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Every 42 minutes, someone in the United States dies in a crash with a drunk driver. In 2023, alcohol-impaired collisions killed 433 people on Georgia roads — 27% of all traffic fatalities statewide, according to the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety. Of those killed or seriously hurt in multi-vehicle wrecks involving intoxicated drivers, 82% were occupants of the other vehicle or pedestrians. People who did nothing wrong. People who happened to be in the path of someone who chose to drive after drinking.
A DUI crash is not an accident. It’s the consequence of a deliberate choice, and Georgia law treats it that way. Driving with a BAC of 0.08 g/dL or higher constitutes negligence per se — the violation itself establishes negligence. You don’t need to prove the driver was careless. You only need to prove they were impaired.
Criminal court handles the punishment. But a criminal case won’t pay your medical bills, replace months of lost income, or address the pain that follows you long after discharge. That's what a civil claim does — and for victims of drunk drivers, Georgia offers a tool unavailable in standard car accident cases. Unlike what Atlanta car accident attorneys typically see, DUI claims unlock uncapped punitive damages.
If you need an Atlanta drunk driving accident lawyer who knows how to use that leverage, Kermani LLP handles exactly these cases. More than 100 litigated trials over five years. Over $100 million recovered for clients. We work on a contingency fee basis — you pay nothing unless we win.
Why DUI Settlements Are Higher: The “Uncapped” Factor
In a standard car accident case, Georgia caps punitive damages at $250,000 — no matter how severe the injuries or how reckless the at-fault driver was. That’s the rule under O.C.G.A. § 51–12-5.1(g).
Drunk driving cases are the exception.
Under O.C.G.A. § 51–12-5.1(f), when a defendant “acted or failed to act while under the influence of alcohol or drugs… to that degree that his or her judgment is substantially impaired,” the cap disappears. Juries can award whatever amount they believe is necessary to punish the conduct and prevent others from doing the same.
Here’s what that looks like in real numbers. Compare two hypothetical scenarios:
Standard car accident:
- Medical expenses: $50,000
- Lost wages: $25,000
- Pain and suffering: $100,000
- Punitive damages (capped): $250,000
- Total: up to $425,000
Drunk driving accident:
- Medical expenses: $50,000
- Lost wages: $25,000
- Pain and suffering: $100,000
- Punitive damages (no cap): $500,000+
- Total: $675,000+
Juries despise drunk drivers. The recklessness, the conscious choice to get behind the wheel — it all works in the victim’s favor. Punitive damages are assessed directly against the at-fault driver as the “active tort-feasor,” and their insurance carrier is obligated to pay the full verdict.
Holding Bars and Restaurants Liable: Georgia’s Dram Shop Law
The drunk driver carries a minimum insurance policy — $25,000. That won’t cover a single day in the trauma unit at Grady Memorial Hospital.
Georgia gives victims another avenue: going after the establishment that kept pouring.
Under O.C.G.A. 51–1-40, if a bar, restaurant, or liquor store served alcohol to someone who was noticeably intoxicated, and the employee knew or should have known that person was about to drive, the business shares civil liability for what happened next.
This matters because commercial insurance policies for bars and restaurants often provide coverage of $1 million or more. Instead of fighting over the driver’s $25,000 minimum policy, you gain access to real money.
A successful Dram Shop claim requires three elements:
- The establishment served alcohol to a visibly intoxicated person
- An employee knew the patron intended to drive
- The alcohol served caused or contributed to the crash
The Kermani Method includes investigating every DUI case for potential Dram Shop liability. An experienced Atlanta DUI accident lawyer will subpoena the bar’s surveillance footage, pull credit card statements, and take depositions from bartenders and patrons. This evidence must be preserved fast — tapes get overwritten, receipts vanish, and witnesses forget.
The Difference Between Criminal and Civil DUI Cases
The prosecutor files charges, seeks a conviction, and pushes for jail time. The prosecutor represents the State of Georgia. Not you.
A civil lawsuit is your tool, and it serves one purpose: financial recovery for your losses. It also carries a critical advantage — a lower standard of proof.
Criminal court requires evidence “beyond a reasonable doubt,” the highest bar in American law. Civil court uses the “preponderance of evidence” standard: you just need to show your version is more likely than not.
