Serving All of Montana No Fee Unless We Win Free Case Review · Available 24/7
Special Situations

Distracted Driving Accident Claims in Montana

Distracted driving — texting, phone use, and other inattention — is a growing cause of Montana crashes. When a distracted driver hurts you, proving that distraction can strengthen your claim significantly.

Distraction and Liability

A driver who causes a crash while distracted is negligent. Establishing that the at-fault driver was on their phone or otherwise inattentive helps prove they breached their duty to drive safely, supporting your claim for full compensation.

Montana communities have varying local rules on phone use while driving, but regardless of the specific ordinance, distraction that causes a crash is evidence of negligence.

Proving the Other Driver Was Distracted

Distraction can be shown through phone records, the driver's own admissions, witness accounts, surveillance or dashcam footage, and the physical evidence of the crash — for example, a rear-end collision with no braking. Phone records in particular can establish use at the moment of impact and are obtainable in litigation.

Acting quickly to preserve this evidence, before records are lost, helps build the case.

Why It Matters to Your Recovery

Beyond establishing fault, clear evidence of distraction can affect how seriously an insurer takes the claim and, in egregious cases, may support a claim for punitive damages where the conduct rises to the level required under Montana law. It also undercuts any attempt to shift blame onto you.

Strong proof of the other driver's inattention keeps fault where it belongs.

Hold Distracted Drivers Accountable

If you were hurt by a distracted driver in Montana, an attorney can pursue the evidence needed to prove it.

Call 973-566-5599 for a free review of your claim.

Frequently Asked Questions

Through phone records, admissions, witnesses, video, and crash evidence like a failure to brake. Phone records can often be obtained in litigation to show use at the time of impact.

In egregious cases, distraction may support punitive damages, but Montana sets a high bar requiring actual malice or fraud. It always strengthens the liability case.

Have questions about your own situation? Get a free, confidential case review. You pay no fee unless you win. Call 973-566-5599.

This article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. For guidance on your specific situation, consult a licensed Montana attorney. Injury Claim Team is a legal referral and lead-generation service, not a law firm.

Injured in Montana? Get Your Free Case Review Today.

There's no cost and no obligation. Find out what your claim may be worth — a specialist will reach out within the hour.

Tap to Call — Free Consultation