Understanding Carrier Negligence and Prior Violations
When you are involved in a collision with a commercial semi-truck, the focus often begins with the driver's actions at the scene. However, a comprehensive legal investigation must look deeper into the carrier’s history. Under the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) guidelines, trucking companies are held to strict standards regarding driver hiring, vehicle maintenance, and safety training. If a carrier has a documented history of ignoring these regulations, this pattern of behavior often serves as powerful evidence of systemic negligence, which can drastically increase the value of your settlement.
The Role of FMCSA Regulations in Your Case
To prove negligence, your legal team will examine the company’s Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) scores. These scores are public records that track a carrier’s performance in several categories, including unsafe driving and vehicle maintenance.
Negligent Hiring and Retention
Under 49 CFR Part 391, carriers are required to conduct thorough background checks before hiring drivers. If your attorney discovers that the driver who hit you had a history of past violations, accidents, or failed drug tests that the company ignored, the carrier may be liable for ‘negligent retention.’ This shift in liability from simple driver error to corporate negligence often opens the door for punitive damages, which are designed to punish the carrier for their recklessness.
Maintenance Violations and 49 CFR Part 396
Federal regulation 49 CFR Part 396 mandates that carriers perform systematic inspections and maintenance on all commercial vehicles. If the carrier’s history reveals frequent ‘out-of-service’ violations regarding brake systems, lighting, or steering components, it establishes a pattern. When a truck crashes due to mechanical failure, these prior violations prove the company prioritized profit over public safety, making it difficult for them to argue that the accident was an ‘unavoidable equipment failure.’
How History Influences Settlement Leverage
Insurance companies operate on risk assessment. When they realize that your legal team has uncovered a history of repeat violations, the risk of a high-verdict jury trial increases significantly. Insurance adjusters are more likely to offer a higher settlement when they know that a jury might view the carrier as a repeat offender. Proving that the company ignored prior warnings to improve safety protocols creates a narrative of indifference that is devastating to a defense attorney’s case.
Practical Advice for Truck Accident Victims
If you have been injured in a truck accident, your first priority is medical care, but your second must be the preservation of evidence. Do not attempt to settle your claim quickly. Insurance adjusters often reach out early to offer a low settlement, hoping to resolve the case before you understand the extent of the carrier’s record.
- Seek legal counsel immediately to ensure a preservation of evidence letter is sent to the trucking company.
- Ensure your attorney pulls the company’s FMCSA safety profile.
- Keep detailed records of your own medical expenses and loss of income.
- Avoid signing any release forms without having an experienced truck accident attorney review them.
By leveraging the carrier’s past failures against them, your legal team can force the company to take full financial responsibility for the consequences of their negligent culture.