A commercial vehicle crash claim arises when a person is injured in a collision involving any vehicle operated for commercial purposes, and the crash was caused by the negligence of the driver, the company that owns or operates the vehicle, or both. Commercial vehicles encompass a far broader category than most people initially realize. Semi-trucks and tractor-trailers, delivery vans and box trucks, utility and service vehicles, concrete mixers, dump trucks, flatbed haulers, refrigerated freight carriers, tanker trucks, passenger vans operated by businesses, company-owned vehicles driven by employees on work assignments, and any other vehicle operated in the course of commercial activity all fall within the commercial vehicle framework that a commercial vehicle crash lawyer must navigate on your behalf.
What makes commercial vehicle crash claims categorically different from standard passenger vehicle collision claims is the multi-layered liability structure that applies to commercial operations. The driver bears personal negligence liability for their own conduct behind the wheel. The company that employs or contracts with the driver bears vicarious liability for the driver’s conduct under the doctrine of respondeat superior and may bear direct liability for its own negligent hiring, inadequate training, or failure to maintain safe vehicles. The vehicle’s owner, if different from the operating company, may bear independent liability under vehicle owner negligence frameworks. And in cases where a defective vehicle component contributed to the crash, the manufacturer bears product liability alongside the commercial operator. A commercial vehicle crash lawyer who identifies and pursues every layer of this liability structure simultaneously builds a case that captures every available source of recovery.
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration regulations govern commercial vehicles that operate in interstate commerce, establishing specific requirements for driver qualification, hours of service, vehicle maintenance, cargo securement, and insurance minimums that exceed the requirements applicable to passenger vehicles by a substantial margin. Kentucky state regulations impose additional commercial vehicle safety requirements for intrastate operations. When a commercial operator violates these regulatory standards and a crash results, those violations establish negligence per se that significantly strengthens the liability case. Louisville’s position as a major commercial logistics hub, with significant freight volume on I-64, I-65, and I-71 and a substantial local delivery and service vehicle fleet throughout Jefferson County, generates a consistent and diverse volume of commercial vehicle crash claims that require a commercial vehicle crash lawyer who understands every category of commercial operation and every applicable regulatory framework.
If you or a loved one was injured on a transit bus, school bus, or charter carrier in Louisville or anywhere in Kentucky, speak with our team today. Every case is reviewed at no charge and we never collect a fee unless we win.
Commercial vehicle operators and their insurers respond to serious crash reports with a speed and sophistication that most injured victims are entirely unprepared for. Major fleet operators maintain dedicated accident response teams, whose function is to reach the crash scene, document the evidence, secure the vehicle’s electronic data, and begin building the company’s defense before an independent investigation can be conducted. Commercial insurance carriers have experienced claims adjusters who specialize in commercial vehicle liability and who open coverage files, evaluate liability exposure, and begin directing the defense strategy within hours of a serious crash report. By the time most seriously injured victims have been stabilized and their families have begun thinking about legal representation, the commercial operator’s response team has already spent days on the case.
The evidence that determines the outcome of a commercial vehicle crash case is among the most time-sensitive in all of personal injury litigation. The vehicle’s Electronic Logging Device, which records driver hours of service compliance, and its Event Data Recorder, which captures speed, braking, acceleration, and steering inputs in the moments before the crash, are stored in devices that the commercial operator controls and that are subject to routine data overwriting without a legal preservation demand. Dashcam footage from the commercial vehicle, if present, is similarly time-sensitive. GPS and fleet tracking data that would establish the driver’s route, speed, and stops in the hours leading up to the crash is stored in the company’s fleet management system and subject to the same overwriting risk. The physical condition of the vehicle, including tire tread depth, brake condition, and any pre-existing mechanical deficiencies that contributed to the crash, can be altered through routine maintenance or repair before an independent inspection occurs.
What injured victims must understand is that the commercial operator’s insurance adjuster who contacts them in the days following a crash is not working in their interest. They are working to minimize the company’s financial exposure. Any recorded statement provided before the victim has legal representation, any access granted to the company’s investigators before an independent inspection has occurred, and any early settlement signed before the full extent of the injuries and the full scope of the company’s liability have been established all permanently damage the victim’s legal position. A commercial vehicle crash lawyer who intervenes immediately, issues preservation demands, and takes control of the claims process from the outset is the single most important protective step an injured victim can take.
Commercial vehicle crash cases present evidence preservation challenges that do not exist in standard passenger vehicle collision cases because the evidence is controlled by a sophisticated institutional defendant who is actively managing their legal exposure from the moment the crash is reported. ELD data, EDR data, dashcam footage, GPS tracking records, driver qualification files, hours of service logs, drug and alcohol testing records, vehicle maintenance histories, and the company’s internal safety communications about the specific driver and vehicle involved in the crash are all in the commercial operator’s possession and subject to their retention policies. A commercial vehicle crash lawyer who issues comprehensive legal preservation demands to the carrier and their insurer within hours of being retained ensures that the evidentiary record is captured in its most complete and unaltered form before the company’s legal team has had the opportunity to manage what exists.
