Why Truck Accident Cases Need Experienced Lawyers

Federal Rules for Trucking Companies

Big trucks have to follow strict federal safety rules. If a trucking company breaks these safety rules, it is much easier to prove they caused the crash. This helps us win your case.

  • Driving hours limits (49 CFR 395.3): Truck drivers can only drive 11 hours in a day. We check the truck's digital logs to see if the driver was tired and driving too long.
  • Electronic logs: Trucks have digital logbooks that record driving times automatically. If a company let a driver fake these logs, we can hold the company responsible.
  • Securing cargo (49 CFR Part 393): If cargo is loaded wrong, it can make the truck roll over or drop heavy boxes on the highway. This is a big problem on elevated highways in Miami.
  • Drug and alcohol rules: Companies must check a national list to make sure their drivers do not have drug or alcohol violations. If they hire a driver with violations, they are responsible.
  • Regular inspections: Trucking companies must inspect and fix their trucks. If they ignore bad brakes or bald tires, they can be forced to pay extra damages.

Florida's Special Owner Liability Law

In Florida, the owner of a truck is responsible for any damage it causes, even if someone else was driving. This is a special rule that helps us hold the company responsible. The company cannot claim the driver was an independent contractor to escape liability.

It does not matter if the driver was an employee or a contractor. The trucking company is still liable. We look at everyone involved, like the loading company or the repair shop. In many cases, we can sue four to six different parties to get you more insurance coverage.

Florida's 2-Year Deadline

Under Florida's 2023 tort reform, you now have just 2 years to file a claim. The evidence clock is even faster—call us now.

Call (305) 501-8021

Dangerous Truck Roads in Miami

Port of Miami Routes

The Port of Miami is very busy. Trucks leaving the port crowd onto I-395, I-95, SR-836, and NW 7th Avenue. Mixing these large trucks with daily city traffic causes many bad accidents.

Doral Warehouse District

Doral has many warehouses and shipping centers. This brings heavy truck traffic to NW 107th Avenue, NW 87th Avenue, and NW 58th Street. The traffic here is some of the most dangerous in Miami.

Urban Delivery Zones

New buildings and hotels mean more delivery trucks in downtown Miami, Brickell, Wynwood, and Miami Beach. These trucks must drive down narrow streets with many pedestrians and bike riders. Crash risks are also high on the causeways.

Why Do Truck Crashes Happen?

  • Tired drivers: Drivers are often pushed to drive too long without sleep. This makes fatigue the top cause of major crashes.

  • Lack of maintenance: Companies fail to fix brakes, replace bald tires, or repair steering systems to save money.

  • Poorly loaded cargo: If cargo shifts, the truck can flip over or dump items onto the road.

  • Distracted or drugged driving: Drivers using cell phones or taking drugs. We check federal databases for these violations.

Who Is Liable in a Miami Truck Accident?

Under Florida's Dangerous Instrumentality Doctrine combined with federal FMCSA carrier liability rules, Miami truck accident cases routinely involve multiple defendants — each with independent insurance coverage. CHG Lawyers investigates every potential defendant and every available policy. Most families settle with one defendant and never know the others existed.

  • The truck driver personally: Negligent driving, hours violations, impairment, distracted operation.
  • The trucking company: Negligent hiring, inadequate training, unrealistic scheduling, maintenance failures.
  • The cargo loading company: Improper freight securing causing rollovers or falling debris crashes.
  • Vehicle and parts manufacturers: Defective brakes, tires, or steering systems.
  • Maintenance contractors: Negligent repairs creating mechanical failure conditions.
  • Leasing companies: Dangerous Instrumentality Doctrine owner liability.

Insurance coverage in Miami truck cases: Commercial minimum $750,000 federal liability insurance. Large Miami-route carriers maintain $1 million to $5 million policies. When multiple defendants combine coverage, total available insurance routinely exceeds $10 million. Accessing it requires identifying every liable party.

What Compensation Can Miami Truck Accident Victims Recover?

Florida law provides comprehensive compensation covering all economic and non-economic losses. The severity of truck accident injuries combined with commercial insurance coverage produces settlement values that significantly exceed car accident cases with equivalent injury types.

  • Economic damages: All past and future medical expenses, lost wages during recovery, loss of earning capacity.
  • Non-economic damages: Pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of consortium.
  • Punitive damages: Available when trucking companies knowingly violated FMCSA safety standards — falsified logs, ignored mechanical failures, retained drug-positive drivers.

Under Florida's 2023 modified comparative fault reform, victims bearing more than 50 percent fault cannot recover. Trucking defense teams actively work to push victim fault above that threshold — particularly in the first hours after an accident when their investigator is documenting the scene without you present. CHG Lawyers counters with early evidence preservation that establishes carrier liability before defense narratives solidify.