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If Someone Hit Me, Can I Sue Them? What Is a Civil Battery in Maryland?

Yes. If someone intentionally hits you, that conduct may give rise to a civil battery claim. But the analysis does not stop there. In Baltimore personal injury cases, the critical questions are whether the contact was intentional, whether it was offensive or harmful, whether there was consent, and whether the defense can reframe the situation to avoid liability.

Main risk: The defense will argue consent, mutual combat, or attempt to recharacterize the conduct as something less than intentional.

Insurance tactic: Shift the case away from intentional conduct and toward confusion, accident, or shared responsibility.

Next issue: Whether the facts support a true civil battery claim as opposed to negligence—or no claim at all.


What Is a Civil Battery?

A civil battery is a non-consensual, offensive, or harmful physical touching of another person.

If someone deliberately strikes another person, throws an object that hits them, or otherwise causes unwanted physical contact, that may constitute a battery. The contact does not have to cause serious injury. The key issue is whether it was intentional and non-consensual.

One does not have to personally touch another. Throwing something that strikes another person can still qualify as a battery.

Can I Sue If Someone Hit Me?

Yes—but only if the facts support a viable civil claim.

Not every physical interaction leads to a lawsuit. The analysis focuses on:

  • Whether the contact was intentional
  • Whether it was offensive or harmful
  • Whether consent may be argued
  • Whether the incident can be proven with evidence

These cases are often fact-driven and may involve witness testimony, video, prior interactions, and context surrounding the incident.

Consent is one of the most common defenses.

A frequent issue in battery cases is whether the parties agreed—explicitly or implicitly—to some level of physical contact. In situations involving mutual combat, sports, or voluntary confrontation, the defense may argue that the injured party accepted the risk of contact.

That does not automatically defeat a claim. It shifts the analysis to the scope of that consent and whether the conduct exceeded it.

What Is the Difference Between Civil Battery and Civil Assault?

Battery involves contact. Assault involves the threat or attempt of contact.

In a assault, the focus is generally on the threat or attempt to cause harmful or offensive contact. When that threat becomes actual contact, a separate cause of action—battery—may arise.

These claims are often brought together because they arise from the same set of facts.

What Is the Difference Between Battery and Negligence?

The key difference is intent.

Battery is an intentional tort. Negligence involves a failure to use reasonable care. In a Baltimore personal injury case, the distinction matters because it affects how the case is evaluated, defended, and proven.

IssueBatteryNegligence
IntentIntentional conductCarelessness or failure to act reasonably
Type of ActDeliberate physical contactAccidental or unintentional conduct
Typical DefenseConsent, denial of intentNo breach of duty, contributory negligence
Case FramingIntentional wrongdoingFailure to exercise reasonable care

Why This Distinction Matters in a Baltimore Case

The defense strategy changes depending on how the claim is framed.

If the case is treated as negligence, the defense may focus on contributory negligence. If it is treated as battery, the focus shifts to intent and consent. In some cases, the defense may attempt to blur that line to gain an advantage.

Statute of Limitations Considerations

Timing matters, and different claims may have different filing deadlines.

Assault and battery claims may be subject to different time limitations under Maryland law. That distinction can affect how a case is evaluated and when action must be taken.

How These Cases Are Typically Defended

Expect the defense to attack the characterization of the event.

  • Denial that the contact occurred
  • Argument that the contact was accidental
  • Claim of mutual combat or consent
  • Challenge to credibility or proof
  • Reframing as negligence instead of intentional conduct

These cases often turn on credibility, consistency, and evidence.