Personal Injury Claims Involving Minors and Court Approval

When a minor sustains injuries giving rise to a personal injury claim, the legal process diverges significantly from claims involving adult plaintiffs. Minors lack the legal capacity to enter binding contracts or authorize settlements on their own behalf, which triggers a mandatory layer of judicial oversight in most U.S. jurisdictions. This page covers the structural requirements, procedural mechanics, common claim types, and the decision boundaries courts apply when evaluating minor settlements.

Definition and scope

A minor, defined under most U.S. state codes as a person under the age of 18, is considered legally incompetent to enter into enforceable agreements — including settlement agreements resolving personal injury claims. This incapacity is not a procedural technicality; it is a substantive protection rooted in common law and codified across state statutes. Because a settlement permanently extinguishes future legal rights, courts exercise parens patriae authority — the sovereign's power to protect those who cannot protect themselves — to review and approve any compromise of a minor's claim before it becomes binding.

The scope of court approval requirements extends broadly. Structured or lump-sum settlements, releases of liability, covenant-not-to-sue agreements, and dismissals with prejudice in exchange for consideration all typically require approval when a minor is the injured party. The statute of limitations for personal injury claims is also affected: most states toll (pause) the limitations period while the plaintiff remains a minor, allowing the claim to be brought within a fixed window after the minor reaches majority — commonly 1 to 3 years after the 18th birthday, depending on the state.

Court approval procedures are governed at the state level. California, for example, codifies the requirement under California Probate Code §§ 3500–3613 (Cal. Prob. Code), which distinguishes between petitions filed in the superior court and expedited procedures available when net proceeds fall below $5,000. New York's Civil Practice Law and Rules (CPLR) § 1207 imposes parallel requirements. The Uniform Law Commission has addressed related guardianship frameworks in the Uniform Guardianship, Conservatorship, and Other Protective Arrangements Act (UGCOPAA), though adoption across states remains uneven.

How it works

The court approval process follows a structured sequence that varies modestly by jurisdiction but generally adheres to the following phases:

  1. Appointment of a representative. If no parent or legal guardian exists with clear authority, the court may appoint a guardian ad litem — an individual designated solely to represent the minor's legal interests in the litigation. This role is distinct from a conservator or a general guardian.

  2. Filing a petition for approval. The guardian, parent, or appointed representative files a petition with the court having jurisdiction over the minor or the action. The petition must disclose the nature and extent of the injuries, the proposed settlement amount, the basis for the proposed amount, and all fees and costs to be deducted.

  3. Disclosure of fees. Most state courts require explicit disclosure of contingency fee agreements and the specific dollar amount of any attorney's fees to be deducted. California Probate Code § 3601 grants the court authority to fix the amount of attorney's fees regardless of any contractual agreement.

  4. Judicial hearing. A judge reviews the petition, often in an informal evidentiary setting. The court examines whether the settlement is in the minor's best interest given the liability facts, the severity of injury, the applicable compensatory damages, and the risks of continued litigation.

  5. Order and disbursement. Upon approval, the court issues a formal order. Net settlement proceeds — after fees, costs, and liens — must typically be deposited into a blocked account, a court-supervised trust, or a structured annuity. The funds are inaccessible to the minor until majority unless the court authorizes earlier disbursement for specific purposes such as medical expenses or education.

  6. Final accounting. Some jurisdictions, including California, require a final accounting when the blocked funds are released upon the minor reaching age 18.

Common scenarios

Minor personal injury claims arise across a wide range of tort contexts. The most frequently encountered categories include:

Decision boundaries

Courts apply defined analytical criteria when deciding whether to approve or reject a proposed minor's settlement. The central inquiry is whether the settlement serves the minor's best interest — a standard that is not satisfied merely because all adult parties consent.

Key approval factors examined by courts include:

Approved vs. rejected settlements. Courts have rejected settlements that appeared facially adequate but left medical liens unresolved, that allocated fees disproportionate to the net recovery, or that failed to account for future care costs in cases involving permanent disability. A settlement that appears favorable to an adult litigant may be rejected when a court determines that a minor with a traumatic brain injury or spinal cord injury will incur lifetime costs exceeding the proposed amount.

Parental authority limits. Parents may not unilaterally waive a minor child's future tort claims. This principle, affirmed in decisions across multiple jurisdictions, distinguishes parental authority from guardianship authority. A parent may act as next friend in litigation, but the settlement still requires judicial confirmation. This contrasts with adult plaintiffs, who possess full authority under tort law foundations to resolve their own claims without court oversight.

Post-majority actions. If a minor's claim is not resolved before majority, the minor — upon turning 18 — acquires independent standing to pursue the claim directly, subject to the applicable tolled limitations period. At that point, no guardian ad litem is required and no court approval is needed for any settlement the now-adult plaintiff accepts.

References

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