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Sacramento, CA

Sacramento Truck Accident Lawyer

Hit by a big rig on I-5, I-80, CA-99, or US-50? 50+ years of experience. $1 billion+ recovered. FMCSA-savvy investigators. No fee unless we win.

100% Confidential · No Fees Unless We Win · Available 24/7 · Bilingual (English/Spanish)

Key Facts for Sacramento Truck Accident Claims

You have 2 years from the crash date to file (Cal. Code Civ. Proc. § 335.1) — but ELD and dashcam evidence can be overwritten in days to weeks without a spoliation letter. Federal FMCSA regulations apply. Commercial policies start at $750,000–$5 million. Multiple defendants are common: driver, carrier, cargo loader, broker, and maintenance contractor. Free 24/7 consultation: 1-800-707-0707.

Why Truck Cases Are Different

A commercial truck collision is not a bigger version of a car crash. An 80,000-pound tractor-trailer operates under a federal regulatory framework the other driver has never heard of, is owned by a corporate defendant with a rapid-response legal team, and is insured for many times the amount of an ordinary auto policy. When a big rig hits a passenger vehicle on I-5 through downtown Sacramento, on the I-80/CA-99 freight stack near West Sacramento, or on a US-50 descent from the Sierra Nevada, the legal universe your case inhabits is completely different from a standard personal injury claim.

Why Truck Cases Are Legally Distinct

An 80,000-lb truck produces catastrophic injury patterns a passenger vehicle simply cannot absorb. Federal FMCSA regulations apply — hours of service, driver qualification, drug and alcohol testing, cargo securement, and vehicle maintenance are all potential levers in your case. Multiple defendants are the rule, not the exception. And digital evidence (ELD data, dashcam, ECM) begins disappearing from carrier systems within days unless a lawyer locks it down. The trucking company’s insurer dispatches investigators to the scene within hours. You need a team doing the same on your side.

Commercial policies: $750K–$5M vs. California’s $30K auto minimum. That difference matters for your recovery.

50+
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Experience

Representing California truck crash victims since the 1970s

$1B+
Recovered

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ELD and Dashcam Evidence Is Being Destroyed Right Now

Trucking carriers are legally permitted to overwrite ELD records, dashcam footage, and dispatch logs on a rolling retention schedule — often as short as 30–90 days. Without a formal spoliation letter from a lawyer, this evidence vanishes. Call us today so we can send a preservation demand before the carrier destroys what you need most.

Federal Regulations That Apply to Your Case

Most lawyers handle car accidents. Truck cases require a working knowledge of the FMCSA rulebook. These are the regulations that come up most often in Sacramento truck crash cases — each a potential source of liability when violated:

FMCSA Hours of Service — 49 C.F.R. Part 395

Drivers may not exceed 11 hours of driving after 10 consecutive off-duty hours, and are capped at 14 hours total on-duty. Violations of these rules are negligence per se — among the strongest evidence a trucking case can produce.

Driver Qualification Files — 49 C.F.R. Part 391

Every motor carrier must verify CDL validity, medical certification, prior employment history, road-test completion, and motor vehicle records. Carriers that hire or retain drivers with disqualifying records are liable for negligent hiring.

Electronic Logging Devices — ELD Mandate (2017)

Almost every commercial driver in interstate commerce must use an ELD that automatically records driving time, engine hours, vehicle movement, and location. ELD data is the single most important piece of digital evidence in modern truck cases — and it can be overwritten within weeks.

Vehicle Maintenance Records — 49 C.F.R. Part 396

Annual DOT inspections, pre- and post-trip driver inspections, brake services, tire condition logs — all must be documented. Brake failures and tire blowouts are not accidents when maintenance records show skipped inspections. Missing maintenance equals carrier liability.

Drug & Alcohol Testing — 49 C.F.R. Part 382

Post-accident testing is required after any crash involving a fatality, injury, or disabling damage. Failure to test after a serious Sacramento crash — or a positive result the carrier failed to act on — is powerful evidence of carrier-level fault.

Sacramento’s Truck Freight Corridors

Sacramento sits at one of the most heavily trafficked freight crossroads in the western United States. Five major commercial corridors converge in or near the city — each a recurring site of serious truck crashes:

I-5 Through Downtown Sacramento

The West Coast freight spine — Mexico-to-Canada agricultural loads, Port of Oakland containers, and warehouse distribution traffic. The heaviest sustained big-rig volume in the Sacramento region, with rear-end crashes in stop-and-go a chronic pattern.

