A Bronx man who was clipped by a city garbage truck while crossing Bruckner Boulevard has won a whopping $50.7 million verdict from a jury.

Video of the September 2021 incident shows construction foreman Darcy Bottex, in a white hat and bright orange shirt, walking back to his work site after a quick stop at a deli when the vehicle struck him in the left arm, sending him careening to the pavement.

Bottex, now 43, climbed back to his feet as the truck finished its left-hand turn, the footage showed.

Darcy Bottex has been unable to work since he was struck by a garbage truck. Helayne Seidman

“The truck was actually about to run over my foot. I pulled my leg back,” Bottex told The Post this week. “I barely escaped it. I got hit directly into my arm and shoulder, that’s why I went flying the way I did.

“My arm was instantly purple,” he added.

Two days later, Bottex began to realize the extent of his injuries.

Bottex was crossing Bruckner Boulevard when he was struck. Obtained by the New York Post

The father of two, left, seen here with his lawyer Jason Herbert, said the verdict is a dream come true. Helayne Seidman

“I was like wait, hold on — I can’t turn my head too much,” he said.

The father of two, who had three subsequent surgeries including a procedure on his shoulder and two on his neck, now has permanent pain and has been unable to work since the incident.

“I can’t look down for too long, can’t look up for too long. It’s very draining. Constantly, 24 hours a day, there’s not a moment that passes that I don’t feel” pain, he said.

He sued the city for unspecified damages in January 2022 in Bronx Supreme Court. The jury handed up its eye-popping decision Oct. 28.

“The verdict is really like a dream come true,” he said. “I haven’t been able to do nothing, I can’t really provide for myself, I rely on family. After a while, it starts mentally affecting you.”

He plans to use the cash to provide for his family after years of being forced to rely on relatives after his injuries.

“Mr. Bottex incurred severe personal injuries which he is forced to cope with for the rest of his life,” said his attorney, Jason Herbert, who noted Bottex was a foreman supervising 30 workers at the time of the incident.

“We respect but disagree with the jury’s verdict which is excessive based on the evidence presented,” said city Law Department spokesman Nicholas Paolucci, who noted the city made arguments during the trial of “comparative negligence” because Bottex was on his cell phone at the time of the incident.