Articles Posted in Truck Accidents

The Dallas Morning News reports that it determined that a quarter of big-rig truck drivers faulted in fatal crashes in Texas from 2000 through 2005 had rap sheets. Their research found that of 953 fatal truck accidents where the driver was determined to be a fault, 25% were convicted of a criminal offense or received deferred adjudication before the fatal wreck. 14% had committed drug or alcohol offenses prior to the fatal truck accident. Ten percent were felons.

I am not sure what to make of this information. I believe that people imprisoned after committing crimes deserve a second chance, as do former drug addicts, for redemption. (Parenthetically, I really cannot figure out why felons cannot vote other than just pure spite. It is not like they will create a voting block. But I digress….)

Then again, I am not suggesting we should allow felons to hold positions that require, for example, knowledge of national security secrets. In the trucking industry, truck drivers are controlling extraordinarily dangerous weapons. If the data shows that ex-convict truck drivers cause an inordinate amount of truck crashes, we should make felony convictions a deal killer for getting a CDL license. I’m not arguing that we have reached that point based on one retrospective study by a newspaper. But I think as a society, it is something lawyers and policymakers should look at.

On Saturday, the New York Times published an informative article on trucking industry deregulation. If you are a truck accident lawyer in Maryland or elsewhere, I would suggest reading the entire article. Here are some highlights:

*In 1937, Congress set the first driving hour limits. Truckers could drive up to 10 continuous hours but were required to rest for a minimum of 8 hours. They could use the remaining six hours for other work activities, like loading, or for breaks or meals. Truckers could drive up to 60 hours over 7 consecutive days, or 70 hours over 8 days. To enforce those rules, the government required drivers to keep logs.

*In 1999, Congress created the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration in response to what lawmakers considered ineffectual regulation and high casualties. A year later, the agency proposed tighter service hour rules. They would allow long-haul drivers to work a maximum of 12 hours a day and require them to take 10-hour breaks between shifts. They also required installation of electronic devices to replace driver logs.

*In April 2003, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration reversed gears and issued rules that increased the maximum driving hours to 77 from 60, over 7 consecutive days, and to 88 hours from 70, over 8 consecutive days. The new rules capped daily work hours at 14, which included driving and waiting for loading and unloading. The Agency also decided not to require truck companies to install electronic monitoring devices.

*During the 2000 election cycle, trucking executives and political action committees gave more than $4.3 million in donations to the Republicans and less than $1 million to Democrats. From 2000 to 2006, the trucking industry directed more than $14 million in campaign contributions to Republicans.

*The trucking industry’s donations and lobbying fees – about $37 million from 2000 to 2005 – led to rules that have saved what industry officials estimate are billions of dollars in expenses linked to tougher trucking regulations.

*The fatality rate for truck-related accidents remains nearly double that involving only cars (according to safety experts).

*The practice of falsifying truck driver hours is an open secret in the trucking industry; truckers routinely refer to their logs as “comic books.” Fines are small and the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration does not have enough staff to monitor 700,000 businesses and almost eight million trucks.

The article then tells the story of a truck driver from Virginia who claims to have been taught to conceal excessive driving hours in his truck during his training last January by his former employer, Boyd Brothers Transportation of Birmingham, Alabama. The truck driver said his orientation instructor at Boyd Brothers told his class that government inspectors were allowed to examine a monthly logbook if it was bound, but taught the truck drivers a back door. If they removed the staples, government inspectors considered the trucking log “loose leaf” and they could require an examination of only pages from the most recent seven days.

To keep inspectors off the trail, the truck driver alleged that the drivers were told to use fuel credit cards that recorded only the date, not the time, of the fuel stop. He added that the trucking company he worked for pushed him to work longer hours than permitted and that his logbooks were “adjusted” frequently to appear as if the truck driver was within the legal limits. He said he told a dispatcher several times he was too tired to make another trip, but he was still ordered to do so after just a few hours of sleep. Continue reading

I provide data from Jury Verdict Research frequently on this blog because I think it is helpful for personal injury lawyers to see the national prevalence of specific classes of cases. Below is a list of recovery percentages in truck accident cases that go to trial:

Broadside Collisions 61%
Head-On Collisions $71%
Intersection Collisions 58%
Multiple Vehicle Collisions 73%
No Contact Accidents 52%
Truck, Overall 60%

Jury Verdict Research also offers statistics on the median compensatory awards for a few different categories of truck accidents:

Head-On Collisions $532,034
Intersection Collisions $85,000
Truck Accidents Overall $90,000

I suspect that most truck crash attorneys would agree that both the likelihood of recovery and the amount of recovery is higher in Maryland, but I have seen no state-specific data on truck accident cases. If anyone knows of any data in Maryland or in any other state, please let me know.

On Tuesday, the American Transportation Research Institute, the research arm of the American Trucking Association, released the results of its industry analysis of the use of recorders to monitor driver hours. The study showed that few fleets use electronic onboard recorders, but those that report increased driver morale. This research contradicts the hypothesis that even a truck accident lawyer had: that “big brother” tracking devices would hurt driver morale and retention. Seventy-six percent of users said the recorders had improved driver morale and 19 percent said they had improved driver retention.

Obviously, there are concerns about data privacy and data access issues. But there are too many deaths in Maryland because of tired drivers logging more hours than federal law allows.

It is difficult for profit-maximizing companies and businesses that specialize in local pickup and delivery service not to act aggressively because they believe their competitors are. A universal requirement that these companies use recorders that monitor driver hours might level the playing field, keeping tired commercial truck drivers off the road. The downside risk to these recorders would be drivers driving faster to make up for the lost hours.

Yesterday I took the deposition of the Defendant truck driver in a crash that occurred on North Point Road near its intersection with Quail Avenue in Baltimore, Maryland. My client suffered permanent injuries to her left hand (she is left-hand dominant) in the accident.

The Case

This is a classic right turn tractor-trailer truck wreck case. To make a right turn in the tractor-trailer, the Defendant truck driver needed to use two lanes of traffic. I think it is also incumbent upon the Defendant to make sure no one is coming when he makes that right turn, although this requires waiting for a moment while checking his rearview mirrors. Here, the truck driver made a quick right-hand turn into my client, who was apparently in one of his blind spots.

truck accident victimA Clark County, Nevada jury awarded $14.1 million to the family of a truck crash victim killed by a drunk driver in 2001. The jury divided the verdict into $4.1 million in compensatory damages and $10 million in punitive damages that three corporate defendants will pay.   Did you say $10 million?  That was one angry jury.

Facts

Rosa Delegado, a 58-year-old grandmother, was getting into her car when the defendant truck driver hit her with a large industrial truck. The impact pinned Delegado against her car, which ran her over. Ms. Delegado’s family’s attorney filed a negligent supervision lawsuit against Terrible Herbst, which operates 80 convenience stores and gas stations in Nevada.

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