can be lost on rolling cycles. A preservation letter has to go out fast.

How Phillips Law Offices investigates a Springfield car case

  1. Day 1 – Evidence preservation. We put the at-fault driver, their insurer, and any nearby business with surveillance cameras on written notice to preserve dash-cam, EDR data, security video, and cell-phone records.
  2. Scene reconstruction. Where the injuries warrant it, we retain accident-reconstruction engineers to map the crash, calculate speeds, and document sight lines, signage, and roadway conditions.
  3. Medical workup. We coordinate with treating physicians and, in serious-injury cases, life-care planners and vocational economists to project future medical costs and lost earning capacity.
  4. Insurance and coverage discovery. We identify every layer of coverage – the at-fault driver’s liability policy, any umbrella or employer policy, dram-shop coverage where applicable, plus your own UM/UIM benefits.
  5. Resolution. Most cases resolve through pre-suit negotiation or mediation. When the insurer will not pay fair value, we file suit in the Seventh Judicial Circuit (Sangamon County) and try the case.

Talk to a Springfield car accident lawyer today

Free consultation. No fee unless we win. Call (312) 346-4262 or use our contact form and we will call you back the same business day. We answer the phone 24/7 and bilingual intake is available.

Meet the attorneys who will work on your case

Stephen D. Phillips

Stephen D. Phillips

Managing Partner. Decades of trial experience in serious-injury and wrongful-death litigation.

Stephen J. Phillips

Stephen J. Phillips

Partner. Focuses on complex personal-injury and motor-vehicle cases throughout Illinois.

Michael J. Phillips

Michael J. Phillips

Partner. Wide trial experience in auto, truck, and premises-liability matters.

Terrence M. Quinn

Terrence M. Quinn

Partner. Litigation focus on catastrophic injury, wrongful death, and trial practice.

Alec D. Mesrobian

Alec D. Mesrobian

Associate. Works on case investigation, discovery, and trial preparation in serious-injury matters.

What to expect when you hire Phillips Law Offices

Once you retain us, the first 30 days are heavy. We open the file, send preservation letters to every party that might hold evidence, request the crash report, order your medical records, and put the at-fault insurer on notice of the claim. You are not chasing paperwork – we are. Most of our communication with you in those first weeks is checking in on your treatment and answering questions about how the comparative-fault rule, the UM/UIM policy stacking, or the medical-lien claw-back will affect your net recovery.

Once treatment plateaus and we have the full medical picture, we send a comprehensive demand package to the insurer. That package includes a written narrative, medical bills and records, lost-wage documentation from your employer, witness statements, photographs, and case law on similar Illinois verdicts. If the insurer engages in good faith, we resolve the case in mediation or pre-suit negotiation. If they lowball or stall, we file suit in the appropriate Illinois circuit court and litigate the case through discovery, depositions, expert witness work, and, when necessary, trial.

What our Illinois clients have said

“Stephen Phillips and his team were absolutely incredible to work with. They were professional, responsive, and genuinely cared about my case.”

Reagan Tokoly

“Phillips Law Offices handled my case with professionalism and care. They kept me informed throughout the entire process.”

Brandon DeWitt

“The team at Phillips Law Offices was outstanding. They fought hard for my case and got me the compensation I deserved.”

Dani Berny

Client testimonials reflect individual experiences and are not a guarantee of any particular result. Every case is unique and is evaluated on its own facts.

Car-accident FAQs

How long do I have to file a car accident lawsuit in Springfield, Illinois?

Illinois gives most adult personal-injury plaintiffs two years from the date of the crash to file suit under 735 ILCS 5/13-202. Wrongful-death claims also follow a two-year window under 740 ILCS 180/2. If a municipal defendant is involved, the Tort Immunity Act (745 ILCS 10/8-101) shortens the window to one year and requires formal notice.

Can a Chicago-based firm handle my Springfield car accident case?

Yes. Phillips Law Offices is admitted in all Illinois state and federal courts, including the Seventh Judicial Circuit (Sangamon County) and the U.S. District Court for the Central District of Illinois sitting in Springfield. We represent injured clients across central Illinois and travel for depositions, mediations, and trial when the case calls for it.

What if the at-fault driver was uninsured or fled the scene?

File an uninsured motorist (UM) claim under your own auto policy or a resident relative’s policy. Illinois requires every auto policy to include UM/UIM coverage under 215 ILCS 5/143a. Hit-and-run is treated as an uninsured-motorist event for UM purposes. The driver who fled also faces criminal exposure under 625 ILCS 5/11-401 and 5/11-403.

What if I was partly at fault for the Springfield car crash?

Illinois follows modified comparative fault under 735 ILCS 5/2-1116. You can still recover if you are 50% or less at fault, with damages reduced by your share. Cross the 50% line and recovery is barred.

Should I give a recorded statement to the other driver’s insurance company?

No. You are not required to give the other driver’s insurer a recorded statement and you should not. Insurers routinely use those statements – taken while you are still injured, medicated, or in shock – to challenge symptoms that develop later. Talk to a lawyer first.

How much is my Springfield car accident case worth?

It depends on the severity of your injuries, your medical bills, lost wages and future earning capacity, pain and suffering, loss of normal life, and the available insurance coverage on both sides. Every case is evaluated on its own facts and past results are not a guarantee.

Do I have to pay anything upfront to hire Phillips Law Offices?

No. Springfield car-accident cases are handled on a contingency fee. There are no hourly bills and no out-of-pocket cost to retain us. We advance the case costs and are reimbursed from the recovery. If there is no recovery, you owe us nothing.

Hablamos español

Si usted o un ser querido resultó herido en un accidente automovilístico en Springfield o en cualquier parte de Illinois, llámenos al (312) 346-4262. La consulta es gratis y no cobramos honorarios a menos que ganemos su caso de accidente de auto.

Contact our Springfield car accident attorney

If you have been hurt in a car crash in Springfield, Chatham, Sherman, Riverton, Rochester, Jerome, Leland Grove, or anywhere across Sangamon County and central Illinois, call Phillips Law Offices at (312) 346-4262 for a free, no-obligation case review. The sooner we get the preservation letter out and the investigation started, the stronger your case will be.

Free, confidential case review

Phillips Law Offices, 161 N Clark St #4925, Chicago, IL 60601. Monday-Friday, 9am-5pm. Calls answered 24/7.

Springfield to Phillips Law Offices, North Clark St, Chicago


Related Phillips Law Offices car accident pages

Page reviewed by the attorneys at Phillips Law Offices. The information on this page is for general education only and is not legal advice. Reading this page does not create an attorney-client relationship. Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome. No aspect of these advertisements has been approved by the Supreme Court of Illinois.

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