Commercial vehicle crash cases require simultaneous investigation on multiple tracks that most general personal injury firms are not equipped to manage concurrently. The driver investigation evaluates hours of service compliance, drug and alcohol testing results, prior traffic violation history, commercial driver’s license status, and the driver’s specific conduct in the moments before the crash. The company investigation evaluates the operator’s FMCSA compliance history, its safety rating, its hiring and training protocols for the specific driver, its vehicle maintenance records, and any prior crashes or safety violations involving the same driver or vehicle. The vehicle inspection evaluates mechanical condition, tire and brake status, cargo securement if applicable, and any equipment defects that may have contributed to the crash. And the damages investigation builds the full medical and economic picture of the victim’s losses across their lifetime.
At Forman & Associates, we take immediate, comprehensive action from the moment we are retained as your commercial vehicle crash lawyer. We issue legal preservation demands to the carrier, their insurer, and any fleet management or telematics service providers requiring immediate retention of all ELD data, EDR data, dashcam footage, GPS records, driver qualification files, drug and alcohol testing results, vehicle maintenance records, and internal safety communications. We obtain the carrier’s FMCSA safety record and CSA score history. We retain commercial vehicle accident reconstruction experts and mechanical inspection specialists to conduct an independent investigation before the carrier’s team controls the evidentiary record. We identify every liable party and every applicable insurance policy. And we build a case designed for trial, because the only thing that makes a commercial carrier’s insurer pay full value on a serious injury claim is knowing that the attorney on the other side has been to a jury and won.
The explosive growth of e-commerce delivery operations has put millions of additional commercial delivery vehicles on Kentucky roads, operated by drivers under intense time pressure who are frequently unfamiliar with local routes. Amazon Logistics, FedEx, UPS, and regional delivery carrier crashes give rise to direct liability against the driver and the delivery company under both respondeat superior and direct negligence theories.
Utility company vehicles, telecommunications service trucks, HVAC and plumbing service vans, and other commercial service vehicles operated by companies whose employees drive on work assignments are covered by the employer's commercial auto policy and give rise to direct employer liability for the employee's negligent driving conduct during the scope of employment.
Heavy construction vehicles including concrete mixers, dump trucks, and flatbed haulers operate at weights and dimensions that produce catastrophic injuries in collisions with passenger vehicles. These cases frequently involve both the commercial vehicle operator's liability and, in cases involving vehicle defects or overloading, product liability and negligent loading claims against additional defendants.
When an employee causes a crash while driving a company-owned or company-leased vehicle in the course of their employment, the employer bears vicarious liability for the employee's negligent conduct under respondeat superior. The company's commercial auto policy provides the primary coverage, and the company's own hiring and supervision practices may give rise to direct negligent entrustment liability if the employee had a known history of traffic violations or impaired driving.
Tanker trucks carrying fuel, chemicals, and other hazardous materials are subject to the most stringent FMCSA safety and driver qualification requirements of any commercial vehicle category. Crashes involving tanker trucks, particularly those that result in fires, explosions, or hazardous material releases, produce catastrophic injuries with multi-party liability exposure encompassing the driver, the carrier, the shipper, and potentially the vehicle manufacturer.
Commercial passenger vans operated by employers, hotels, airports, and transportation companies that carry passengers for hire are subject to common carrier standards under Kentucky law, imposing the highest duty of care recognized in vehicle liability litigation. Passenger injuries in commercial van crashes give rise to claims against the operating company, the driver, and in cases of vehicle defects, the manufacturer.
Commercial vehicle crashes produce some of the most severe injuries in all of personal injury litigation because of the mass and force differentials between commercial vehicles and the passenger vehicles they collide with. As a commercial vehicle crash lawyer serving Louisville and Kentucky injury victims, Forman & Associates pursues every available category of recovery from every responsible party, building a damages case that reflects the true economic and human cost of what a commercial vehicle collision has produced.
In a Kentucky commercial vehicle crash lawsuit, recoverable damages typically include:
Larry Forman has actually stood before juries and won. That track record is known in Kentucky legal circles — and it changes how the other side negotiates.
ELD data, EDR data, dashcam footage, GPS records, driver qualification files, drug and alcohol testing results, and vehicle maintenance histories are all time-sensitive and controlled by the commercial carrier.
FMCSA regulations, hours of service requirements, driver qualification standards, cargo securement rules, commercial vehicle maintenance obligations, respondeat superior liability, negligent entrustment, and the specific coverage frameworks applicable to every category of commercial vehicle operation are not abstract concepts to our team.
From expert witness retention to pattern-of-misconduct research, we build cases designed to win at trial — not just settle quickly to move to the next file.
You pay nothing out of pocket. Our firm advances all costs, and we only collect if we secure a recovery on your behalf. Zero financial risk to you.
Larry Forman is one of the most-watched legal voices online. He knows how to tell your story — in front of a jury, a judge, or a national audience.
Over $5,000,000 recovered for injured people all over the United States.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Each case is unique.
Commercial vehicle crash cases differ from standard passenger vehicle collision cases in nearly every dimension that matters legally. The vehicles are heavier, the forces involved are greater, and the injuries are correspondingly more severe. The legal framework involves federal FMCSA regulations, commercial driver's license requirements, hours of service rules, and cargo securement standards that do not apply to passenger vehicles. The liability structure encompasses the driver, the carrier, the vehicle owner, and potentially the cargo loader and the vehicle manufacturer simultaneously. The insurance coverage available is substantially higher. And the institutional defendant, a commercial carrier with a fleet safety department and experienced legal representation, moves with a speed and sophistication that most general personal injury firms are not equipped to match from day one.