The Toll of Impaired Driving in Montana
Montana has long struggled with impaired driving, and the human cost is severe. Drunk and drugged drivers cause high-speed, often head-on crashes on rural highways where help is far away. Victims and families face catastrophic injuries, wrongful death, and lasting trauma. A criminal DUI case may punish the driver, but it does not compensate the victim — that requires a separate civil injury claim.
Civil Claims and Punitive Damages
Beyond the compensatory damages available in any injury case — medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering — drunk-driving crashes may support punitive damages, which are intended to punish especially reckless conduct and deter others. Montana law allows punitive damages where a defendant acted with actual malice or, in some cases, fraud, and choosing to drive while impaired can support such a claim. Additionally, Montana's dram shop principles may allow claims against a bar or establishment that unlawfully over-served a visibly intoxicated person who then caused a crash.
Protecting Your Claim
Preserve the police report and any evidence of the driver's impairment, seek medical care, and document your injuries and losses. A civil claim proceeds independently of the criminal case, and your attorney can coordinate with it. Montana's three-year statute of limitations generally applies to the injury claim.
Montana deadline: Most drunk driving accident claims must be filed within three years from the date of injury under the statute of limitations. Evidence fades fast — don't wait to learn your rights.
Drunk Driving Accident FAQs in Montana
Yes. The criminal case punishes the driver but doesn't compensate you. A separate civil claim pursues your damages and can proceed alongside the criminal case.
Possibly. Drunk driving can support punitive damages, which punish reckless conduct, in addition to compensation for your actual losses.
In some cases. Montana's dram shop principles may allow a claim against an establishment that unlawfully over-served a visibly intoxicated person who then caused the crash.