CA-99 South of Sacramento

The Central Valley agricultural freight corridor — massive volumes of produce, livestock, and consumer goods. Tule fog in winter produces jackknife events and multi-vehicle pile-ups. High-speed merge conflicts at Florin Road and Mack Road interchanges.

I-80 / Capital City Freeway Interchange (West Sacramento)

The major freight stack where I-80, CA-99, and I-5 all interact near West Sacramento. This convergence zone produces blind-spot sideswipes, hard-braking rear-ends, and lane-change collisions at freeway speed throughout the day.

US-50 Corridor

Sierra Nevada freight and construction haulers come down a long descent into the Sacramento Valley. Brake failure and brake fade from improper technique produce runaway-truck scenarios. High-speed descent sections have a long history of serious crashes.

West Sacramento Freight District

The Port of West Sacramento and surrounding warehouse and distribution center area generate heavy local truck traffic on arterials and intersections. Right-turn squeeze crashes and wide-turn collisions are recurring patterns at loading-area access points.

Who Can Be Held Liable

In a car-on-car accident there is usually one defendant. In a commercial truck case, there are often five or more — and identifying each one is critical because each party carries separate insurance.

The Driver

Direct liability for fatigued, distracted, impaired, or reckless driving. Almost always a defendant.

The Trucking Carrier (Respondeat Superior)

Vicarious liability for the driver’s conduct plus direct liability for negligent hiring, retention, training, supervision, maintenance, and dispatch decisions that pushed the driver into HOS violations.

The Cargo Loader

A separate company is often responsible for loading and securing the freight. Improperly loaded cargo that shifts or falls creates independent liability with its own insurance policy.

The Freight Broker

Brokers that select carriers with known poor safety records can be independently liable for negligent selection. The FMCSA’s public Safety Measurement System lets us look up any carrier’s full inspection and crash history.

The Maintenance Contractor

Many carriers outsource brake, tire, and trailer inspections. When a failure caused by negligent maintenance causes the crash, the maintenance vendor is a defendant with separate coverage.

Evidence to Preserve — It Disappears Fast

This is the part that does not wait. The single most important thing your lawyer can do within the first 24 hours of being retained is send a formal spoliation letter that legally obligates the carrier to preserve the following:

Electronic Logging Device (ELD) Data

Hours driven, GPS route, speed, engine events, and hard-braking moments — overwritten by carriers on rolling schedules, often within 30–90 days of a crash.

Dashcam Footage (Cab-Facing and Road-Facing)

Most carriers run both forward and inward cameras. Retention cycles of 3–5 days are common before footage overwrites — unless a preservation demand has been served.

Maintenance and Inspection Records

Annual DOT inspections, daily driver pre-trip inspections, brake service logs, and tire condition records. Required under 49 CFR Part 396 — missing or incomplete records are themselves evidence of negligence.

Driver Qualification File

Training records, license history, prior violations, medical certification, and drug test results. Carriers that put unqualified drivers on the road face independent liability for negligent hiring and retention.

Black Box / ECM Data

The truck’s Electronic Control Module records speed at impact, braking force, throttle position, and engine events in the seconds before the crash. ECM data can be lost the moment the truck is repaired or returned to service.

Common Injuries in Sacramento Truck Crashes

Truck crashes don’t produce ordinary injuries. The energy involved is too great. These are the injury patterns we handle most often for Sacramento truck crash victims:

Catastrophic Spinal Cord Injuries

Including paraplegia and quadriplegia requiring lifetime attendant care, adaptive equipment, and ongoing medical management.

Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI)

From concussion through severe TBI requiring long-term cognitive rehabilitation. TBI is among the most expensive injuries to litigate and the most critical to value correctly with life-care planning.

Crush Injuries Requiring Amputation

Hands, arms, legs, and feet subjected to crush forces in underride and side-impact crashes. Prosthetics, rehabilitation, and vocational retraining are all compensable.

Multiple Fractures

Pelvis, femur, ribs, skull, and facial fractures common in high-energy truck impacts. Surgical intervention and lengthy recovery add to lifetime medical costs that must be fully accounted for.

