As used in this chapter:

Terms Used In North Dakota Code 26.1-41-01

  • children: includes children by birth and by adoption. See North Dakota Code 1-01-18
  • Corporation: A legal entity owned by the holders of shares of stock that have been issued, and that can own, receive, and transfer property, and carry on business in its own name.
  • Decedent: A deceased person.
  • Dependent: A person dependent for support upon another.
  • following: when used by way of reference to a chapter or other part of a statute means the next preceding or next following chapter or other part. See North Dakota Code 1-01-49
  • Individual: means a human being. See North Dakota Code 1-01-49
  • Lease: A contract transferring the use of property or occupancy of land, space, structures, or equipment in consideration of a payment (e.g., rent). Source: OCC
  • Organization: includes a foreign or domestic association, business trust, corporation, enterprise, estate, joint venture, limited liability company, limited liability partnership, limited partnership, partnership, trust, or any legal or commercial entity. See North Dakota Code 1-01-49
  • Person: means an individual, organization, government, political subdivision, or government agency or instrumentality. See North Dakota Code 1-01-49
  • State: when applied to the different parts of the United States, includes the District of Columbia and the territories. See North Dakota Code 1-01-49
  • Tort: A civil wrong or breach of a duty to another person, as outlined by law. A very common tort is negligent operation of a motor vehicle that results in property damage and personal injury in an automobile accident.
  • week: means seven consecutive days and the word "month" a calendar month. See North Dakota Code 1-01-33

1.    “Accidental bodily injury” means bodily injury, sickness, or disease, including death resulting therefrom, arising out of the operation of a motor vehicle, and excluding injury as the result of an individual entering or alighting from a stopped motor vehicle if the injury is not caused by another motor vehicle, and which is accidental as to the person claiming basic or optional excess no-fault benefits.

2.    “Basic no-fault benefits” means benefits for economic loss resulting from accidental bodily injury. The maximum amount of basic no-fault benefits payable for all economic loss incurred and resulting from accidental bodily injury to any one person as the result of any one accident may not exceed thirty thousand dollars, regardless of the number of persons entitled to the benefits or the number of basic no-fault insurers obligated to pay the benefits. Basic no-fault benefits payable may not exceed one hundred fifty dollars per week per person prorated for any lesser period for work loss or survivors’ income loss, or three thousand five hundred dollars for funeral, cremation, and burial expenses.

3.    “Basic no-fault insurer” means an insurer or a qualified self-insurer.

4.    “Bus” means:

a.    Any motor vehicle owned by a public or governmental agency and operated for the transportation of children to or from school or privately owned and operated for compensation for the transportation of children to or from school.

b.    Any motor vehicle owned by a charitable, religious, educational, or governmental corporation or organization designed for carrying more than ten passengers and used for the transportation of persons not for compensation.

c.    Any motor vehicle owned by a political subdivision and operated as part of a public transit system in which all or a portion of the costs of operation are subsidized by the political subdivision or the federal government.

5.    “Dependent survivors” means the surviving spouse of a deceased injured person if residing in the deceased’s household at the time of the deceased’s death, and other persons receiving support from the deceased injured person at the time of the deceased’s death which would qualify them as dependents of the deceased for federal income tax purposes under the federal Internal Revenue Code. The dependency of a surviving spouse terminates upon remarriage.

6.    “Disability” means the inability to engage in substantially all of the injured person’s usual and customary daily activities.

7. “Economic loss” means medical expenses, rehabilitation expenses, work loss, replacement services loss, survivors’ income loss, survivors’ replacement services loss, and funeral, cremation, and burial expenses.

8.    “Injured person” means an individual who sustains accidental bodily injury.

9.    “Medical expenses” means usual and customary charges incurred for reasonable and necessary medical, surgical, diagnostic, x-ray, dental, prosthetic, ambulance, hospital, or professional nursing services or services for remedial treatment and care. Usual and customary charges do not include:

a.    The portion of the charge for a room in any hospital, clinic, convalescent or nursing home, extended care facility, or any similar facility in excess of the reasonable and customary charge for semiprivate accommodations unless intensive care is medically needed.

b.    Charges for drugs sold without a prescription. c.    Charges for experimental treatments.

d.    Charges for medically unproven treatments.

