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Fort Worth Truck Accident Lawyer | 18-Wheeler & Commercial Truck Cases
Fort Worth · Tarrant County · Texas

Fort Worth truck accident lawyer.

18-wheeler crashes are not car wreck cases. Federal Motor Carrier regulations, black-box data, multi-defendant complexity — the trucking company sends its defense team out the same day the crash happens. We move just as fast on your side.

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Commercial truck crashes in Fort Worth involve a different legal universe than ordinary car wrecks. Federal regulations (49 CFR Parts 350-399) govern how the truck was driven, maintained, and inspected — and violations of those regulations often establish negligence as a matter of law. The trucking company's insurer will start protecting evidence immediately. So do we.

See our overview of truck accident cases → or read our in-depth Texas Truck Accident Guide for how these cases actually work — the same FMCSA rules apply in NM.

Why Fort Worth truck cases are different.

Major Roadways

I-30 east-west to Dallas, I-35W north-south, I-820 Loop, the Chisholm Trail Parkway, and US-287.

Local Courts

Tarrant County Civil District Courts at the Tom Vandergriff Civil Courts Building (100 N. Calhoun St.) and the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Fort Worth Division.

Trauma Care

JPS Health Network — John Peter Smith Hospital (Level I trauma), Texas Health Harris Methodist Fort Worth, and Cook Children's Medical Center.

Why It Matters Here

Fort Worth sits at the western anchor of the DFW Metroplex with heavy commercial truck volume along I-30 and I-35W. Tarrant County's fast growth has put real pressure on every major interchange, particularly the Mixmaster downtown and the I-35W reconstruction corridors.

A loaded 18-wheeler weighs up to 80,000 pounds — roughly 20 times a passenger car. The injuries are catastrophic far more often. But the legal terrain matters just as much: federal FMCSA regulations apply, multiple parties may share liability (driver, motor carrier, broker, shipper, maintenance contractor), insurance policies are far larger (often $1M–$10M+), and electronic evidence can be overwritten in 30 days if not preserved.

The evidence that wins truck cases.

  • The truck's "black box" (Engine Control Module / ECM) — records speed, braking, throttle in the seconds before impact
  • Electronic Logging Device (ELD) data — exposes hours-of-service violations
  • The driver qualification file — reveals negligent hiring
  • Dashcam and telematics — frequently "unavailable" unless preserved fast
  • Maintenance and inspection records — show ignored defects
  • Dispatch and bill-of-lading records — connect the carrier, broker, and shipper
Time-Critical
The trucking company's defense starts within hours.

Large carriers deploy rapid-response teams — investigators, adjusters, and defense lawyers — who reach the crash scene within hours, often before the victim has left the hospital. The longer you wait, the more the evidence landscape tilts against you. Contact us immediately →

Who can be liable.

  • The driver — for negligent operation
  • The motor carrier (trucking company) — for the driver's conduct and for negligent hiring, training, supervision, or maintenance
  • The broker or shipper — for selecting an unsafe carrier
  • The cargo loader — if improper loading caused or worsened the crash
  • The truck or parts manufacturer — for defects
  • Maintenance contractors — for negligent repair

Multiple defendants mean multiple insurance policies — and a substantially better chance of full recovery for catastrophic injuries.

FMCSA violations that matter most.

  • Hours of Service (49 CFR Part 395) — limits on driving time without rest
  • Driver Qualification (Part 391) — what carriers must verify before hiring
  • Inspection & Maintenance (Part 396)
  • Drug & Alcohol Testing (Part 382)
  • Cargo Securement (Part 393)

Texas deadlines.

Two years from the date of the crash to file (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §16.003). Cases against governmental entities require notice within much shorter windows — sometimes as little as six months. Texas applies modified comparative fault: you can still recover if you were 50% or less at fault. More on comparative fault →

Fort Worth truck accident questions.

How are truck accident cases different from car accident cases?+
Trucking is regulated by Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs) — Hours of Service, driver qualification, vehicle maintenance, drug testing. Violations of these regulations can establish negligence per se. Truck crashes also involve multiple potential defendants: driver, motor carrier, shipper, broker, maintenance contractors.
What evidence is critical in a truck case?+
Black-box / ECM data, ELD (electronic logging device) records, driver qualification files, maintenance records, post-accident drug test results, and dashcam footage. Most of this has short retention periods — preservation letters need to go out within days, not weeks.
Can I still recover if I was partially at fault?+
In Texas, yes — as long as you were 50% or less at fault. Texas applies modified comparative fault with a 51% bar. Read our full guide on comparative fault →
What if the insurance company already called me?+
Don't give a recorded statement, accept an offer, or sign anything. Read our guide on insurance company tactics, then call us — talking to us is free.
What if a government vehicle was involved?+
Cases against city, county, state, transit, or school district vehicles in Texas require notice within much shorter windows — sometimes just six months or less. Don't assume you have the full two-year statute.

Hit by an 18-wheeler in Fort Worth?

Truck cases require fast preservation work — ECM data, ELD logs, maintenance records. We handle Fort Worth truck crashes and we know what to demand before it disappears.