Alexandria Personal Injury Lawyers

Alexandria, NJ personal injury attorneys for claims tied to Hunterdon County.

Alexandria Township injury matters often involve Hunterdon County roads, rural intersections, farm and commercial properties, local businesses, school or municipal entities, and medical providers in nearby towns. The legal framework is statewide, but the practical work is local: identifying who controlled the site, which police agency responded, where records are kept, what insurance applies, and whether the case belongs in the Hunterdon Vicinage.

This page gives local information for Alexandria, New Jersey personal-injury matters. It is not legal advice about a particular accident, property condition, medical outcome, or filing deadline.

Local Snapshot

Alexandria is in Hunterdon County, near Frenchtown, Milford, Kingwood, and surrounding rural communities. Civil personal-injury lawsuits tied to Alexandria facts are commonly filed in the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Civil Part for the Somerset/Hunterdon/Warren Vicinage when venue is proper there. The Hunterdon County Justice Center is located at 65 Park Avenue, Flemington, NJ 08822.

Simon Law Group’s nearest physical office for Alexandria residents is the Flemington office at 39 Route 12, Feed Mill Station, available by appointment. Meetings may also occur in Somerville, Morristown, by phone, or by video when appropriate.

Direct Answer

An Alexandria injury claim should be reviewed for incident location, responsible parties, insurance sources, medical documentation, venue, and deadlines. A car crash on a county road, a fall at a local business, an injury on public property, and a product defect at home may all require different evidence and notice steps.

Evidence to Gather Locally

For an Alexandria crash, useful records may include police reports, photographs of the intersection or roadway, weather and lighting information, witness names, insurance declarations pages, repair estimates, and medical records. For a premises claim, collect photographs of the hazard, incident reports, owner or tenant information, maintenance records if available, contractor names, and any surveillance-camera locations.

Rural and semi-rural settings can create proof issues that differ from dense urban cases. Lighting may be limited. Curves, hills, drainage, shoulders, agricultural equipment, deer-related evasive maneuvers, and road-maintenance history may affect causation. Site photographs should be taken before conditions change.

Hunterdon Venue and Procedure

Venue depends on court rules, party residence, incident location, existing related litigation, and the type of defendant. Counsel should confirm venue before filing rather than assuming that the nearest courthouse controls. Once a civil action is filed, court rules govern pleadings, discovery, expert reports, motions, arbitration, trial scheduling, and dismissal risks for missed deadlines.

Many non-medical-malpractice tort cases are subject to court-annexed arbitration under R. 4:21A. Arbitration is not the same as a private settlement conference, and either side may seek a trial de novo under the rule. Strategic decisions about arbitration should be made after liability, medical status, damages, and insurance limits are evaluated.

Public-Entity and Roadway Issues

If an Alexandria matter involves a municipal vehicle, school district, public employee, dangerous public property, public road design, missing or obstructed sign, drainage condition, or other government-related issue, the New Jersey Tort Claims Act may require written notice within 90 days. The notice question should be checked early because it can arise long before the two-year statute of limitations.

Private contractors may also be involved. Snow removal, paving, construction, maintenance, delivery, security, landscaping, and property-management contracts can affect who had control at the time of injury.

Insurance and Medical Documentation

Motor vehicle claims may involve PIP, liability coverage, UM/UIM coverage, MedPay, health insurance liens, and policy exclusions. Premises and product claims often involve commercial general liability or homeowner policies. Serious-injury cases may also require expert review on causation, future care, earning capacity, or life-care planning.

Medical records should connect the incident to the claimed injury. Gaps in treatment, prior conditions, later injuries, and inconsistent histories can become contested issues, so the chronology matters.

Consultation and Fees

Initial case review focuses on facts, deadlines, evidence, and whether the firm can consider representation after conflict screening. Some personal-injury matters may qualify for a contingency-fee agreement under New Jersey court rules. The actual fee structure, case costs, disbursements, and scope of work are set only in a written engagement agreement.


Responsible Attorney: Britt J. Simon, Esq., Managing Partner, Simon Law Group, LLC.

Frequently asked questions

Will my Alexandria injury case be filed in Flemington?
Possibly, but not automatically. Hunterdon venue may be proper when the incident, parties, or court rules point there. Venue should be reviewed before filing.
How close is the Flemington office?
The Flemington office is the nearest Simon Law Group office listed for Alexandria residents, with an estimated drive time of about 20 minutes under ordinary conditions. Appointments must be scheduled in advance.
What if my claim involves a township road or public property?
Tell the firm at intake. Public-entity involvement can trigger a 90-day Tort Claims Act notice requirement, and roadway evidence can change with weather, repairs, or traffic patterns.
Do I need to live in Alexandria to use this local page?
No. The relevant issue is usually where the incident occurred, where the parties are located, and what venue rules apply. Nearby Frenchtown, Milford, Kingwood, and Hunterdon County residents may face the same courthouse and evidence questions.
What should I bring to an Alexandria injury consultation?
Bring the police report or incident report, photographs, insurance cards and declarations pages, medical records, bills, witness information, employer wage records if income was lost, and any letters from insurers or public entities.

