Biker’s estate awarded millions for crash injuries

Jamaica’s Supreme Court has delivered a landmark ruling granting over $7 million in total damages to the estate of a young motorcyclist who was left permanently disabled by a negligent vehicle collision, before dying three years later from unrelated causes. The 22-year-old victim, who passed away at age 25 in 2024, never recovered from the life-altering injuries he sustained in the May 2021 crash on Porus Main Road, where a negligently operated Mazda vehicle collided head-on with his motorbike, throwing him from the vehicle.

Following the collision, the victim spent five consecutive months hospitalized from the incident through January 2023, undergoing multiple invasive procedures including skin grafts and orthopedic reconstructive surgeries to repair his damaged legs. Court testimony from his mother revealed the long-term impacts of the crash: his left leg grew shorter than his right, he could not fully extend his right leg, he could not walk correctly, stand for extended periods, or return to his regular work.

Prior to the collision, the young man worked alongside his mother, conducting vehicle sales runs for a weekly wage of $20,000 Jamaican dollars. He was unable to resume this work for a full year after the crash, resulting in more than $1 million in lost wages alone. A passionate amateur football player, he was also forced to abandon the sport he loved, and suffered social embarrassment due to his visible physical disability and altered gait.

After the victim’s 2024 death from causes unconnected to the collision, courts appointed a substitute claimant to pursue the lawsuit on behalf of his estate, naming the Mazda’s driver as third defendant and the vehicle’s owner couple as first and second defendants.

In his written judgment, Puisne Judge Dale Staple emphasized the disproportionate harm the crash inflicted on the victim, who was in the prime of his youth and most productive working years when the incident occurred. Staple noted that even over the short three-year period between the collision and the victim’s untimely death, the severe injuries caused devastating, permanent disruption to his ability to work, engage in recreation, and participate in everyday social life.

“His injury was a very serious one and clearly had a serious effect on his work and social life, even in such a short period of time,” Staple wrote in the ruling, handed down in late 2024. The judge outlined that the first three years post-injury represented the most acute period of suffering, including a grueling five-month recovery marked by major surgical interventions, and that adjusting to life with permanent disability would have placed ongoing strain on the young man.

To account for this prolonged hardship, Staple ruled that a substantial portion of the total damage award would be allocated to the acute recovery and post-injury period. The final judgment set $6 million in general damages for pain, suffering, and loss of life amenities, accruing 3% annual interest from December 16, 2023 through March 16, 2026. The court also granted just over $1 million in special damages to compensate for lost wages and related expenses, with 3% interest starting from the date of the collision, May 7, 2021, running through March 16, 2026.