Why Hire Truck Accident Lawyers?
Truck accident cases are fundamentally different from car accident claims. Commercial trucks are governed by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) regulations, and crashes often involve multiple liable parties — the driver, the trucking company, cargo loaders, maintenance contractors, and even vehicle manufacturers. Each party has separate insurance coverage and legal teams working to shift blame.
Trucking companies begin their own investigation within hours of a crash, dispatching rapid response teams to gather evidence and protect their interests. Without an experienced truck accident attorney acting quickly on your behalf, critical evidence — electronic logging device (ELD) data, driver qualification files, inspection records, and black box data — can be lost or destroyed.
Our attorneys understand FMCSA hours-of-service rules, cargo securement standards, driver qualification requirements, and the corporate structures trucking companies use to limit liability. We retain accident reconstruction experts, toxicologists, and trucking industry specialists to build cases that hold every responsible party accountable.
At Roden Law, our personal injury attorneys have helped numerous victims secure millions in compensation across Georgia and South Carolina. We provide all potential clients with a free, no-obligation review of their claim and do not charge upfront legal fees.
Types of Truck Accident Lawyers Cases We Handle
Meeting the Statute of Limitations
If you fail to file within the statute of limitations, your claim will be dismissed and you will permanently lose the right to pursue compensation. You should not hesitate to consult with a skilled attorney to ensure your claim is filed on time.
Do I Have a Case?
Before our attorneys can take legal action, we must prove the four elements of negligence existed in your accident:
Duty of Care
The other party owed you a duty of care and was obligated to act in a manner that ensured your safety and the safety of others.
Breach of Duty
The other party breached that duty by failing to act as a reasonably safe and prudent person would have in the same situation.
Causation
The at-fault party's conduct and the resulting accident directly caused your injuries. We gather evidence to prove that but for their negligence, you would not have been harmed.
Damages
You suffered actual, quantifiable damages — medical expenses, lost income, pain and suffering — as a direct result of the at-fault party's breach.
Types of Compensation You Can Recover
Economic Damages
- Past and future medical expenses
- Lost wages or income
- Loss of earning capacity
- Property damage and vehicle repair/replacement
- Cost of rehabilitation and physical therapy
- Assistive medical equipment
- Cost of long-term or lifelong care
Non-Economic Damages
- Pain and suffering
- Mental and emotional distress
- Loss of companionship (spouse/family)
- Disability and disfigurement
- Loss of enjoyment of life
- Humiliation or loss of reputation
Non-economic damages can only be pursued through a personal injury lawsuit, not a standard insurance claim.
Comparative Fault — What If I'm Partially At Fault?
🍑 Georgia — Modified Comparative Fault
You can recover if less than 50% at fault (O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33). Your award is reduced by your fault percentage.
🌙 South Carolina — Modified Comparative Fault
You can recover if less than 51% at fault. Your award is reduced by your fault percentage.
For example, if you filed a $100,000 lawsuit and a court finds you are 30% at fault, your award would be reduced to $70,000. Our attorneys will work to minimize any fault assigned to you.
Common Causes of Truck Accident Lawyers Cases
- Driver fatigue and hours-of-service violations
- Distracted driving (phone, GPS, dispatching systems)
- Impaired driving (alcohol, drugs, prescription medication)
- Speeding and aggressive driving under delivery pressure
- Improper cargo loading or overweight loads
- Inadequate truck maintenance (brakes, tires, lights)
- Unqualified or insufficiently trained drivers
- Blind spot accidents (no-zone collisions)
- Wide turn accidents at intersections
- Tire blowouts from worn or defective tires
- Adverse weather combined with excessive speed
- Failure to comply with FMCSA safety regulations
Common Injuries in Truck Accident Lawyers Cases
The massive force of a truck collision frequently causes severe head trauma, ranging from concussions to permanent brain damage with cognitive, behavioral, and motor impairments requiring lifelong care.
The weight disparity between commercial trucks and passenger vehicles makes spinal injuries common, potentially resulting in partial or complete paralysis, loss of sensation, and permanent disability.
Victims trapped in wreckage may suffer crush syndrome, compartment syndrome, or traumatic amputations requiring emergency surgery, prosthetics, and extensive rehabilitation.
The extreme impact forces in truck accidents often cause compound fractures, shattered pelvis, crushed legs, and multiple broken bones requiring surgical hardware and lengthy recovery.
Blunt force trauma from truck collisions can rupture the spleen, liver, kidneys, or lungs, causing life-threatening internal bleeding that requires emergency surgical intervention.