Sources & authorities

Reviewed by Britt J. Simon, Esq., Managing Partner — May 2026

Geographic scope

Serving 5 New Jersey counties.

  • Alexandria
  • Hunterdon County
  • Frenchtown
  • Milford
  • Kingwood

Quick Answers

Start with the questions most people ask before they call.

Claim fit Do I have an injury claim?
A claim usually requires negligence, causation, measurable injury, and an open deadline. Auto claims also require PIP and verbal-threshold review.
Deadline How long do I have after an accident?
Most injury claims have a two-year statute of limitations, but public-entity claims may require a 90-day notice. Evidence should be preserved immediately.
Do not do Should I talk to the insurance company first?
Do not give a recorded statement to the other side before counsel reviews the facts. Preserve photos, treatment records, wage loss, and daily symptoms.

What Matters Now

What to do first depends on your deadline and the evidence.

Evidence

Evidence is freshest in the first 48 hours.

Photographs, witness names, incident reports, treatment notes, and a daily symptom log should be preserved immediately.

Treatment

Medical continuity affects claim value.

Follow recommended care, keep bills and restrictions, and do not let gaps appear without a reason you can document.

Statements

Recorded statements can damage a valid claim.

Do not give the other side a recorded statement before counsel reviews liability, PIP, threshold, and deadline issues.

Choose Your Next Step

Choose the first step that fits the moment.

How your case moves forward

From first contact to the first legal decision.

  1. Preserve evidence and deadlines.

    We start by checking the injury date, public-entity notice risk, insurance, treatment, photos, witnesses, and recorded-statement pressure.

  2. Track treatment and losses.

    Medical care, bills, wage loss, restrictions, and daily symptoms become the foundation for damages and carrier negotiations.

  3. Evaluate liability, coverage, and claim strategy.

    Counsel reviews fault, PIP, threshold, lien, coverage, medical proof, settlement timing, and filing posture.

Local to New Jersey

Where your case is filed changes what happens next.

Geography

Scoped to 5 New Jersey counties for this service.

Civil, family, estate, injury, real-estate, and malpractice matters are evaluated statewide unless the page states a narrower scope.

Offices

Somerville, Morristown, and Flemington intake.

Somerville accepts office visits. Morristown and Flemington are by appointment. Phone and video consultations are available for statewide matters.

Local proof

County, court, and deadline facts matter.

The intake screen asks for county, court, deadline, and practice fit because local procedure can change what the next useful step should be.

Volume 2

The Post-Accident Evidence Playbook

Use the pain log, photo checklist, witness template, and treatment ledger before memories and documents scatter.

Open the evidence playbook

What to have handy when we speak.

  • Photos of scene, vehicles, injuries, footwear, property condition, or defective product.

  • Police report, incident report, claim numbers, insurance letters, and adjuster contact info.

  • Treatment records, bills, work notes, restrictions, and a daily pain/symptom log.

  • Do not post about the accident, delete messages, or give a recorded statement.

Consult

Contact the Firm

Confidential and no-obligation.

Consultation request. There is no charge to send this form or to talk through your situation.

Address

Use your mailing address. It helps intake route the request and prepare conflict review.

A short summary is plenty — we’ll request documents at the right time.

Sending this form does not create an attorney-client relationship. Please do not include confidential documents here.

What Happens Next

What happens after you reach out.

  1. We make sure we're the right firm.

    We start with the basics: what kind of matter, which county, and how urgent, before any detailed legal discussion.

  2. You choose how we follow up.

    Call, text, or email, whichever you prefer. Text consent is optional.

  3. Hold the confidential details.

    Do not send privileged documents or sensitive narratives until the firm confirms it can discuss the matter.

  4. We review and follow up.

    Our team reviews your request for urgency, practice fit, conflicts, deadlines, and availability before confirming next steps.

Submitting a form, downloading a guide, texting, or calling does not create an attorney-client relationship. That relationship begins only after we review your matter and sign a written agreement.

Call Us Today

(800) 709-1131

No-cost consultation request
Available Mon-Fri, 9am-5pm

Our Offices

Somerville accepts office visits. Morristown and Flemington are by appointment. Intake requests are reviewed by practice area, urgency, and matter details.