Andrew Pickett Law represents injured motorcyclists and families throughout Florida, and few crash scenarios generate more blame-shifting than the classic left-turn collision. A driver turns across the rider’s path, the rider goes down hard, and within minutes the same explanation appears: “I just didn’t see the motorcycle.” It sounds apologetic. It also sounds ordinary. Legally, though, that sentence proves very little.
Florida law gives a motorcycle the full use of a lane. A rider is not required to hug one edge of the lane to make a driver feel more comfortable. A left-turning motorist, on the other hand, has a duty to yield to oncoming traffic that is lawfully approaching and close enough to create an immediate hazard. Those principles do not answer every fault question, but they do set the starting point. The rider’s mere presence in a lawful lane position is not negligence.
Need free legal help in Florida?
We specialize in personal injury claims.
Still, left-turn motorcycle claims are heavily contested. Insurers often argue that the bike was moving too fast, hidden in traffic, poorly lit, or positioned in a way that made detection difficult. Some of those arguments are legitimate in some cases. Many are not. The difference comes down to proof.
If a driver turned left in front of your motorcycle and now claims you were hard to see, Andrew Pickett Law can focus the case on evidence instead of excuses.
Why is “I didn’t see you” not a defense by itself?
Because a driver’s failure to perceive visible traffic is often the negligence. The law does not reward a motorist for not looking carefully enough. If the rider was there to be seen, with enough time and distance for a reasonable driver to detect and react, the statement becomes an admission of failure, not a legal shield.
That is especially true at intersections where the left-turn driver was scanning for gaps, fixating on larger vehicles, or trying to “beat” oncoming traffic. Motorcycles are smaller than cars, but they are not invisible. A driver who pulls across a rider’s lane because the bike did not register in time may still be entirely or primarily at fault.
Need free legal help in Florida?
We specialize in personal injury claims.
At the same time, lawyers should resist treating every left-turn crash as automatic liability. Speed matters. Signal phase matters. Lane position matters. Headlight use, sight obstructions, sun glare, and whether the rider changed lanes or approached around other traffic can all become important. Trial-ready handling means being honest about the weak points while still forcing the defense to prove its story.
What role does lane positioning actually play?
Lane positioning is one of the most misunderstood issues in motorcycle cases. Riders adjust within a lane for many valid reasons: surface debris, drainage grates, visibility, escape routes, or simply ordinary traffic flow. That does not mean the rider was operating unpredictably or unlawfully.
Defense carriers often try to use lane position as shorthand for causation. They will suggest the rider was “hidden” by being left-of-center or right-of-center. Sometimes that is speculation dressed up as analysis. In other cases, lane position must be studied against the geometry of the intersection, adjacent vehicles, median openings, and the turning driver’s actual line of sight.
The critical question is whether a reasonable left-turning driver, paying proper attention, should have detected the motorcycle in time. That question cannot be answered by a generalized claim that bikes are smaller or harder to notice.
Motorcycle cases are not won by repeating that riders are vulnerable. They are won by proving exactly what the turning driver should have seen and when. Andrew Pickett Law builds cases that way.
What evidence usually decides a left-turn motorcycle case?
A strong motorcycle case is built from physical facts, digital facts, and human facts. The defense may try to make the entire dispute about one witness impression. That is rarely enough.
Useful evidence often includes:
- event data from the other vehicle showing speed and braking
- surveillance footage, dashcam video, and helmet-cam footage
- crush damage, gouge marks, scrape patterns, and rest positions
- signal timing and sight-distance measurements
- witness accounts about the rider’s lane position and headlight visibility
- phone records or infotainment data showing distraction
- toxicology, if impairment is alleged against either party
Florida riders should also know that daylight headlight issues are not as simple as insurers sometimes suggest. Even when headlight use becomes part of the discussion, the defense still has to show it mattered causally. They do not get to turn every visibility dispute into a complete bar to recovery.
How does comparative fault affect motorcycle injury claims?
This is where the stakes rise. In Florida negligence cases, the percentage assigned to each side can have enormous consequences. If the defense can push the rider over the threshold that bars recovery, the case may collapse no matter how serious the injuries are.
That is why “I didn’t see you” is so often paired with speed allegations. The defense wants to say not only that the bike was hard to perceive, but that it arrived so quickly the turn looked safe until it was not. Sometimes the evidence supports part of that theory. Sometimes the download data, video, and scene measurements tear it apart.
Why should riders act fast after a left-turn crash?
Because intersection evidence changes quickly. Skid marks fade. surveillance video is overwritten. Vehicles are repaired or sold. Witness memories grow less precise. In severe motorcycle accidents involving brain injuries, amputations, orthopedic trauma, spinal injuries, or wrongful death, the medical crisis can easily overshadow the liability investigation. Unfortunately, the defense counts on that.
Andrew Pickett Law helps preserve the parts of the case that cannot be reconstructed later. That includes the scene, the vehicles, the electronic records, and the witness accounts that clarify whether the rider was plainly there to be seen.
Frequently asked questions about Florida motorcycle left-turn crashes
Does a motorcycle have the same right to a lane as a car?
Yes. Florida law gives motorcycles full use of a lane and prohibits other vehicles from depriving riders of that full use.
If the driver says they never saw the bike, does that defeat the claim?
No. The issue is whether a reasonable driver should have seen and yielded to the motorcycle.
Speak with a trusted Florida trial lawyer, contact Andrew Pickett Law now. If a left-turn crash left you or your family dealing with catastrophic injuries, Andrew Pickett Law is ready to investigate before the defense narrative takes over.
Need free legal help in Florida?
We specialize in personal injury claims.