If you were hurt in a hit and run accident in Fort Bend County, you have real legal options — even if the driver was never caught. Texas law and your own insurance policy may both provide paths to compensation.
Experienced Hit and Run Lawyers Serving Fort Bend County
Being struck by a driver who flees is one of the most frustrating situations a crash victim can face. You are hurt, possibly seriously, and the person responsible is gone. But that does not mean your case is over before it starts.
Varghese Summersett’s personal injury team has the skill and experience to pursue every avenue of recovery — from tracking down the at-fault driver to maximizing your uninsured motorist claim. The firm’s injury lawyers bring deep courtroom credentials and a proven track record. Ty Stimpson, who leads the Personal Injury Division, began his career as a prosecutor at both the Dallas County and Tarrant County District Attorney’s Offices before building a reputation for exceptional negotiation and trial results in personal injury cases. Partner Damian Williams is known for handling complex, high-stakes catastrophic injury and wrongful death matters.
If you’ve been injured in a hit-and-run crash, you don’t have to navigate the aftermath alone. Our team is prepared to step in immediately, investigate the facts, and fight for the compensation you deserve.
You've Seen Us On
Common Questions After a Fort Bend Hit and Run
After a hit and run crash, people typically have questions that go beyond the basics of who pays. Here are the concerns we hear most often.
What if the driver was never identified?
Your own uninsured motorist (UM) coverage may kick in even when the at-fault driver is unknown. Most Texas policies include this protection, and it can cover your medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering. An attorney can help you file and fight that claim.
What if I was a pedestrian or cyclist?
Hit and run crashes injure far more than just other drivers. If you were on foot, on a bike, or even a passenger in another vehicle, you may still have claims under your own policy, a household member’s policy, or against the at-fault driver if they are later identified. Our pedestrian accident and bicycle accident pages cover these situations in more detail.
Will hiring a lawyer actually help if I’m dealing with my own insurer?
Yes. Insurance companies — even your own — are motivated to minimize what they pay. Having an attorney changes the dynamic. It signals that you are prepared to fight, and it often results in meaningfully better outcomes than handling the claim alone.
Is it too late to file if some time has already passed?
Possibly not, but time matters. Texas imposes strict deadlines on personal injury claims. If you are close to that line, get legal advice immediately.
How Texas Law Applies to Hit and Run Injury Claims
Texas law requires every driver involved in a collision that causes injury or death to immediately stop at the scene, render reasonable aid, and provide their name, address, vehicle registration, and insurance information. This obligation comes from Texas Transportation Code § 550.021. A driver who flees has broken this law and exposed themselves to both criminal prosecution and civil liability.
To recover compensation in a personal injury case, the injured party must prove four elements by a preponderance of the evidence — meaning it is more likely than not that each element is true. The burden of proof is on the plaintiff (the injured person), not on the defendant.
- Duty: The other driver owed a duty of reasonable care to others on the road.
- Breach: The driver violated that duty — by speeding, running a light, driving while impaired, or any other negligent act that caused the collision.
- Causation: The breach directly caused the crash and your injuries.
- Damages: You suffered real, measurable harm — physical, financial, or emotional.
Texas follows a modified comparative fault rule under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code § 33.001. If you are found to be more than 50 percent at fault for the accident, you cannot recover anything. If your fault is 50 percent or below, your recovery is reduced by your percentage of responsibility. In most hit and run cases, the victim bears little to no fault — but insurers sometimes try to assign blame anyway.
What Damages Are Available in a Fort Bend Hit and Run Case?
Texas personal injury law allows injured victims to pursue both economic and non-economic damages. Economic damages are the out-of-pocket losses you can document with bills and records. Non-economic damages compensate for losses that are harder to quantify but no less real.
Economic damages typically include medical expenses (emergency care, surgery, hospitalization, physical therapy, and future treatment), lost wages and reduced earning capacity, vehicle repair or replacement, and other out-of-pocket costs tied to the injury.