10.    “Motor vehicle” means a vehicle having more than three load-bearing wheels, of a kind required to be registered under the laws of this state relating to motor vehicles, designed primarily for operation upon the public streets, roads, and highways, and    driven by power other than muscular power, and includes a trailer drawn by or attached to such a vehicle. The term does not include an unconventional vehicle defined in subsection 2 of section 39-29.2-01.

11.    “Noneconomic loss” means pain, suffering, inconvenience, and other nonpecuniary damage recoverable under the tort law of this state.

12.    “Occupying” means to be in or upon a motor vehicle.

13.    “Operation of a motor vehicle” means operation, maintenance, or use of a motor vehicle as a vehicle. Operation of a motor vehicle does not include conduct within the course of a business of repairing, servicing, or otherwise maintaining a motor vehicle unless the injury occurs off the business premises, or conduct in the course of loading and unloading the vehicle unless the injury occurs while occupying the motor vehicle.

14.    “Owner” means the person in whose name the motor vehicle has been registered. If ownership has been transferred, but the registration record has not been changed, “owner” means the person, other than a lienholder, to whom ownership has been transferred. If no registration is in effect at the time of an accident involving the motor vehicle, “owner” means the person, other than a lienholder, who holds the legal title to the motor vehicle. If the motor vehicle is the subject of a security agreement with the debtor having the right to possession, a lease with an option to purchase with the lessee having the right to possession, or a lease with a term of six months or more with the lessee having the right to possession, “owner” means the debtor or lessee.

15.    “Pedestrian” means any individual not occupying any vehicle designed to be driven or drawn by power other than muscular power.

16.    “Rehabilitation expense” means the cost of a procedure or treatment for rehabilitation or a course of rehabilitative occupational training if the procedure, treatment, or training is reasonable and appropriate for the particular case, its cost is reasonable in relation to its probable rehabilitative effects, and it is likely to contribute substantially to medical or occupational rehabilitation.

17.    “Relative” means any of the following residing in the same household as the owner: an individual related to the owner by blood, marriage, or adoption, or a foster child. An individual resides in the same household if that individual usually makes a home in the same family unit, even though temporarily living elsewhere.

18.    “Replacement services loss” means expenses not exceeding fifteen dollars per day in obtaining ordinary and necessary services from others not members of the injured person’s household in lieu of those that the injured person would have performed had the injured person not been injured, not for income but for the benefit of the injured person or the injured person’s household. Replacement services loss does not include any loss after the death of an injured person.

19.    “Secured motor vehicle” means a motor vehicle with respect to which the security required by this chapter was in effect at the time of its involvement in the accident resulting in accidental bodily injury.

20.    “Secured person” means the owner, operator, or occupant of a secured motor vehicle, and any other person legally responsible for the acts or omissions of the owner, operator, or occupant.

21. “Serious injury” means an accidental bodily injury which results in death, dismemberment, serious and permanent disfigurement or disability beyond sixty days, or medical expenses in excess of two thousand five hundred dollars. An injured person who is furnished the services in subsection 9 without charge or at less than the usual and customary charge for the service in this state is deemed to have sustained a serious injury if a court determines that the usual and customary value of the services exceeds two thousand five hundred dollars.

22.    “Survivors’ income loss” means loss sustained after an injured person’s death by dependent survivors during their dependency and consisting of the loss of the contributions they would have received for their support from the decedent out of income from work the decedent would normally have performed had the decedent not died.

    23.    “Survivors’ replacement services loss” means expenses, not to exceed fifteen dollars per day after the injured person’s death, by dependent survivors in obtaining ordinary and necessary services from others not members of the decedent’s household in lieu of the services the decedent would have performed not for income but for the benefit of the decedent’s household.

24.    “Work loss” means eighty-five percent of loss of income from work an injured person who would normally be employed in gainful activity during the period of disability would have performed had the person not been injured, reduced by any income from substitute work actually performed by the injured person or by income the injured person would have earned in available appropriate substitute work that the injured person was capable of performing but unreasonably failed to undertake. Work loss does not include any loss after death of an injured person.