Hit by a Drunk Driver in Nashville: Your Rights as a Victim
If you were injured by a drunk driver in Nashville, you can file both a criminal complaint and a civil personal injury claim. The civil case is separate from the criminal prosecution and has a different burden of proof. Tennessee law gives drunk driving victims powerful legal tools: the punitive damage cap is removed entirely when the defendant was intoxicated. Davidson County recorded over 1,100 DUI arrests in a recent year, and Nashville's bar-heavy corridors along Broadway, Midtown, and East Nashville generate a steady flow of impaired driving accidents. You have 1 year from the date of injury to file a civil lawsuit — one of the shortest deadlines in the nation. Here is what you need to know to protect your claim.
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Key Takeaways
- Your civil injury claim is separate from the criminal DUI case — you do not need a criminal conviction to win compensation.
- Tennessee's punitive damage cap (the greater of 2x compensatory damages or $500,000) is lifted entirely for DUI cases under Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-39-104, allowing unlimited punitive damages.
- Bars and restaurants can be held liable under Tennessee's dram shop law (Tenn. Code Ann. § 57-10-102) if they sold alcohol to someone known to be under 21 or visibly intoxicated — but the burden of proof is beyond a reasonable doubt.
- Tennessee's statute of limitations for personal injury is only 1 year from the date of injury (Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-3-104) — one of the shortest in the country.
- Tennessee uses modified comparative fault with a 49% bar (Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-11-103) — if you are 50% or more at fault, you recover nothing.
- Davidson County averages over 1,100 DUI arrests annually, with Nashville's entertainment districts driving a disproportionate share of alcohol-related crashes.
Your civil claim is separate from the criminal case
When a drunk driver injures you in Nashville, two separate legal proceedings can happen. The criminal case is brought by the Davidson County District Attorney under Tennessee's DUI statute (Tenn. Code Ann. § 55-10-401). The prosecutor decides whether to charge, and the penalties — jail time, fines, license revocation — go to the state, not to you. You are a witness in the criminal case, not a party.
Your civil claim is yours. You file it against the drunk driver (and potentially the bar that overserved them) seeking money damages for medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and other losses. The civil case uses a preponderance of the evidence standard (more likely than not), which is far lower than the criminal standard of beyond a reasonable doubt. You can win your civil case even if the driver is acquitted or the criminal charges are dropped.
A criminal conviction strengthens your civil case significantly. Under the negligence per se doctrine, violating Tennessee's DUI statute constitutes automatic proof that the driver breached their duty of care. You still need to prove the drunk driving caused your injuries and damages, but the most contested element — whether the driver was negligent — is established by the conviction itself.
Punitive damages: the cap is lifted for drunk drivers in Tennessee
Tennessee allows punitive damages when the defendant acted intentionally, fraudulently, maliciously, or recklessly. For most civil cases, punitive damages are capped at the greater of 2x compensatory damages or $500,000 under Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-39-104. But for DUI cases, Tennessee law removes the cap entirely.
The cap does not apply when the defendant was under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or other intoxicants and the defendant's impaired judgment substantially contributed to the injuries or death. This means there is no ceiling on what a jury can award in punitive damages. If your compensatory damages are $200,000, the punitive damages are not limited to $400,000 — a Nashville jury could award $1 million or more if the facts support it.
The plaintiff must prove punitive damages by clear and convincing evidence — a standard higher than preponderance of evidence but lower than beyond a reasonable doubt. The trial is bifurcated: liability and compensatory damages are decided first, then punitive damages in a separate phase. This procedure prevents punitive damage evidence from influencing the compensatory damage determination. Driving drunk and causing injuries generally satisfies the reckless threshold with little dispute.
Dram shop liability: when the bar shares blame
Tennessee's dram shop law (Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 57-10-101 and 57-10-102) creates a general rule and two exceptions. The general rule under § 57-10-101 is that the consumption of alcohol — not the furnishing of it — is the proximate cause of injuries. This means alcohol sellers are normally not liable. But § 57-10-102 creates liability when the seller sold alcohol to someone known to be under 21 or to someone who was visibly intoxicated.
There is a major catch: Tennessee requires the dram shop plaintiff to prove the establishment's liability beyond a reasonable doubt — the same standard used in criminal cases. This is far higher than the preponderance of evidence standard used in most civil cases and makes Tennessee dram shop claims among the hardest to win in the country. You need compelling evidence: surveillance footage showing the patron stumbling or slurring, witness testimony from other patrons, server admissions, or receipts showing extreme alcohol consumption.
Despite the high burden, dram shop claims are worth investigating in every Nashville drunk driving case. Broadway (Lower Broadway's honky-tonk row), Midtown, East Nashville's Five Points, and the Gulch are densely packed with bars and restaurants. Nashville attracts over 14 million visitors a year, many of whom are partying on Broadway. If the driver who hit you was overserved at one of these establishments, adding it as a defendant can significantly increase available insurance coverage. Bars carry commercial liability policies with higher limits than personal auto coverage. Act quickly — security footage is typically overwritten within 7-14 days.
