TrustAIby Bonis Systems

Practice Division · Personal Injury · California

Personal-injury intake, governed — cited deadlines, fail-closed

A practice division built for California personal-injury firms. It recognizes the limitations deadline a matter is under directly from the controlling statute, triages a raw intake into a worklist the firm can act on, and abstains wherever the facts can't prove a conclusion. It is held to the same bar as the trust division: grounded in authority, cited, and conservative by construction. It organizes and prepares — it never gives legal advice, and it never solicits.

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Statute-of-Limitations Check

Enter the claim type and the date of injury and get the California filing deadline that generally applies — cited to the controlling statute (CCP § 335.1 for general injury, § 340.5 for medical malpractice, Gov. Code § 911.2 for a government defendant, § 352 for a minor). When a date can't be proven — a discovery date you don't have, a state that isn't California — it says cannot determine rather than guess. The deadline that costs a case is the one nobody computed; this one is computed, cited, and fails closed.

Open the SOL check →

Intake Triage

Turn a raw intake into a worklist: what's still missing to evaluate the matter, which records to pull, which specialists the case is likely to need, the limitations posture, and a review of the negligence elements — each element cited (Civ. Code § 1714, CACI 400/401/430; CACI 500/501 for medical negligence). The element review reports satisfaction only; it never decides the claim.

Open intake triage →

Damages Schedule

Assemble the claim's damages into a documented schedule: economic items totaled to the cent, anything without documentation flagged and held out of the total — nothing estimated or invented. Non-economic harm is listed but never assigned a value (that's for the attorney and the trier of fact), and medical-malpractice non-economic damages carry the MICRA cap flag (Civ. Code § 3333.2). It organizes; it never produces a settlement figure.

Open damages schedule →

Demand-Package Draft

Assemble the limitations posture, the liability-element review, and the documented damages schedule into one organized, cited, printable package draft — with the open items that still need resolving before the record is complete. It is stamped for attorney review and fails to incomplete until the gaps are closed. It assembles the record; it never writes the demand, sets a figure, decides the claim, or sends.

Open demand package →

How this division is built

Grounded in the authority

Every deadline points at the California statute it comes from, with a link to the official code section. Nothing is asserted that isn't tied to a source — the same cite-or-abstain rule the trust tools run on.

Fail-closed by construction

When the inputs don't support a conclusion, the tool returns cannot determine and names what's missing. It is built so it can never report more time than the facts prove — the over-reporting failure mode, certifying time that isn't there, is engineered out.

Runs on the device

The tool runs entirely in the browser. Claim facts, dates of birth, and injury dates are never uploaded, stored, or sent to a server.

Organize, never advise — never solicit

The division prepares and cites the work for the firm's lawyers; it does not advise a claimant, predict an outcome, or contact anyone. It is a firm tool, not a lead engine.

For California PI firms

This division is built for the intake desk that can't afford a missed deadline. If you run a California personal-injury practice and want to see it against your own caseload, the firm track is the place to start.

For firms →   Try the SOL check

What it does — and doesn't

It does

Recognize and cite the limitations deadline, flag tolling (minority, government-claim preconditions), and hand the cited result to the firm — ready for a lawyer to act on.

It doesn't

Give legal advice, decide whether a claim is good, predict a recovery, or contact a claimant. California limitations law has fact-specific exceptions and changes over time — a licensed California attorney must confirm anything relied on.