Non-economic damages include physical pain and suffering, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life, disfigurement, and physical impairment. In cases involving a death, family members may also have a wrongful death claim under Texas law.
Statute of Limitations for Hit and Run Claims in Texas
Texas gives most personal injury victims two years to file a lawsuit. This deadline comes from Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code § 16.003. The clock generally starts on the date of the accident. Miss that deadline and you lose the right to sue — no matter how serious your injuries.
There are narrow exceptions, such as cases involving minors or cases where the victim did not immediately discover the injury. But relying on an exception is risky. If you are approaching the two-year mark, speak with an attorney right away.
Note that insurance policy deadlines can be even shorter. Many UM/UIM policies require prompt notice of a hit and run claim. Waiting too long to report can give the insurer grounds to deny coverage entirely.
What Is a Fort Bend Hit and Run Case Worth?
There is no standard number. Every case turns on specific facts: how serious your injuries are, how long your recovery takes, whether you missed work, and the insurance coverage available. A soft-tissue injury with a quick recovery looks very different from a fractured spine or a traumatic brain injury.
In hit and run cases, the total recovery is often shaped by two primary sources: the at-fault driver’s liability coverage (if they are ever identified) and your own UM/UIM coverage. The limits of your own policy become critically important when no other coverage exists. An attorney can review all applicable policies and help you understand the full landscape of potential recovery.
One of the most common mistakes injured people make is settling too quickly — before they know the full scope of their injuries or the long-term costs of their care. A lawyer can help you avoid that trap. Learn more about what to expect on our hit and run accidents page.
The Legal Process: What Happens After a Fort Bend Hit and Run
Understanding the road ahead can reduce the anxiety that comes with being injured and uncertain about what to do next.
The first step is reporting the crash to law enforcement and seeking medical care immediately — even if you feel okay. Symptoms from soft-tissue injuries and traumatic brain injuries often don’t appear for hours or days. A medical record created close in time to the accident is essential evidence in any later claim.
After the scene, gather everything you can: photos of your injuries and vehicle damage, witness contact information, dashcam footage from nearby vehicles, and traffic camera footage if available. Fort Bend County’s highway system along corridors like US-59, US-90, and the Grand Parkway (SH 99) means many intersections are monitored. That footage has a short retention window — often 30 days or less.
Once an attorney is retained, the firm will send preservation letters, conduct a thorough investigation, and file all required notices with the relevant insurers. If the at-fault driver is later identified, a demand package is prepared and sent to their insurer. If the driver remains unidentified, the UM claim proceeds under your own policy. If the insurer refuses to make a fair offer, the case moves into litigation.
Why Insurance Companies Fight Hit and Run Claims
Uninsured motorist claims are among the most frequently disputed in Texas. Insurance companies profit by paying out as little as possible, and UM claims are no exception. Common tactics include disputing whether the unknown vehicle actually made contact, challenging the severity of your injuries, arguing that pre-existing conditions account for your pain, demanding an independent medical examination by a doctor of their choosing, and making a lowball offer early — banking on the fact that injured, stressed people often accept the first number they hear.
Having an attorney changes that equation. A lawyer who is prepared to take your case to trial is a very different adversary than an unrepresented claimant. Our team knows how insurers think because several of our attorneys have worked in prosecution and insurance defense. We use that knowledge to build stronger cases and negotiate from a position of strength.
You can also learn more about how uninsured motorist coverage works on our uninsured motorist claims page, and read about how leaving the scene of an accident is prosecuted in Texas.
Fort Bend County Local Resources
If you were involved in a hit and run crash in Fort Bend County, here are the key resources to know:
- Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office — For crashes in unincorporated areas of the county. File your accident report promptly.fortbendcountytx.gov
- Sugar Land Police Department — Covers accidents within Sugar Land city limits.sugarlandtx.gov
- Missouri City Police Department — Jurisdiction for crashes in Missouri City.missouricitytx.gov
- Memorial Hermann Sugar Land Hospital — Full-service hospital in Sugar Land for non-life-threatening injuries.memorialhermann.org
- Memorial Hermann — Texas Medical Center — Level I Trauma Center approximately 25 miles north of Sugar Land; handles the most severe traumatic injuries.memorialhermann.org
- Fort Bend County District Courts (Richmond, TX) — Where civil personal injury litigation for Fort Bend County is filed. The 268th and 400th District Courts handle civil matters.
