Skip to main content
Hit and Run attorney in Buda Texas

Buda Hit and Run Lawyer

When a negligent driver flees the scene, finding justice can seem impossible. We know how to investigate hit-and-run accidents and identify all available sources of compensation.

Buda is a growing suburb south of Austin along the I-35 corridor. With rapid residential and commercial growth, traffic accidents have increased. We help Buda residents pursue full compensation for their injuries.

Serving Buda

Attorney Israel Medina handles your case personally

You speak directly with your attorney

Central Texas

Hays County

No Fee Unless We Win

Free consultation available

24/7 Availability

We’re here when you need us

Hit and Run Lawyer in Buda, Texas

Medina & Medina handles hit and run cases for clients across Central Texas, where the Hays County courts have their own pace, their own customs, and their own expectations of trial counsel. A serious injury in Buda deserves a lawyer who walks into those courtrooms on a regular basis. Our consultations are free, and we charge nothing unless we win the recovery.

Why Choose a Local Buda Hit and Run Attorney?

  • Familiarity with Buda courts, judges, and local legal procedures
  • Knowledge of dangerous corridors in Buda, including I-35 and FM 967
  • Established relationships with trusted local medical providers and expert witnesses
  • Convenient access for in-person meetings at our office near Buda

Medina & Medina combines local expertise with proven results across Central Texas. We offer free consultations to every Buda victim and charge no fee unless we win your case.

Compensation for Hit and Run Victims in Buda

Texas Statute of Limitations

The Texas filing clock for most personal injury claims runs out at two years from the date of injury. Witnesses move, surveillance gets overwritten, and adjuster files harden long before that. Reach us early.

Hit and Run Cases in Buda

Hit and Run cases in Buda frequently arise along major corridors including I-35, FM 967, FM 1626, Main Street (Old San Antonio Road). Buda has a population of approximately 17,000 residents and was named one of the fastest-growing cities in the country

High-risk areas in Buda include I-35 frontage roads through Buda, FM 1626 and FM 967 intersection, I-35 and Main Street (Exit 220) interchange, FM 967 between Buda and Dripping Springs. If you have been injured near any of these locations, our attorneys can help.

  • The city sits along the I-35 corridor just 15 miles south of downtown Austin, making it a popular commuter community
  • Buda hosts the annual Wiener Dog Races and bills itself as the "Outdoor Capital of Texas"

Understanding Hit and Run Cases

Common Causes

In Buda, hit and run cases often trace back to conditions on I-35 and near I-35 frontage roads through Buda. Local drivers and pedestrians encounter these specific risks when navigating these corridors.

  • Drivers fleeing the scene to avoid DWI charges
  • Uninsured drivers who panic after causing a crash
  • Drivers with suspended or revoked licenses
  • Drivers with outstanding warrants who fear police contact
  • Distracted drivers who may not realize they hit someone
  • Drivers who flee after striking pedestrians or cyclists

Typical Injuries

Accident victims in Buda are typically transported to trauma centers including Ascension Seton Hays (Kyle). The following injuries are common outcomes of these incidents.

  • Severe injuries worsened by delayed emergency response
  • Traumatic brain injuries from pedestrian knockdowns
  • Broken bones and fractures
  • Spinal cord injuries
  • Psychological trauma and anxiety disorders
  • Wrongful death when victims are left without aid

Establishing Liability

For hit and run claims filed in Hays, liability often turns on evidence gathered from specific Buda locations, including I-35 frontage roads through Buda.

Identifying the fleeing driver is the first challenge in hit and run cases, and investigators rely on surveillance cameras, witness descriptions, vehicle debris, and paint transfer evidence to locate the responsible party. When the driver cannot be identified, the victim may still recover through their own uninsured motorist coverage. If the driver is eventually found, the act of fleeing the scene can serve as evidence of consciousness of guilt and support claims for additional damages.

Relevant Texas Law

Residents of Buda pursue these claims under the same Texas statutes that govern all state personal injury actions.

Texas Transportation Code Section 550.021 requires drivers involved in an accident resulting in injury or death to stop, provide information, and render aid. Failure to stop is a felony under Texas law when serious injury or death is involved. Texas Insurance Code provisions regarding uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage allow victims to recover through their own policies when the at fault driver cannot be identified or lacks insurance.

★★★★★
500+ families helped

Ready to discuss your case?

Free consultation. No fee unless we win.

Local Resources and Courts in Buda

Hays County Government Center, 712 S Stagecoach Trail, San Marcos, TX 78666

Buda falls under Hays County jurisdiction. Personal injury civil cases are filed in the Hays County District Courts in San Marcos. The 22nd, 207th, and 428th Judicial District Courts handle civil matters.

Nearby Hospitals and Trauma Centers

  • Ascension Seton Hays (Kyle)
  • St. David's South Austin Medical Center
  • Dell Seton Medical Center (Level I Trauma Center in Austin)

Free Case Evaluation

Get a free review of your case in minutes.

Please provide at least a phone number or email.

ConfidentialNo fee unless we win

Or call now

(512) 500-2810

Buda Hit and Run Cases: How They Arise

Hit-and-run incidents concentrate in urban entertainment districts (Austin's Sixth Street, Houston's Washington Avenue, Dallas's Deep Ellum and Uptown) and on the urban interstates where impaired or unlicensed drivers flee after collisions. Pedestrian and bicyclist hit-and-runs are a significant subset in the metros, particularly at crosswalks and on bike lanes adjacent to high-speed roadways.

