Probate Q&A Series

Can I recover my repair costs if I only have liability insurance and the city’s insurer is dragging its feet? – North Carolina

Short Answer

Yes—under North Carolina law you can pursue payment from the public entity responsible for the property if its negligence caused the damage. For a state university, you file a claim with the North Carolina Industrial Commission under the State Tort Claims Act. You must prove negligence (not just that a tree limb fell) and file within the standard time limits. While the claim is pending, a repair shop may legally hold your car until lawful charges are paid.

Understanding the Problem

You want to know if you can get your repair costs covered when you don’t have collision coverage and the government’s insurer is slow. In North Carolina, if a tree limb fell on your car on a state university campus, the path to recovery runs through a formal tort claim process, not your own policy. The key is whether you can show the public entity was negligent and that its negligence caused the damage.

Apply the Law

In North Carolina, property-damage claims against a state agency (including a state university) are brought before the North Carolina Industrial Commission under the State Tort Claims Act. You must prove the same basic elements as a negligence claim against a private party: duty, breach, causation, and damages. The forum is the Industrial Commission, not regular civil court. North Carolina follows strict contributory negligence, which can bar recovery if you were even slightly at fault. Claims generally must be filed within three years of the incident, but procedures and timelines can change.

Key Requirements

  • Negligence by the public entity: Show the state agency failed to use reasonable care (for example, by not inspecting or maintaining a hazardous tree) and that it had actual or constructive notice of the risk.
  • Causation and damages: The limb’s fall must be the direct cause of your property damage; document repair estimates, towing, and reasonable storage costs.
  • Forum and filing: File your claim with the North Carolina Industrial Commission; do not file in regular civil court for state-agency defendants.
  • Deadline: Property-damage claims are generally due within three years from the date of the incident.
  • Contributory negligence: If your own negligence contributed to the loss, recovery can be barred.
  • Repair shop lien limits: A shop may hold the vehicle for lawful repair, towing, and storage charges, but charges for unapproved work are restricted by the Motor Vehicle Repair Act.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because the limb fell on a state university campus, your route is a negligence claim against the State in the Industrial Commission. You’ll need evidence the university knew or should have known the tree was dangerous (for example, visible decay or prior complaints) and failed to act, and that this caused your damage. Your lack of collision coverage does not prevent recovery if you prove negligence; it just means you pursue the public entity directly. The shop can hold the car for reasonable, lawful charges, but it cannot demand payment for unapproved work beyond what the Repair Act allows.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: You (the vehicle owner). Where: North Carolina Industrial Commission, Tort Claims Section. What: Tort Claim Affidavit (commonly called Form T-1) with supporting evidence (photos, invoices, witness statements). When: Generally within three years of the date the limb fell.
  2. The Attorney General’s Office typically defends the state agency. Expect an investigation, possible mediation, and scheduling of a hearing before a Deputy Commissioner. This can take several months or more, depending on docket load.
  3. After the hearing, the Industrial Commission issues a written decision. If you prevail, it will award proven damages for the loss proximately caused by the negligence (e.g., reasonable repair, towing, and storage).

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Act-of-God events: If the limb fell during a sudden storm with no prior warning signs, the agency may not be negligent.
  • Contributory negligence: Any fault on your part can bar recovery; be careful with statements that could be construed as admitting fault.
  • Wrong forum: Do not file suit in regular court against a state university; use the Industrial Commission process.
  • Repair shop charges: Demand an itemized invoice and authorization record. Dispute unauthorized work in writing; remember the shop may still hold the car for lawful charges and can pursue lien-sale procedures if bills go unpaid.
  • Evidence gaps: Lack of proof that the agency knew or should have known of a hazardous tree condition can sink the claim; document prior complaints, visible decay, or maintenance lapses.

Conclusion

In North Carolina, you can recover repair costs from a state university only if you prove its negligence caused the damage. File a tort claim with the Industrial Commission, show notice of a hazardous tree condition, and document your losses. The main deadline is generally three years from the incident. Next step: prepare and file a Tort Claim Affidavit with the Industrial Commission’s Tort Claims Section and gather evidence of notice, causation, and damages.

Talk to a Other Legal Matters Attorney

If you’re dealing with government property damage and a stalled claim, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today.

Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.