Truck accidents can occur almost anywhere a road has been built, from logging crews in mountain forests to supplying equipment to remote oil fields, crops from fields to processing plants, and even groceries to your local supermarket. Due to the size and weight of trucks, these accidents are often serious, if not fatal. That's why it's important to have a truck accident lawyer on your side if you or a loved one has been involved in a truck accident.
Seek Medical Attention
In some cases, someone hit by a truck might not suffer serious injuries. However, some injuries don’t manifest until hours or even days later. Even if you think you are not severely injured, you should seek medical attention immediately. Let the medical professionals know you were in a truck accident and would like a complete check-up. Seeking immediate medical attention starts the paperwork trail should injuries manifest later. Along with the police report, documentation that you saw a medical professional immediately after the wreck shows you are concerned about potential injuries. It makes it harder for the insurance company to use the excuse that you didn’t seek medical help to deny a claim.Seek Legal Help
Truck accident cases are complex, especially when more than one defendant is responsible for your damage. A truck accident lawyer can help with settlement negotiations, which makes it harder for an insurance company to deny your claim or offer you a pittance. A firm can also investigate the case to find all those responsible for your damages, whether individuals or companies. Other ways a truck accident lawyer can help include:- Ensuring you don’t miss any deadlines. Missing deadlines, especially the statute of limitations, can jeopardize your case.
- Depose (question under oath) witnesses, the at-fault driver, and other defendants.
- Investigate the case, including the location of the wreck, the vehicles involved, and your medical records.
- Enter settlement negotiations with the insurance company. If more than one person or entity is responsible for your injuries and losses, the attorney can work on a settlement with more than one insurance company and/or defendant.
- File a lawsuit if the insurance company refuses a fair and reasonable settlement.
- Help put a case together for the best outcome at a trial.
The Elements of Negligence
You must be able to prove the defendants were negligent. An experienced truck accident lawyer can help you show the defendant was negligent by applying the four elements of negligence to the driver’s actions or inactions. The four elements of negligence include:- The defendant has a duty of care to drive safely and consider others’ safety while driving.
- The defendant breached the duty of care with certain actions (or inactions), such as speeding or driving under the influence.
- The defendant’s breach caused the accident, which caused your injuries (causation).
- You suffered damages because the defendant breached the duty of care.
Working With Insurance Companies
One of the first things you or a loved one does is notify the insurance company of the accident. If you have not yet done it, it’s better to let your attorney handle that phone call. Insurance companies are notorious for using tricks to deny claims or offer amounts so low that they don’t cover even minor medical expenses. The best way to get around insurance company tricks is to document everything about your case and have a truck accident lawyer handle the insurance companies. That is also the best way to reduce the stress you will have dealing with them and work on recovering quicker. Some of the tricks insurance companies use include:- Twisting what you say to place the blame for the accident on you.
- Ignoring or putting off communicating with you until you miss the insurance company’s deadline or the statute of limitations.
- Delaying and stalling investigations.
- Admitting their client is at fault and offering you a pittance, then telling you that is the most they can pay. This is almost always a lie they hope you believe so they can get away with paying a pittance.
Type of Injuries in a Truck Accident
Because of the size of a commercial truck, accident injuries are usually severe or catastrophic or result in death. However, that doesn’t mean that some people can’t get away with minor injuries. The severity and type of injuries you sustain depend on the speed of the vehicles when they crash and how a truck hits you. For example, a sideswipe will most likely cause fewer and less severe injuries than a head-on collision with a truck. Truck accident injuries include:- Bumps, bruises, scratches, scrapes, cuts, and punctures.
- Strains and sprains.
- Pulled and torn muscles and other soft tissue injuries.
- Simple and compound fractures.
- Crushed bones and crush injuries.
- Internal injuries.
- Face and eye injuries.
- Ear injuries.
- Head, neck, and shoulder injuries.
- Traumatic brain injuries.
- Lung injuries from breathing in chemicals and smoke.
- Back and spinal cord injuries.
- Road rash.
- Chemical and thermal burns.
- Amputation of a digit or limb.
Recovering Damages After a Truck Accident
You could recover compensatory damages in the form of economic damages and non-economic damages after a truck accident. Most people who can prove the defendant(s) were negligent recover economic damages. Many others, but not all recover non-economic damages.Economic Damages
Sometimes referred to as special damages, economic damages have a monetary value. Most people injured in truck accidents recover economic damages, including:Medical Expenses
The medical expenses you incur after a truck accident include but are not limited to:- Doctors’ appointments.
- Surgeries and follow-up appointments.
- Prescriptions and prescribed over-the-counter medications.
- Ambulatory aids.
- Medical equipment, such as oxygen tanks, and prescribed over-the-counter medical equipment, such as shower chairs.
- Physical therapy appointments.
- Occupational therapy appointments.
- Cognitive therapy appointments.
- Psychological therapy appointments.
- Home health care.
- Accessibility aids for vehicles, such as wheelchair lifts and ramps and hand controls.
- Accessibility aids for your home, including but not limited to wheelchair ramps, handrails, grab bars, and widened doorways.
- Nursing home and/or rehabilitative home care.
Income and Wages
Chances are, if you suffer injuries in a truck accident, you’ll be out of work. Whether it’s for a few days, months, or years, you could recover compensation to pay for that lost income. Additionally, if you suffer long-term or permanent disabilities caused by truck accident injuries, you could recover loss of future earning capacity until you would normally retire. If your disabilities allow you to work full-time but at a lower-paying job or part-time, you could recover the loss of partial future earning capacity.Personal Property
After a truck accident, you could also recover compensation to cover repairing or replacing personal property damaged, including your vehicle. You can also claim items of value, such as cell phones and computers, that might have suffered damage when the truck hit your vehicle.Death-Related Expenses
If you lost a loved one in a truck accident, you could recover funeral and burial expenses, cremation expenses, certain probate court fees, and probate attorney’s fees and costs.Non-Economic Damage
Sometimes referred to as general damages, non-economic damages do not have a monetary value. Most people who recover from non-economic damage suffer catastrophic injuries or lose a loved one. These types of damages are for those whose truck accident injuries cause long-term or permanent disabilities. While most insurance companies have their own definition of long-term and permanent disabilities, the Social Security Administration defines them as resulting in your death or lasting for longer than 12 months. Non-economic damages include:- Pain and suffering, including emotional distress.
- Loss of use of a digit or limb, such as an arm or a foot.
- Loss of use of a bodily function, such as your bladder or eyesight.
- Loss of consortium if you can no longer enjoy a physical relationship with your spouse.
- Loss of companionship if you can no longer enjoy time with your family or attend family activities and events.
- Inconvenience if you have to hire someone to do the chores you usually do, including but not limited to house cleaning, lawn maintenance, grocery shopping, and home repair and maintenance.
- Amputation of a digit or limb.
- Excessive scarring and/or disfigurement.
- Loss of quality of life if you have to make lifelong changes such as taking prescription medications or using ambulatory aids.