Truck accidents involving fuel tank ruptures, hazardous material spills, or post-collision fires can cause third-degree burns requiring skin grafts, reconstructive surgery, and permanent scarring.
Due to the size and weight of commercial trucks (up to 80,000 lbs), truck accidents are disproportionately fatal. Surviving family members may pursue wrongful death claims for their loss.
Survivors of catastrophic truck accidents frequently develop severe PTSD, anxiety disorders, driving phobia, nightmares, and depression that significantly impact their daily functioning and relationships.
Recent Case Results
Results shown are gross settlement/verdict amounts before fees and costs. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes.
Reviewed by Joshua Dorminy, Partner — Licensed in Georgia & South Carolina
Frequently Asked Questions
Truck accident cases are far more complex than car accidents. They involve federal FMCSA regulations, multiple potentially liable parties (driver, trucking company, cargo loader, maintenance provider), larger insurance policies ($750,000 to $5 million minimum), electronic logging device (ELD) data, and aggressive corporate defense teams. The severity of injuries is typically much greater due to the massive size and weight difference between commercial trucks and passenger vehicles.
Multiple parties may share liability: the truck driver (for negligence, fatigue, or impairment), the trucking company (for negligent hiring, training, or supervision), the cargo loading company (for improperly secured loads), the maintenance provider (for brake or tire failures), the truck or parts manufacturer (for defective components), and even the shipper (for pressuring unrealistic delivery schedules). Our attorneys investigate all potential sources of liability and insurance coverage.
In Georgia, you have 2 years from the date of the accident to file a personal injury claim (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33). In South Carolina, the deadline is 3 years (S.C. Code § 15-3-530). However, acting quickly is critical in truck accident cases because trucking companies may only be required to retain electronic logging data for 6 months and other records may be destroyed if a litigation hold is not issued promptly.
Critical evidence includes: the truck driver's electronic logging device (ELD) records showing hours of service, the driver's qualification file and employment history, drug and alcohol test results, the truck's maintenance and inspection records, the event data recorder (black box) data, cargo manifests and weight tickets, dashcam or surveillance footage, and the trucking company's safety rating and prior violations from the FMCSA SAFER database.
Federal hours-of-service (HOS) regulations limit how long commercial truck drivers can operate. Drivers may drive a maximum of 11 hours after 10 consecutive hours off duty, cannot drive beyond the 14th consecutive hour after coming on duty, and must take a 30-minute break after 8 cumulative hours of driving. Violations of these rules — often caused by pressure from dispatchers to meet delivery deadlines — are a leading cause of fatigued driving accidents.
Truck accident cases typically involve significantly higher compensation than car accidents due to the severity of injuries and the larger insurance policies carried by commercial carriers (federal law requires a minimum of $750,000 in liability coverage). Our firm has recovered multi-million dollar settlements and verdicts in truck accident cases. The value depends on medical expenses, lost income, permanent disability, pain and suffering, and the degree of the trucking company's negligence.
No. Trucking companies and their insurers often make early settlement offers before you understand the full extent of your injuries, specifically to limit their exposure. These initial offers are almost always far below the true value of your claim. Our attorneys will not recommend a settlement until you have reached maximum medical improvement and we have fully evaluated all current and future damages, including long-term care needs.
Trucking companies sometimes classify drivers as independent contractors to avoid liability. However, courts in Georgia and South Carolina apply tests that look at the actual level of control the company exercises over the driver — including setting routes, schedules, and work requirements. Even if a driver is classified as a contractor, the trucking company may still be held vicariously liable. Our attorneys investigate the true employment relationship.
An underride accident occurs when a smaller vehicle slides beneath the trailer of a commercial truck, often shearing off the roof of the passenger vehicle. These are among the most deadly types of truck accidents. Federal regulations require rear underride guards on trailers, but side underride guards are not yet mandated. If an underride guard was missing, improperly maintained, or failed on impact, the trucking company or manufacturer may bear additional liability.
While most truck accident cases settle before trial, our attorneys prepare every case as if it will go to court. Trucking companies and their insurers are more likely to offer fair settlements when they know the opposing attorneys have trial experience and are willing to take the case before a jury. If a fair settlement cannot be reached, we are fully prepared to litigate your case to verdict.
Related Resources
Contact Our Truck Accident Lawyerss Today
If you were injured and believe another party is at fault, contact us for a free, no-obligation review. We dedicate our skills and resources to recovering the maximum compensation you deserve — at no upfront cost.