What to Expect From Varghese Summersett
From the moment you reach out, our team takes over the work. You will not be handed off to a paralegal or left wondering what is happening with your case. Here is what working with us looks like:
A free, no-pressure consultation. We listen to what happened, explain your options clearly, and tell you honestly whether we think you have a strong case. There is no obligation and no fee just for talking.
A full investigation. We move quickly to preserve evidence — traffic camera footage, witness statements, dashcam videos, cell tower data if the driver is a suspect — before it disappears. In hit and run cases, speed matters.
Experienced negotiators and trial lawyers. Our team includes former prosecutors who have tried hundreds of cases. Insurance companies know we are willing to go to trial, which strengthens our hand in every negotiation.
No fee unless we win. We take hit and run injury cases on contingency. You pay nothing out of pocket, and we only collect a fee if we recover money for you. Reach out to our Fort Bend personal injury team to get started.
Award-Winning Legal Excellence
Ask Varghese Summersett AI
Versus-AI has been taught everything from our website and is here to help you find the answers you need. Ask Versus-AI anything.
Watch: What Should You Do If You’re Involved in a Hit and Run Accident?
Our team breaks down the steps to take immediately after a hit and run crash in Texas — and how to protect your right to compensation.
Frequently Asked Questions: Fort Bend Hit and Run Accidents
Can I still recover compensation if the hit and run driver was never found?
Yes. If you have uninsured motorist coverage on your own policy — or through a household member’s policy — that coverage can compensate you even when the at-fault driver is never identified. Texas does not require physical contact in all UM situations, though policy language varies. An attorney can review your specific coverage and advise you on your options.
What if I don’t have uninsured motorist coverage?
If the driver is later found, you can pursue a claim directly against their liability insurance or file suit against them personally. If they are never found and you have no UM coverage, your options are more limited — but a thorough review of all applicable policies (employer policies, umbrella policies, rideshare policies, etc.) may reveal coverage you didn’t know existed.
How long do I have to report a hit and run in Texas?
You should report to law enforcement immediately. For insurance purposes, most policies require prompt notice, and some require you to report within a specific number of days. Waiting can give the insurer grounds to deny your UM claim. The legal deadline to file a lawsuit in Texas is generally two years from the date of the crash under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code § 16.003.
What evidence should I try to collect at the scene?
If you are physically able, take photos of your injuries, your vehicle, the road, and any debris. Note the direction the fleeing vehicle traveled and try to capture any partial license plate information. Look for witnesses and get their contact details. Write down your own account of events as soon as possible while the details are fresh. All of this strengthens both the police investigation and your civil claim.
Do I need a lawyer if I’m just filing a UM claim with my own insurer?
You are not legally required to have one — but having representation often makes a significant difference. UM claims are frequently disputed, and insurers may use the investigation process to build a case for minimizing your payout. A lawyer levels the playing field from the start and can pursue litigation if the insurer acts in bad faith.
Fort Bend County Personal Injury Practice Areas
Our Fort Bend County injury lawyers fight for maximum compensation
Main Pages
Vehicle Accidents
Wrongful Death
Injured in Fort Bend County? Get a free consultation.
If you or a family member was hurt in a hit and run crash anywhere in Fort Bend County — Sugar Land, Missouri City, Katy, Rosenberg, Stafford, or the unincorporated areas in between — Varghese Summersett is ready to help. Our injury lawyers work on contingency, meaning there is nothing to pay unless we win. To speak with a member of our team, call (281) 805-2220 or reach out online. The sooner you act, the better your chances of preserving the evidence your case depends on.