
Truck crashes in Texas can often cause severe injuries, leading to numerous Texas truck crash claims each year. The size, weight, and impact force of large commercial vehicles mean injuries are usually more serious and often fatal.
Many successful truck accident claims require four key elements:
Our law firm focuses on building cases that identify all liable parties, preserve critical evidence, and prove damages to maximize your compensation.
Truck accident claims differ from ordinary car wreck cases. Commercial carriers and professional truck drivers must comply with federal regulations, Texas statutes, and industry standards.
Liability can extend beyond the driver to:
With multiple parties to any personal injury lawsuit, the case will take longer with each new party.
The Challenge: Commercial defendants deploy rapid response teams, insurers, and defense counsel within hours of a crash. Evidence disappears quickly unless decisive steps are taken.
The Solution: A strong case is built from the first day, not months later. The sooner we get started on your case, the better.
Preserving evidence can be vital for a successful truck crash claim. In appropriate cases, our truck accident attorney moves quickly to secure important evidence before it is altered or destroyed.
Vehicle & Electronic Records:
Operational Records:
Scene Evidence:
Spoliation notices are sent without delay to prevent the destruction of evidence. Getting competent representation ASAP is a good first step to a truck accident injury case.
Truck accident liability rarely rests with a single party. Texas law allows claims against every entity whose negligence contributed to the crash.
Truck Driver:
Trucking Companies:
Maintenance Providers:
Manufacturers:
A comprehensive liability analysis expands available insurance coverage and strengthens negotiating leverage.
Comparative Fault in Texas
In personal injury cases, Texas uses a comparative fault system in which the conduct of all parties is measured to determine whether they contributed to causing the accident. Defense attorneys will almost always try to blame the victim to reduce the amount of money they must pay.
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSA) often play a role in proving negligence. Violations often establish clear fault and can support claims for punitive damages when misconduct is severe. The violation must relate to a cause of the crash to be effective in your case.
FMCSA compliance records, inspection histories, and safety ratings provide objective proof of unsafe operations and systemic negligence.
Serious truck accident cases demand expert analysis to establish how and why the crash occurred.
Expert testimony is often necessary to prove your case and maximize your damages.
Truck crashes frequently cause severe injuries that require comprehensive documentation beyond basic medical bills. Usually, treating physicians will explain to the jury the nature of your injuries and the impact on your life.
When a truck crash is fatal, Texas law allows the immediate surviving family members to pursue wrongful death claims. These cases require careful handling, both legally and emotionally.
In addition to wrongful death claims, survival claims may be pursued for the pain and suffering, medical expenses, mental anguish, and other non-economic damages experienced before death.
After filing a lawsuit after a fatal truck accident, we often uncover safety violations and false claims by the truck driver, which can enhance your case value.
Commercial trucks carry commercial insurance policies, often both primary and excess, but accessing those limits requires aggressive, experienced attorneys. The more money at risk for the insurance company, the harder they fight to keep it.
Learning the policy limits often requires filing a lawsuit to obtain the policies in disclosure.
Texas follows a proportionate responsibility system. Injured parties may recover damages if they are not more than 50 percent at fault for causing the crash.
Defense teams almost always try to shift blame to injured motorists through:
For more than 4 decades, we have countered defense arguments trying to shift the blame to our client. We use eyewitness testimony and expert testimony, and we highlight violations of federal regulations or Texas law to ensure the jury understands who is really at fault for the crash.
All of this comes with a commitment to being fully prepared for your case.
It has been our experience that most truck accident claims settle before a jury trial is concluded. Often, litigation is required to focus the insurance company on its real exposure to the damages. By being ready for a trial, your case is strengthened, and the chances of full compensation go up substantially.
Our trial strategy focuses on:
“The best way to maximize compensation is for your lawyer to be fully ready to try your case to the jury”. Greg Baumgartner
Our first truck accident case was in 1985, which involved a fatal crash where our client ran into the back of a semi-truck that was parked at the time of the crash. The case became complicated because our driver was intoxicated when he ran into the back of the 18-wheeler.
Nevertheless, we fought hard to prove that the truck was illegally parked partly on the highway and was responsible for the accident.
The insurance company settled with us right before trial. But why?
We rely on 4 decades of experience handling truck crashes to maximize the compensation for your case. We do not have to reinvent the wheel, as we have been there and done that, and truck accidents are what we do.