Why drunk driving claims settle higher than typical car accidents
Drunk driving accident claims consistently produce higher settlements and verdicts than standard car accident claims for several reasons. First, liability is rarely disputed — a driver at or above 0.08% BAC has clearly breached their duty of care. Insurance adjusters have no credible way to argue the drunk driver was not negligent.
Second, the removal of Tennessee's punitive damage cap creates enormous financial risk for the defendant. Unlike standard accident cases where damages are limited to compensatory amounts, DUI cases carry open-ended punitive exposure. This motivates insurers and defense attorneys to settle for higher amounts rather than risk an unpredictable jury verdict. Third, juries are uniformly hostile toward drunk drivers and sympathetic toward their victims, making trial outcomes dangerous for the defense.
Fourth, drunk driving crashes tend to produce more severe injuries because of higher impact speeds and the impaired driver's inability to brake or take evasive action. More severe injuries mean higher medical bills, longer recovery periods, more lost wages, and greater pain and suffering damages. Nashville's high-speed corridors — I-24, I-40, I-65, and Briley Parkway — see a significant share of late-night DUI collisions, particularly on weekends after Nashville's entertainment districts close.
Tennessee's comparative fault rule in drunk driving cases
Tennessee uses a modified comparative fault system under Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-11-103. Your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault, and if you are 50% or more at fault, you are completely barred from recovery. This 49% threshold is stricter than states that use a 51% bar.
In practice, drunk driving victims are almost never assigned significant fault. The drunk driver bears overwhelming responsibility for choosing to drive impaired. Defense attorneys may argue comparative fault if the victim was speeding, not wearing a seatbelt, or failed to observe a traffic signal. Even in those scenarios, courts and juries typically assign 80-95% of fault to the intoxicated driver.
Punitive damages are assessed separately from comparative fault analysis. The punitive damage determination in the bifurcated second phase focuses on the defendant's conduct — not the plaintiff's. This means even if your compensatory damages are reduced by your fault percentage, the availability of uncapped punitive damages remains fully in play.
Evidence to preserve after a drunk driving accident in Nashville
Your civil case is only as strong as your evidence. After a drunk driving accident, critical evidence includes: the Metro Nashville Police Department (MNPD) accident report (which should document the driver's BAC level and field sobriety test results), any criminal charges filed by the Davidson County DA, the driver's criminal record for prior DUI offenses, hospital blood-draw results, dashcam or traffic camera footage, and witness statements from anyone who saw the driver before or during the crash.
For dram shop claims, evidence from the serving establishment is critical — point-of-sale receipts showing how much alcohol was sold to the driver, security camera footage, witness testimony from other patrons or staff, and the establishment's alcohol service training records. This evidence disappears fast. Have your attorney send a preservation letter to the bar or restaurant immediately. Broadway and Midtown venues have extensive surveillance systems, but footage is typically overwritten within 7-14 days.
For your injury claim, keep all medical records, bills, and documentation of missed work. Photograph your injuries as they progress through recovery. Keep a daily journal noting your pain levels, limitations, and emotional impact. This personal evidence becomes powerful testimony about your non-economic damages — the suffering that medical bills alone cannot capture. If your injuries were treated at Vanderbilt University Medical Center (Nashville's Level I trauma center), those records carry significant weight in establishing severity.
The 1-year deadline: Tennessee's short statute of limitations
Tennessee's statute of limitations for personal injury is 1 year from the date of injury under Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-3-104. This is one of the shortest filing deadlines in the country — most states give you 2 or more years. For wrongful death, the deadline is 1 year from the date of the injury that caused death (not the date of death itself). Miss this deadline by even one day and your case is permanently dismissed.
There is one important extension: if criminal charges are brought against the person who caused your injury, the statute of limitations is extended to 2 years from the date of injury. This extension applies only when criminal charges are actually filed — a police investigation alone does not trigger it. Given that Nashville DUI cases frequently involve criminal prosecution, this extension may apply to your situation, but do not rely on it without confirming the criminal charges were filed.
Do not wait for the criminal case to resolve before starting your civil claim. Evidence degrades, witnesses become harder to find, and the 1-year deadline arrives faster than you expect — especially when you are recovering from serious injuries. Consult an attorney within weeks of the accident, not months.
Get Your Free Injury Claim Check
Want to understand your options after being hit by a drunk driver in Nashville? Get your free Injury Claim Check. You will answer a few questions about your accident and injuries, and we will provide a personalized report covering your potential claim value — including whether uncapped punitive damages and dram shop liability may apply — and whether connecting with a Nashville personal injury attorney makes sense for your situation.
You did nothing wrong. The drunk driver chose to get behind the wheel. Tennessee law gives you powerful tools to hold them accountable — including punitive damages with no cap. Start with the Injury Claim Check. It is free, confidential, and takes less time than explaining your situation on the phone.