California Truck Accident — Legal Resource

Spinal Cord Injuries After a Truck Accident: California Legal Rights

Catastrophic spinal cord injuries from truck collisions require life care planning, forensic economic analysis, and often litigation to recover the full extent of lifetime economic and non-economic damages.

Written by Jayson Elliott, J.D.  ·  CA Bar No. 332479
Legal Information Notice

This article provides general legal information about California truck accident law. It does not provide legal advice. Consult a licensed California attorney for advice specific to your situation.

Catastrophic spinal cord injuries from truck collisions require life care planning, forensic economic analysis, and often litigation to recover the full extent of lifetime economic and non-economic damages.

California commercial truck accident law operates under a dual framework: FMCSA federal regulations that create specific duties and negligence per se theories, and California tort law that governs damages, comparative fault, and multi-defendant liability. The two systems work together to create a powerful legal environment for truck accident victims.

FMCSA minimum insurance requirements under 49 CFR Section 387.9 set the floor for commercial carrier coverage at $750,000 for general freight and $5,000,000 for hazardous materials. These minimums are substantially higher than California's personal auto minimums, making serious truck accident cases more likely to produce full economic recovery even in catastrophic injury cases.

Electronic logging device records are the most important electronic evidence in truck accident cases. They establish hours-of-service compliance at the moment of the accident, driving time history, and vehicle location. A written preservation demand must be sent to the carrier immediately after the accident — before automated deletion policies can destroy this critical evidence.

California's pure comparative fault from Li v. Yellow Cab Co. (1975) allows recovery even if the truck accident victim was partly at fault. Proposition 51 (Civil Code Section 1431.2) governs multi-defendant cases. The two-year statute of limitations under CCP Section 335.1 applies to private carrier claims; the six-month Government Claims Act deadline under Government Code Section 945.4 applies to Caltrans and other government entity claims.