Internal Organ Damage

Liver, spleen, kidneys, and lungs subjected to blunt force trauma in high-energy collisions. Surgical repair, monitoring, and long-term functional limitations are all part of the damages picture.

What Compensation Is Available

Commercial truck insurance policies — $750K to $5M federal minimums — give your case a recovery ceiling that a typical car accident simply cannot match. A properly worked-up Sacramento truck case accounts for everything:

Medical Expenses — Past and Future

Hospital, surgery, rehabilitation, prosthetics, attendant care, durable medical equipment, and future care projected over your lifetime. Life-care plans in catastrophic-injury cases frequently run into the millions.

Lost Income and Reduced Earning Capacity

Income missed while recovering plus the long-term difference in earning capacity if your injuries permanently affect your ability to perform your prior work. Vocational rehabilitation and economic experts document this comprehensively.

Pain and Suffering

Physical pain, emotional distress, anxiety, loss of enjoyment of life, and impact on your relationships. In catastrophic-injury cases — TBI, paralysis, amputation — this category is typically the largest component of the recovery.

Property Damage

Vehicle repair or total-loss valuation, plus diminished value — the reduction in your vehicle’s resale value after a crash even after full repair.

Punitive Damages

Available where the carrier’s conduct was egregious — DUI, falsified logs, knowing HOS violations, or willful regulatory non-compliance. These go beyond compensating you and punish the carrier for the most serious safety failures.

How Your Sacramento Truck Case Works

Step 1

Free Consultation

You call us at 1-800-707-0707, 24/7. We listen, answer your questions honestly, and tell you whether you have a case worth pursuing. No commitment. No fee.

Step 2

Spoliation Letter + Investigation

Same day we are retained, we send formal preservation demands to the carrier, broker, loader, and maintenance vendor. We pull the CHP report, FOIA the carrier’s USDOT history, secure scene surveillance, and retain an accident reconstructionist when warranted.

Step 3

Medical Coordination

We connect you with the specialists your injuries require — including TBI, spine, and orthopedic experts — and arrange lien-based treatment if you don’t have health insurance.

Step 4

Demand & Negotiation

Once you’ve reached maximum medical improvement (or future care can be projected by a life-care planner), we send a comprehensive demand against every applicable commercial policy and negotiate hard.

Step 5

Litigation at Sacramento County Superior Court

If the carrier and its insurer won’t pay what your case is worth, we file suit at the Gordon D. Schaber Sacramento County Courthouse, 720 9th Street. Willingness to try cases is what produces serious settlement offers.

Step 6

Recovery

Settlement or verdict. We resolve outstanding medical liens, deduct fees and costs, and put your check in your hand.

What to Do After a Sacramento Truck Crash

The first few hours after a commercial truck crash determine a lot. The trucking company’s rapid-response team is already moving. Here is exactly what to do:

1

Call 911 and Move to Safety

For serious truck-crash injuries, UC Davis Medical Center (2315 Stockton Blvd, (916) 734-2011) is Sacramento’s only Level I trauma center — the right destination for catastrophic injuries. CHP Sacramento patrols all Sacramento freeways; Sacramento PD handles city streets.

2

Document the Truck: DOT Number, Company Name, License Plate, Dashcam

The USDOT number on the cab door is the key to the FMCSA database. Photograph the cab, trailer, all sides, license plates, and any visible cargo. The carrier’s name may differ from the truck’s livery — the USDOT number is the definitive identifier.

3

Seek Immediate Medical Care

Adrenaline and shock can mask serious injuries for hours. A same-day medical record is critical evidence. Other Sacramento ERs: Sutter Medical Center Sacramento (2825 Capitol Ave), Mercy General (4001 J St), Kaiser Permanente Sacramento (2025 Morse Ave), Methodist Hospital Sacramento (7500 Hospital Drive).

4

Call Us Immediately — We Send the Spoliation Letter

1-800-707-0707, 24/7. The sooner we send the preservation demand, the more evidence we save. The carrier’s insurer has already deployed. Get a truck-experienced lawyer in your corner today.

5

Don’t Sign Anything from the Carrier or Their Insurer

Do not give a recorded statement. Do not accept any “quick check” for property damage. Do not sign any release. Tell the carrier’s insurer to contact your lawyer. Once you sign a release, the case is over.

