If you’ve been involved in an accident with a commercial truck, you’re dealing with something far more complex than a typical car collision.
The injuries are often more severe, the vehicles are heavier, and the legal landscape is completely different.
What many people don’t realize is that federal regulations are about to become your best friend in proving negligence.
At BV Law Group, APLC, we’ve handled hundreds of commercial truck accident cases, and we’ve seen firsthand how federal trucking regulations level the playing field between injured victims and massive trucking companies.
Federal regulations carry such weight in settlement negotiations and jury trials because they establish objective standards—not subjective arguments about what should have happened.
The trucking industry isn’t like typical businesses. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has established strict rules that govern virtually every aspect of commercial trucking operations.
These regulations cover:
Here’s what makes this powerful: when a trucking company violates these federal regulations, it’s not just breaking a rule—it’s essentially admitting negligence.
A judge and jury understand that these regulations exist for public safety. They were written in blood, based on lessons learned from decades of accidents.
One of the most common violations we see involves hours of service regulations. Federal law limits how many consecutive hours a driver can operate a vehicle.
These rules exist because fatigued drivers cause accidents.
When we prove a driver violated federal hours of service limits and that fatigue contributed to the collision, negligence is already established.
If we can show that a driver exceeded these limits and that fatigue contributed to the collision, we’ve already established a clear pattern of negligence.
Commercial trucks must meet strict maintenance requirements. Everything is regulated:
We’ve won cases where brake failure or tire blowouts were traced directly back to a company’s failure to perform required maintenance inspections.
That’s not just an accident; that’s negligence with documentation.
Trucking companies must verify driver qualifications and maintain training records.
If a company hired a driver with a history of violations or failed to provide adequate training, federal regulations make that company liable. We use these requirements to show that accidents weren’t just bad luck—they were preventable.
When we represent you after a commercial truck accident, we don’t just investigate what happened. We investigate whether the trucking company complied with every applicable federal regulation.
Evidence we examine includes:
These documents become evidence that tells the story of negligence. Insurance companies know this. Trucking companies know this.
We’re not making subjective arguments about what should have happened. We’re showing what federal law required to happen—and documenting exactly where the company fell short.
Commercial truck accident cases are complicated, but you have rights.
At BV Law Group, APLC, we handle every aspect of your case on contingency, which means you pay nothing unless we recover for you.
Here’s what we do:
If you’ve been injured in a commercial truck accident, contact us today. Let’s talk about how federal regulations strengthen your case.