  • I-35 high-speed sideswipes through Buda where the at-fault driver leaves the scene
  • FM 1626 and FM 967 rural-road strikes with fleeing drivers
  • Main Street and downtown Buda late-night pedestrian and cyclist strikes

Verdict and Settlement Bands

Hays County hit-and-run case recoveries arising in Buda turn primarily on uninsured-motorist coverage stacking and have ranged from $18,000 (minimum-UM-limit soft-tissue) to over $1.3 million (catastrophic-injury matters with multi-vehicle stacking), with most clear-medical-causation cases resolving in the $32,000 to $150,000 band.

The Injury Picture

The injury picture mirrors car-accident and pedestrian injury patterns generally: soft-tissue, orthopedic fractures, traumatic brain injury, and wrongful death in pedestrian and bicyclist cases. The delayed medical response in some hit-and-run cases (where the victim is not found immediately) can worsen outcomes.

The Liability Framework

When the at-fault driver is not identified, the plaintiff's own uninsured-motorist (UM) coverage becomes the primary recovery vehicle under Texas Insurance Code Chapter 1952. The Texas Supreme Court's decision in Brainard v. Trinity Universal Insurance, 216 S.W.3d 809 (Tex. 2006) frames the UM-coverage litigation. When the driver is later identified, traditional auto-negligence theory applies, with the additional procedural issue of locating service. Phantom-vehicle UM claims require evidence of an actual contact-incident with another vehicle.

Where This Case Would Be Filed

Hays County district courts hear UM contract claims under the two-year SOL in CPRC § 16.003; the plaintiff's UM carrier stands in the shoes of the unidentified driver, and Texas Insurance Code Chapter 1952 governs stacking and consent-to-settle.

Procedural Notes

UM claims often proceed through a separate breach-of-contract action against the plaintiff's own carrier, with the underlying liability questions tried in that posture; the carrier is entitled to the same defenses the phantom driver could raise.

Our Reach in Hays County

Our attorneys handle Buda personal injury cases in the Hays County District Courts at the Hays County Government Center in San Marcos, including I-35 corridor commercial-vehicle and FM 967 / FM 1626 rural-roadway matters.

The Local Jury

Hays County juries seated for Buda-area matters skew suburban-rural mix, with a substantial commuter population working in Austin; moderately conservative on non-economic damages but receptive to clear-liability commercial-vehicle and out-of-county defendant cases.

Local Reference Points

  • I-35 between FM 1626 and FM 150
  • FM 1626 corridor
  • Main Street Buda downtown

Frequently Asked Questions in Buda

Get medical attention first. Ascension Seton Hays (Kyle) is the closest level of care most Buda clients use for serious cases, and a written record from the date of the incident is one of the most valuable pieces of evidence we ever obtain. From there, document the scene with photographs, collect contact information for any witness who saw what happened, and avoid giving any recorded statement to an insurance adjuster until you have spoken with a lawyer. Severe injuries worsened by delayed emergency response often takes days to fully present, which is another reason early documentation matters.

Most personal injury cases brought by clients in Hays are filed in the county district courts, with Hays County Government Center, 712 S Stagecoach Trail, San Marcos, TX 78666 serving as the principal venue. Each Hays bench runs its docket a little differently, and the local rules on scheduling, mediation, and pre-trial conferences vary from court to court. Our attorneys are in those courtrooms often enough that we plan around those rhythms rather than reacting to them.

The Buda medical network handling acute injuries from incidents like this one centers around Ascension Seton Hays (Kyle), St. David's South Austin Medical Center, and Dell Seton Medical Center (Level I Trauma Center in Austin). Diagnoses we see again and again in these intake records include Severe injuries worsened by delayed emergency response, Traumatic brain injuries from pedestrian knockdowns, and Broken bones and fractures. We work directly with the records departments at each of these facilities, which is part of why our timelines for assembling a medical chronology run shorter than what most clients expect.

The general rule is two years from the date of the injury, under Section 16.003 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. The clock can run on a different schedule when the claimant is a minor, when the injury was not reasonably discoverable until later, or when a government entity is involved, where notice deadlines can fall as early as six months. The cleanest way to know exactly where the clock stands in your case is a short call with a lawyer who can look at the dates.

There is no single cause, but Drivers fleeing the scene to avoid DWI charges comes up often enough in the Buda cases we handle that it is one of the first things we look for. Geographically, I-35 and I-35 frontage roads through Buda are recurring locations, and the conditions specific to those places, road design, traffic volume, lighting, and signage, all factor into liability. We build the evidentiary record with crash reports, witness statements, and any available video before adjusters can lock in their version of events.

Daily familiarity with the courthouse and the community. Our team works Hays matters week in and week out, which means we know the bench at Hays County Government Center, 712 S Stagecoach Trail, San Marcos, TX 78666 on a first-name basis and we know how juries pulled from the broader community tend to read a personal injury case. That continuity affects everything from how we schedule depositions to how we frame opening statements.

Your Buda Hit and Run Case Starts With a Conversation

Tell us what happened. A Buda hit and run lawyer at our firm will look at your case for free, give you a straight answer on what it is worth, and only take a fee if we put money in your hands.