Local Resources

Sacramento Hospitals & Trauma Centers

UC Davis Medical Center (Level I Trauma) — 2315 Stockton Blvd, Sacramento, CA 95817 · (916) 734-2011 · 24/7 trauma + emergency
The only Level I trauma center in the Sacramento region — the right destination for catastrophic truck-crash injuries.

Sutter Medical Center Sacramento — 2825 Capitol Ave · (916) 454-3333 · 24/7 ER
Midtown Sacramento emergency care.

Mercy General Hospital — 4001 J Street · (916) 453-4545 · 24/7 ER
East Sacramento emergency care and cardiac trauma.

Kaiser Permanente Sacramento Medical Center — 2025 Morse Ave · (916) 973-5000 · 24/7 ER

Methodist Hospital of Sacramento — 7500 Hospital Drive · (916) 423-3000 · 24/7 ER
South Sacramento — closest major ER to CA-99 corridor crashes.

Police, CHP & Sacramento County Superior Court

California Highway Patrol — Sacramento — 5109 Tyler Street, Sacramento, CA 95841 · (916) 338-6710
Primary agency for I-5, I-80, US-50, CA-99, and Capital City Freeway truck-crash investigations.

Sacramento Police Department — 5770 Freeport Blvd, Sacramento, CA 95822 · (916) 808-5471
City streets and surface roads.

Gordon D. Schaber Sacramento County Courthouse (PI filings) — 720 9th Street, Sacramento, CA 95814
Where Sacramento truck accident lawsuits are filed.

We pull crash reports and the carrier’s full FMCSA inspection history for our clients as part of intake.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long do I have to file a Sacramento truck accident claim?
Two years from the crash date under California Code of Civil Procedure § 335.1. If a government entity such as Caltrans contributed, a written claim is required within six months (Gov. Code § 911.2). But don’t confuse the statute of limitations with the evidence clock — ELD data and dashcam footage can be lawfully destroyed within weeks. Call us as soon as possible so we can send a spoliation letter before evidence disappears.
Why does ELD and dashcam evidence disappear so quickly?
Federal rules require Electronic Logging Device records to be retained for approximately six months for driver records of duty status. But carriers’ internal systems often overwrite event-level ELD detail and dashcam footage on rolling cycles of 30 to 90 days — or even shorter for in-cab cameras. Without a formal preservation demand, this evidence is lawfully destroyed on schedule. That is why getting a truck-experienced lawyer retained immediately after a Sacramento crash is so critical.
Who can be held liable in a Sacramento truck crash?
Often more than one party. The driver is almost always a defendant. The trucking company can be liable for respondeat superior plus negligent hiring, supervision, and maintenance. The cargo loader is liable if improper securement caused the crash. The freight broker can be liable for negligently selecting an unsafe carrier. The maintenance contractor is liable for brake or tire failures caused by negligent servicing. Each party carries separate insurance coverage — identifying all of them is one of the most important tasks in a truck case.
What FMCSA regulations apply to my case?
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration governs hours of service (49 CFR Part 395), driver qualification files (49 CFR Part 391), drug and alcohol testing (49 CFR Part 382), vehicle inspection and maintenance (49 CFR Part 396), and the ELD mandate. Violations of any of these rules are powerful evidence of negligence. We pull the carrier’s full FMCSA inspection and crash history through the public Safety Measurement System as part of every case intake.
How much does it cost to hire a Sacramento truck accident lawyer?
Nothing up front. Scranton Law works on contingency — our fee comes out of the settlement or verdict, only if we win. We also front investigation costs, expert witnesses, accident reconstruction, life-care planners, and all litigation expenses. If we don’t win, you owe us nothing.
What if Caltrans or a government entity contributed to the crash?
You must file a government tort claim within six months of the crash date under California Government Code § 911.2. Missing this deadline permanently bars the claim against that government entity, regardless of the underlying merits. If a road defect, missing signage, failed signal, or Caltrans maintenance failure may have contributed to your Sacramento truck crash, call us immediately so we can evaluate and meet the government-claim deadline.

Commercial Insurance Pays More. We Know How to Get It.

The trucking company’s insurer is not going to tell you what your case is actually worth — especially before their own records have been pulled into discovery. Get a free evaluation before the evidence cycles out.

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100% Confidential · No fees unless we win · Available 24/7 · Bilingual