
If you were injured in a crash at or near FM 1960 & Cutten, we can help. This page explains why this intersection is dangerous, what evidence must be preserved quickly, and what to do right now.
Quick answer: Crashes at FM 1960 & Cutten are frequently severe because of high traffic volume, conflicting vehicle speeds, and the specific roadway design at this location. If you were injured here, move fast to preserve evidence — surveillance video from nearby businesses can be overwritten within 7 to 30 days. Texas has a two-year statute of limitations on most injury claims, but the preservation window is much shorter. Call (713) 842-9442 for a free case review.
A high-speed east-west corridor where rapid suburban expansion has outpaced road updates. Left turns are frequent but poorly managed by current signal timing. Short turn lanes spill over into straight-through traffic.
Left-turn collisions dominate. Rear-end crashes from sudden stops when turn-lane queues back up. Hydroplaning incidents during storms — poor drainage causes temporary flooding.
Soft-tissue injuries from rear-end impacts, head and neck injuries from left-turn angle collisions, and more severe injuries in weather-related loss-of-control crashes.
Weather conditions frequently contribute to crashes here. National Weather Service records and TxDOT drainage-complaint records can be valuable evidence in storm-related loss-of-control cases at this location.
Every injury case is stronger when evidence is locked down early. We send preservation letters to every business within line-of-sight of the crash, request dashcam footage from rideshare platforms, subpoena traffic engineering records where relevant, and obtain the Texas Peace Officer's Crash Report (CR-3) as soon as it becomes available through TxDOT's Crash Records Information System.
Under Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code §16.003, most personal-injury lawsuits must be filed within two years of the date of injury. Claims against government entities — for example, if a signal malfunction is part of the case — can require notice in as little as 90 days under the City of Houston charter. Read our full statute of limitations guide →
Texas follows a modified comparative negligence rule: if you are 50% or less at fault, you recover damages reduced by your fault percentage. At 51% or more, you recover nothing. Insurance adjusters push fault onto victims aggressively to trigger the 51% cliff. How the 51% bar works →
At high-volume intersections like FM 1960 & Cutten, catastrophic injuries frequently exceed the at-fault driver's minimum Texas liability limits (30/60/25). Our firm maps every potentially available policy — the at-fault driver's personal policy, any employer coverage if the driver was on the job, commercial umbrellas, your own UM/UIM coverage, and in drunk-driver cases, potential dram shop liability against bars that over-served.
Information on this page about crash patterns and frequency at this intersection is drawn from publicly available sources including the Texas Department of Transportation Crash Records Information System (CRIS), City of Houston ARC-GIS data, Houston-Galveston Area Council reports, and widely-reported news coverage. This page is general information, not legal advice for your specific case.
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