In practice, that means even if a drunk driver is acquitted in criminal court, your civil case survives. The prosecution couldn’t clear the “beyond a reasonable doubt” threshold — but that doesn’t make the driver innocent under civil standards. Police reports, field sobriety results, camera footage, and witness testimony still carry weight.
You don’t have to wait for the criminal case to wrap up before filing suit. Your Atlanta drunk driving accident attorney can pursue both tracks simultaneously. The statute of limitations is two years from the date of the crash (O.C.G.A. § 9–3-33), and the clock doesn’t pause for the criminal proceeding. If the crash involved government or municipal transportation — MARTA, for example — the ante litem notice deadline may be as short as six months (O.C.G.A. § 36–33-5).
Proving Intoxication Without a Breathalyzer
The driver refused testing. Does that mean proving intoxication is impossible?
Not even close.
Under Georgia’s implied consent law (O.C.G.A. § 40–5-67.1), every driver on the state’s roads automatically consents to chemical testing upon arrest for suspected DUI. Refusing triggers an automatic one-year license suspension. In your civil case, the refusal itself becomes evidence — a sober person confident in their innocence would have taken the test.
There are several other ways to establish impairment:
Police body camera footage. Slurred speech, unsteady balance, the smell of alcohol, erratic behavior — it’s all on video, and it becomes some of the most compelling evidence a jury will see. They watch the driver’s condition with their own eyes.
Field Sobriety Tests. The walk-and-turn, one-leg stand, and horizontal gaze nystagmus tests are administered by the responding officer and documented in the police report. Failing them provides strong circumstantial proof of impairment.
Credit card receipts and transaction records. Bar tabs reveal exactly what the driver ordered, how much, and when. The same records are critical for building a potential Dram Shop claim.
Witness testimony. Fellow bar patrons, passengers in the at-fault vehicle, and bystanders at the scene can all describe the signs of intoxication they observed.
Under the Kermani Method, evidence collection begins the moment a client reaches out. An experienced Atlanta DUI accident victim lawyer knows that surveillance footage gets overwritten within 24 to 72 hours, phone records disappear, and details fade from memory. Every day of delay works against you.
Common Injuries in High-Speed DUI Crashes
Impaired drivers are more likely to speed, run red lights, and veer into oncoming lanes. Motorcyclists hit by drunk drivers and pedestrians injured by impaired drivers face the greatest risk — there is no vehicle frame to absorb the blow. On I-285, I-20, Buford Highway, and Memorial Drive — some of Atlanta’s highest-crash corridors — collisions with drunk drivers routinely produce head-on and T-bone impacts with devastating force.
Traumatic brain injuries. A head-on collision above 50 mph is one of the leading causes of TBI. Cognitive deficits, memory loss, and personality changes can persist for years or become permanent. Shepherd Center in Atlanta ranks among the nation’s top rehabilitation facilities for these patients.
Spinal cord damage. A high-speed impact can cause partial or complete paralysis. Lifetime medical costs for spinal cord injuries run into the millions and require expert economic testimony to calculate in a lawsuit.
Multiple fractures and internal injuries. When an intoxicated driver blows through a red light and T-bones another vehicle, the result is often pelvic fractures, broken ribs, and ruptured organs. Emergency surgery at Grady Memorial Hospital is just the start. Recovery stretches on for months.
When a drunk driving crash kills a loved one, the family may file a wrongful death claim within two years of the date of death (O.C.G.A. § 9–3-33). Wrongful death DUI claims involving an impaired driver unlock uncapped punitive damages on top of compensatory recovery.
Compensation for DUI Accident Victims
Victims of drunk driving crashes can pursue several categories of damages:
Medical expenses — from emergency hospitalization through long-term rehabilitation, physical therapy, mental health treatment, and future care needs. When injuries require lifelong treatment, an economic expert calculates the full cost.
Lost wages — missed work, reduced earning capacity, and diminished future income. If your injuries prevent a return to your previous occupation, you can seek the difference in earnings across your remaining working years.
Pain and suffering — physical pain, emotional distress, PTSD, and loss of quality of life. Juries assess these damages based on the severity of injuries and how they affect daily living.
Punitive damages — uncapped in DUI cases under O.C.G.A. § 51–12-5.1(f). Often the largest component of the total recovery.
Georgia follows a modified comparative negligence rule (O.C.G.A. § 51–11-7): your compensation decreases in proportion to your share of fault, but you keep the right to recover as long as your fault stays below 50%. Your Atlanta drunk driving accident lawyer can leverage this effectively — in cases involving impaired drivers, fault allocation is typically one-sided, and insurers struggle to argue that a sober victim shares blame for a crash with a drunk driver.
