Commercial Truck Speeding Accidents
Federal Regulations: Commercial truckers must follow Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs) including speed limits, hours of service rules, and vehicle inspection requirements. Violations establish regulatory negligence.
Electronic Logging Devices (ELDs): Federal law requires ELDs that track truck location, speed, and driving time. This data can prove speeding and hours violations that led to fatigued driving.
Company Liability: Trucking companies may be liable for negligent hiring (failing to screen drivers), negligent supervision (not monitoring for speeding), negligent training, and vicarious liability for employee actions.
Higher Insurance Limits: Federal regulations require trucking companies to carry minimum insurance of $750,000 to $5 million depending on cargo type. These higher limits mean more resources for serious injury claims.
Multiple Defendants: Truck crash cases often involve multiple potentially liable parties: the driver, trucking company, truck owner (if different), cargo loader, and maintenance providers.
Black Box Data: Commercial trucks have sophisticated ECMs (Electronic Control Modules) that record detailed data about speed, braking, and other parameters. This evidence is crucial.
Delivery Driver Speeding Accidents
Amazon Delivery Partners: Amazon uses a network of delivery service partners (DSPs) who hire drivers. Amazon sets demanding delivery quotas that can incentivize speeding. We investigate Amazon's role in creating these pressures.
FedEx and UPS: These carriers employ both direct employees and independent contractors. Determining employment status affects liability analysis and available insurance.
Gig Economy Drivers: DoorDash, Instacart, Uber Eats, and similar services use independent contractor models. Determining when these companies share liability requires careful analysis of their control over drivers.
Commercial Insurance: Delivery drivers should be covered by commercial policies with higher limits than personal auto insurance. We identify all applicable coverage.
Employer Negligence: Beyond vicarious liability, companies may be directly negligent for setting unrealistic schedules, failing to discipline speeding, or encouraging dangerous driving through incentive structures.
Multiple Claims: Injured parties may have claims against the driver, the delivery company, the vehicle owner, and potentially the company receiving the delivery if they created time pressures.
Employer Liability for Speeding Employees
Respondeat Superior: This doctrine makes employers vicariously liable for employee negligence committed within the scope of employment. If a driver speeds while making deliveries or traveling to client meetings, the employer is typically liable.
Scope of Employment: The key question is whether the employee was acting within their job duties. Commuting usually isn't covered, but traveling between work locations or running work errands is. Detours may complicate analysis.
Negligent Hiring: Employers who hire drivers with poor driving records may be directly liable if that history suggested the driver was dangerous. We investigate driving records and what employers knew.
Negligent Supervision: Companies must monitor employee driving behavior. Failure to discipline employees for speeding tickets or complaints can establish negligent supervision.
Negligent Entrustment: Giving a vehicle to someone the employer knows or should know is an unsafe driver creates direct liability.
Company Policies: We investigate whether the employer had speed or safety policies and whether they enforced them. Companies that tacitly encourage speeding through unrealistic schedules face stronger liability claims.
Insurance Implications: Employer liability means access to commercial insurance policies with limits often ten times higher than personal auto policies.