Preserve proof now
Save photos, medical records, witness names, bills, repair estimates, and insurance communications before details get harder to recover.
Evidence checklistMissouri | Personal Injury
Missouri injury claims depend on filing deadlines, venue, insurance issues, and proof. This page connects the statewide deadline to the local court path for O'Fallon.
Start here
If you only have a few minutes, use this block to preserve evidence, find records, and keep the filing clock visible.
Save photos, medical records, witness names, bills, repair estimates, and insurance communications before details get harder to recover.
Evidence checklistO'Fallon Police Department may hold crash or incident records if it handled the scene.
Police websiteMissouri generally uses a five-year limitations period for personal injury claims.
View deadlinesOn this page
Local directory
Use these contacts to confirm court dates, request records, verify office hours, or find the correct agency before visiting.
Office
Municipal Police
For city police reports, local crash records, and O'Fallon law-enforcement questions.
Official websiteMissouri License Office
Missouri DOR license office serving O'Fallon-area driver-license and motor-vehicle transactions.
Official websiteLocal office locations
The map is a quick orientation tool. Confirm the right office and hours before traveling.
Local guide
St. Charles County Circuit Court is the local court reference for civil injury cases connected to O'Fallon.
O'Fallon Police Department is the first local agency to check for city crash or incident records when it handled the scene.
Missouri generally uses a five-year limitations period for personal injury claims.
Key deadlines
Medical records, photographs, repair estimates, crash reports, witness names, and insurance communications should be preserved early.
Claims involving public vehicles, public property, or government defendants can have shorter notice requirements than ordinary injury claims.
Missouri generally uses a five-year limitations period for personal injury claims.
Missouri law
Most injury claims turn on fault, causation, damages, insurance coverage, and whether the injury can be proven with records and witnesses.
Missouri generally uses a five-year limitations period for personal injury claims.
O'Fallon Police Department or the county agency that handled the scene may have crash or incident reports needed for an insurance claim.
Civil injury lawsuits are usually filed in the circuit court connected to the county where venue is proper.
Process
Court reference
300 N. Second Street, St. Charles, MO 63301
Missouri claims
Claim value depends on liability, medical proof, causation, available insurance, lost wages, permanent injury, and venue.
Who was legally at fault and whether comparative fault can reduce recovery.
Diagnosis, treatment history, bills, future care, and whether symptoms are tied to the incident.
Available liability coverage, uninsured motorist coverage, med-pay, and liens can change net recovery.
Lost wages, pain, impairment, scarring, and permanency can all matter.
Fault and proof
The claim usually starts by proving another person or business failed to act reasonably.
Medical and factual proof must connect the incident to the injury being claimed.
The other side may argue the injured person was partly or fully responsible.
Reports, photographs, medical records, and witness statements often decide the practical strength of the claim.
Insurance and settlement
Notify the relevant insurer and keep written confirmation of claim numbers and adjuster contacts.
Collect medical bills, treatment notes, wage records, photos, and out-of-pocket expenses.
Health insurance, medical providers, Medicare, Medicaid, or workers' compensation may assert repayment rights.
Settlement paperwork usually ends the claim, so the release should match the intended scope.
Attorney question
A personal injury claim can have serious financial and legal consequences if deadlines, evidence, medical documentation, insurance issues, or settlement terms are handled incorrectly. People often consider talking with a O'Fallon personal injury attorney when injuries are serious, fault is disputed, medical bills are growing, an insurer asks for a recorded statement, or a government vehicle or public property may be involved. Seeking legal advice from a licensed Missouri attorney is strongly recommended before making decisions that could affect a claim.
Fault, causation, medical documentation, witness issues, and comparative fault arguments can all affect whether a claim succeeds.
Injury claims can involve liability coverage, medical payments coverage, health-insurance liens, subrogation, uninsured motorist issues, or disputed settlement terms.
Useful records may include the crash or incident report, photographs, medical records, bills, wage documents, insurance letters, claim numbers, and repair estimates.
This page does not recommend a specific lawyer and is not legal advice. It is meant to help you identify the local court, records, and insurance context that may matter before you contact a Missouri personal injury attorney.
Nearby areas
FAQ
Missouri generally uses a five-year limitations period for personal injury claims.
Civil injury lawsuits are usually filed in the circuit court connected to the county where venue is proper.
Medical records, insurance coverage, crash reports, photographs, witness information, and any government notice deadline should be reviewed early.