What to Do After a Drunk Driving Accident
Kermani LLP developed the SAD™ System (Safety, Ambulance, Document) — a step-by-step framework that protects both your health and your future case:
Safety — get to a safe location. If you can move, get off the roadway. Turn on your hazard lights. Do not try to detain or confront an impaired driver — it puts you at risk.
Ambulance — call 911. Even if you feel fine, adrenaline can mask internal bleeding and fractures. Medical records created at the scene become the foundation of your case.
Document — record everything. Photograph vehicle damage, road conditions, and your injuries. Collect contact information from witnesses. If you spot signs of impairment in the other driver — the smell of alcohol, slurred speech, bottles in the car — note it on your phone immediately.
Then call an attorney. If you’re searching for a drunk driver accident lawyer near me, Kermani LLP is available 24/7 and starts working your case the day you reach out.
Contact Kermani LLP
Georgia’s statute of limitations for personal injury claims is two years from the crash date (O.C.G.A. § 9–3-33). But the investigation needs to start now. Bar surveillance footage gets overwritten daily. Skid marks fade under other tires. Witnesses lose details with each passing week.
Kermani LLP offers a free case evaluation. Call us, and your Atlanta drunk driving accident lawyer starts working your case that same day. We operate on a contingency fee basis: you pay nothing until we secure compensation. Fill out the form on our website or call — we’re available 24/7.
Discover your legal options. Get a free case review, and pay nothing unless we win.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Our personal injury team is here to help. Get a free case evaluation.
Can I sue the bar that served the drunk driver
Yes. Under Georgia’s Dram Shop Act (O.C.G.A. § 51–1-40), if an establishment served alcohol to a visibly intoxicated person and an employee knew or should have known that person intended to drive, the business is civilly liable. This is especially significant when the at-fault driver carries only minimum coverage ($25 000), because commercial policies for bars and restaurants typically start at $1 million. Our team investigates every DUI case for potential establishment liability — we subpoena surveillance footage, pull card statements, and interview staff.
What if the driver refused the breathalyzer
A refusal doesn’t shield the at-fault driver. Under Georgia’s implied consent law (O.C.G.A. § 40–5-67.1), refusing chemical testing triggers an automatic one-year license suspension. In civil court, the refusal itself can be presented to the jury as evidence: a sober person who believed they’d pass would have taken the test. Beyond that, intoxication can be established through police body cam footage, field sobriety test results, bar receipts, and witness testimony.
Is there a limit on how much I can sue a drunk driver for in Georgia
No cap exists on compensatory damages — medical bills, lost income, pain and suffering. Punitive damages in standard cases are limited to $250 000 under O.C.G.A. § 51–12-5.1(g), but for DUI crashes, subsection (f) removes the cap entirely. Juries set whatever amount they consider sufficient to punish the defendant and discourage similar behavior. Combined with compensatory damages, the total recovery can far exceed what a standard car accident case would yield.
Can a drunk driver avoid paying by filing for bankruptcy
Generally, no. Debts from bodily injuries caused by impaired driving are typically classified as “non-dischargeable” in bankruptcy. Courts treat DUI-related injuries as the result of willful and malicious conduct, which bars the debt from being eliminated. A defendant may attempt to escape liability through bankruptcy, but the law specifically closes that door for injuries caused behind the wheel while intoxicated.
Can I file a civil lawsuit if the drunk driver was acquitted in criminal court
Absolutely. Civil and criminal cases are independent proceedings with different proof standards. A conviction requires evidence “beyond a reasonable doubt” — an extremely high threshold. Civil court asks only whether the defendant was more likely than not responsible. All evidence from the criminal case — police reports, test results, video footage, testimony — remains available in your civil lawsuit regardless of the criminal verdict.
Will the at-fault driver’s insurance cover my damages
Georgia auto insurance policies do cover crashes caused by impaired driving. The insurer must compensate the injured party up to policy limits, including court-ordered punitive damages. But Georgia’s minimum liability coverage is just $25 000 per person — rarely enough when injuries are serious. That’s why we simultaneously pursue Dram Shop claims, check whether the at-fault driver holds umbrella policies, and tap into your own uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage when it’s available.
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