Albuquerque sits at the crossroads of two interstates that together carry an enormous share of America’s freight: I-40 east-west (the Los Angeles-to-North Carolina corridor) and I-25 north-south (the El Paso-to-Wyoming corridor). The interchange where they meet — the Big I — is one of the busiest and most accident-prone in the Southwest. Commercial truck traffic moving through Albuquerque is constant, and so is the share of serious cases involving 18-wheelers.
The Longhorn Law Firm maintains a New Mexico office in Albuquerque and represents Bernalillo County truck accident victims directly. Read our Texas Truck Accident Guide — the same FMCSA rules apply in NM.
Albuquerque context.
Major Roadways
the Big I (I-25/I-40 interchange), I-25 north-south, I-40 east-west, Paseo del Norte, and Coors Boulevard.
Local Courts
the Second Judicial District Court (400 Lomas Blvd NW) and the U.S. District Court for the District of New Mexico.
Trauma Care
University of New Mexico Hospital (the only Level I trauma center in the state), Presbyterian Hospital, and Lovelace Medical Center.
Why It Matters Here
Albuquerque sits at the crossroads of two interstates at the Big I — one of the busiest and most accident-prone interchanges in the Southwest. New Mexico’s pure comparative fault rule, three-year statute of limitations, and uninsured-motorist stacking all favor victims more than Texas law does.
Why NM law helps truck crash victims.
- Pure comparative fault — recovery possible even at 99% fault. Texas blocks recovery at 51%+.
- Three-year statute of limitations (NMSA §37-1-8) — vs. Texas’s two-year clock
- No general damages cap in standard injury cases
- Joint and several liability applies more broadly than in Texas
- UM stacking — increases available coverage when at-fault carrier’s policy is insufficient
That said, the federal FMCSA rules that govern interstate trucks apply in NM exactly as they do in Texas — and the same evidence preservation and rapid-response defense issues apply.
The truck’s ECM (“black box”) and Electronic Logging Device data can be overwritten within 30 days. Carriers send rapid-response teams to crash scenes within hours. We move just as fast — preservation letters out within days, expert reconstruction lined up, witnesses interviewed before memories fade. Call us immediately after an Albuquerque truck crash ?
The federal rules that matter.
- Hours of Service (49 CFR Part 395) — see our HOS violations guide
- Driver Qualification (Part 391)
- Inspection & Maintenance (Part 396)
- Drug & Alcohol Testing (Part 382)
- Cargo Securement (Part 393)
Violations are powerful evidence of negligence — often the difference between a routine settlement and a full-value (or punitive damages) outcome.
Who can be liable.
- The driver — for negligent operation
- The motor carrier — for negligent hiring, training, supervision, or maintenance, plus vicarious liability
- 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 product defects
- Maintenance contractors — for negligent repair
NM deadlines.
Three years from the date of the crash. Cases against government defendants (NMDOT, the City of Albuquerque) require notice within 90 days under the NM Tort Claims Act — a deadline that’s easier to miss than people realize. Don’t wait ?