West Virginia Code § 55-7-11a

Settlement, release or statement within twenty days after personal
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
injury; disavowal; certain expressions of sympathy inadmissible as evidence.
(a) If a person sustains a personal injury, no person shall within twenty days from the date of
the personal injury while the injured person is either: (i) An inpatient in any hospital; or (ii)
partially or totally unable to engage in his or her usual trade, profession or occupation:
(1) Negotiate or attempt to negotiate a settlement of any claim for such personal injury with
or for and on behalf of the injured person;
(2) Obtain or attempt to obtain from the injured person a partialu or general release of
liability for such injury; or
(3) Obtain or attempt to obtain any statement, either written or oral, from the injured person
for use in negotiating a settlement or obtaining a partiaal or general release of liability with
respect to the personal injury: Provided, That nothing herein shall prohibit a person acting
or intending to act for and on behalf of the injured lperson from obtaining any statement, oral
or written, from an injured person upon the exspress request of the injured person.
Nothing herein shall prevent a person whoi may be liable for damages on account of the
personal injury from making an advance payment of all or any part of his or her liability for
the damages; any sum paid during the twenty days by a person liable for damages on
account of the personal injury is allowed as full credit against any damages which may be
finally determined to be due an injured person.
Any settlement, release of liability or statement entered into, obtained or made in violation
of this section may be disavowed by the injured person at any time within one hundred
eighty days from the date of the personal injury by executing a written statement of
disavowal andV thereupon forwarding a copy of the same to the person violating this section,
in which event the settlement, release or statement may not be admissible in evidence for
any purpose in any court or other proceeding relating to the personal injury, if any
consideration paid for the settlement of or the general release of liability for the personal
injury, at the time of the forwarding of the copy of the written statement of disavowal, is
repaid or returned to the person who paid the consideration.
(b) (1) No statement, affirmation, gesture or conduct of a healthcare provider who provided
healthcare services to a patient, expressing apology, sympathy, commiseration, condolence,
compassion or a general sense of benevolence, to the patient, a relative of the patient or a
representative of the patient and which relate to the discomfort, pain, suffering, injury or
death of the patient shall be admissible as evidence of an admission of liability or as
evidence of an admission against interest in any civil action brought under the provisions of
article seven-b, chapter fifty-five of this code, or in any arbitration, mediation or other
alternative dispute resolution proceeding related to such civil action.
(2) Terms not otherwise defined in this section have the meanings assigned to them in article
seven-b, chapter fifty-five of this code. For purposes of this section, unless the context
otherwise requires, "relative" means a spouse, parent, grandparent, stepfather, stepmother,
child, grandchild, brother, sister, half-brother, half-sister or spouse's parents. The term
includes said relationships that are created as a result of adoption. In addition, "relative"
includes any person who has a family-type relationship with a patient.

‹ Prev All West Virginia sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.