Los Angeles, CA Motorcycle Accident Spinal Injury

Motorcycle Accident Spinal Cord Injury in Los Angeles — California Legal Guide

Local courthouse filing procedures, California law, government entity deadlines, and what to do after a Motorcycle Accident Spinal Injury accident in Los Angeles. General legal information — not legal advice.

Written by Jayson Elliott, J.D.  ·  California-Licensed Attorney & Legal Writer Updated April 2026
Legal Information Notice

This page provides general legal information about Motorcycle Accident Spinal Injury accidents in Los Angeles, California. It is not legal advice. Consult a licensed California attorney for guidance specific to your case.

Motorcycle Accident Spinal Injury Accidents in Los Angeles

Los Angeles is one of California's highest-volume jurisdictions for Motorcycle Accident Spinal Injury cases. Local factors — freeway density, port traffic, construction activity, and commercial property concentration — shape both the frequency and the legal landscape of spinal cord injury claims arising in the city.

The same California law that governs statewide SCI claims applies in Los Angeles, but local conditions create important practical differences. Los Angeles's government entity defendants — including the Stanley Mosk Courthouse's jurisdiction and relevant public agencies — require government tort claims within six months under Government Code section 911.2, a deadline that must be tracked separately from the general two-year statute of limitations. Courthouse procedures, local expert witness pools, and jury composition also differ from other California jurisdictions in ways that affect SCI litigation strategy.

For the full legal framework governing Motorcycle Accident Spinal Injury cases under California law, including rights analysis, fault determination, insurance layers, and evidence requirements, see the Motorcycle Accident Spinal Cord Injury statewide guide.

California Law That Applies to Your Case

Motorcyclists have the same legal rights as car occupants under California law. California Vehicle Code section 21658.1 legalizes lane-splitting when done safely; riders lane-splitting lawfully retain full legal rights. Vehicle Code section 27803 requires DOT helmets; non-use may reduce damages attributable to head injuries but does not bar SCI recovery. The statute of limitations is two years under CCP section 335.1; government road defect claims require a tort claim within six months. Pure comparative fault applies. UM/UIM coverage under Insurance Code section 11580.2 is critical when the at-fault driver is underinsured.

For a full analysis of each of these rules — including comparative fault, insurance requirements, damage caps, and court procedures — see the California legal guide.

California Vehicle Code section 21658.1 permits motorcycle lane-splitting when done in a safe and prudent manner. A rider lane-splitting safely retains full legal rights when struck by a negligent driver. Whether specific lane-splitting was safe is evaluated against CHP guidelines considering speed differential, traffic density, and conditions.

Courts and Procedures in Los Angeles

Personal injury lawsuits for Motorcycle Accident Spinal Injury cases arising in Los Angeles are filed in the Unlimited Civil Division of the local Superior Court. Under California Code of Civil Procedure section 395, cases may be filed in the county where the injury occurred or where the defendant resides or has principal offices. All spinal cord injury cases — which routinely involve millions of dollars in claimed damages — are filed in the unlimited civil division, not the limited civil division.

Government entity claims against Los Angeles agencies require a written tort claim filed with the appropriate entity within six months of the incident under Government Code section 911.2. Failure to comply bars the lawsuit entirely. After rejection of the government claim, the injured person has six months to file the lawsuit.

Primary Courthouse

Stanley Mosk Courthouse

111 N. Hill Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012

What to Do After a Motorcycle Accident Spinal Injury in Los Angeles

  1. Call 911 and do not move. Local emergency services respond to serious injury accidents in Los Angeles. Wait for emergency responders to stabilize the spine before any movement. Improper movement can worsen an incomplete spinal cord injury.
  2. Accept full emergency evaluation and spinal imaging. Los Angeles's Level I trauma centers include LAC+USC Medical Center (1200 N. State St.), Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center (757 Westwood Plaza), Cedars-Sinai (8700 Beverly Blvd.). For SCI rehabilitation: Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center, Downey. Emergency room imaging records are the medical foundation of any SCI claim.
  3. Document the scene and preserve all evidence immediately. Photograph the accident location, any hazardous conditions, and all parties and vehicles involved. Send written preservation demands for surveillance footage within 48 hours. Scene conditions and footage are overwritten quickly.
  4. File a government tort claim within six months if a public entity is involved. Any claim against the City of Los Angeles, county agencies, or state entities must include a written government tort claim under Government Code section 911.2 before a lawsuit can proceed. This deadline runs concurrently with the two-year civil statute of limitations.
  5. Follow all prescribed medical treatment without gaps. Gaps in treatment are used by defense insurers to argue the injury has resolved or was less severe than claimed. Attend all specialist appointments, rehabilitation, and follow-up visits as scheduled.
  6. Confirm the applicable statute of limitations. California CCP section 335.1 provides two years from the date of injury for most SCI claims. Government entity deadlines are shorter. Filing the wrong deadline for the wrong defendant type is an irreversible error in California personal injury practice.

FAQs — Motorcycle Accident Spinal Injury in Los Angeles

Find a Motorcycle Accident Spinal Injury Attorney in Los Angeles

This page is educational. To find a licensed California attorney who handles Motorcycle Accident Spinal Injury cases in the Los Angeles area, use these verified directories.