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Recovering After a Fort Worth Truck Crash
Fort Worth Truck Accident Lawyers
A loaded 18-wheeler weighs up to 80,000 pounds, roughly 20 times a passenger car, so when one hits you on I-35W the injuries are rarely minor.
A big-rig case is also not a bigger car wreck. It runs on federal trucking rules, corporate defense teams, and commercial insurance worth far more than an auto policy.
The carrier sends its own investigators to the scene within hours, and the data that proves your case starts disappearing just as fast.
Lawsuit Legal is a Texas trial firm based in Houston, and we take on the trucking and energy companies behind serious crashes across Tarrant County.
Our Texas cases are led by personal injury attorney Don Worley, licensed by the State Bar of Texas, with more than 40,000 cases handled and over $100 million recovered for injury victims.
We move fast to preserve the black-box and logbook data, identify every liable company, and build the case for trial from day one.
When the carrier and its insurer will not pay what a claim is worth, our trial-ready attorneys are prepared to take it to a Tarrant County jury.
Call (888) 713-6653 for a free, confidential review of your truck accident claim. You Win or It's Free.
- $100+ million recovered w/ a 98% recovery rate
- FMCSA logs, ELD data, and the black box preserved before the carrier scrubs them
- Texas trial lawyers, Houston-based, serving all of Tarrant County

Why a Truck Case Is a Federal Case
Every commercial truck on I-35W runs under the federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations that do not apply to ordinary drivers, and those rules are where the case is usually won.[1] When a carrier breaks one and someone gets hurt, the violation becomes the evidence.
- Hours of service. Drivers are capped at 11 hours of driving in a 14-hour window, with a 10-hour rest. A carrier that pushes a driver past the limit to make a delivery window is liable when fatigue causes the crash.
- Driver qualification. A carrier that hires a driver with a suspended CDL, a failed drug test, or a bad record, or keeps him after learning of it, exposes itself to negligent hiring and retention claims.
- Maintenance and inspection. Daily inspection reports and systematic brake, tire, and component maintenance are required. Deferred maintenance is a common cause of the brake fade and tire failures that put a rig out of control.
- Cargo securement. Federal rules govern how a load is secured, and an improperly loaded flatbed or shifting freight can pull the shipper and the loader into the case.
Behind the driver sits a company with a defense team and a commercial policy that can run from $750,000 to several million dollars. That is exactly why the carrier fights hard, and why these cases take a firm built to fight back.
How 18-Wheelers Crash Around Fort Worth
The way a tractor-trailer crashes shapes the injuries and the proof, and a handful of patterns account for most of the serious cases on Tarrant County highways.
- Rear-end crashes. A loaded semi at highway speed needs the length of a city block to stop, so a following-too-close driver in the congestion on I-35W or Loop 820 can drive 80,000 pounds into stopped cars.
- Jackknife crashes. The trailer swings out from the cab and sweeps across lanes, often on iced pavement during a North Texas winter event or after a panic stop on I-35W or I-30.
- Rollovers. Shifting cargo, too much speed on a ramp or curve, and a high load tip a tractor-trailer onto the cars beside it, a frequent tanker and energy-truck failure on the loop ramps.
- Underride crashes. A car slides beneath the trailer in a rear or side impact, shearing the roof, a uniquely catastrophic failure in high-speed collisions.
- Tire blowouts. Texas pavement temperatures and skipped inspections cause blowouts that throw tread and send a rig out of control across lanes.
- Blind-spot and wide-turn crashes. A truck's no-zones hide entire cars, and an unsafe lane change or wide right turn pins a vehicle against a barrier or curb.
Whatever the pattern, the question is the same: what did the driver and the carrier do or fail to do, and the physical evidence and the data usually answer it.
Who Pays for a Fort Worth Truck Crash
An 18-wheeler crash usually involves more than the driver, and each company in the chain carries its own insurance. Finding every responsible party is the work.
- The truck driver, for the negligent driving that caused the crash.
- The trucking or energy company, both for the driver's conduct on the job and for its own negligent hiring, training, supervision, and dispatch decisions.
- The freight broker. After the 2026 Supreme Court decision in Montgomery v. Caribe Transport, a broker that negligently hired an unsafe carrier can be named as a direct defendant, often adding a separate policy.
- The cargo shipper or loader, when an unsafe or improperly secured load caused the wreck.
- The leasing or maintenance company, when a leased tractor or trailer or a botched repair contributed.
- A parts manufacturer, when defective brakes, tires, or other components failed.
Fort Worth freight runs through the Alliance hub, the BNSF rail yards, and the Barnett Shale energy fields, so a local crash often involves national carriers, energy contractors, and brokers with deep coverage. The fault between them gets divided under Texas proportionate responsibility, which the carrier's insurer will try to turn against you.
The Evidence the Carrier Erases First
A truck case is built on data the carrier controls, and much of it overwrites itself within days. The early steps decide how much of it survives.
- The engine control module, or black box. It records speed, braking, throttle, and more in the seconds before impact, and it can be overwritten or lost when the truck is repaired or returned to service.
- Electronic logging device data. The ELD shows the driver's hours, rest, speed, and location, and it exposes the hours-of-service violations a fatigued-driving case depends on.
- The driver qualification and drug-test file. These records prove negligent hiring and retention, and carriers are required to keep them but do not always preserve them.
- Dash-camera and highway-camera footage. Cab cameras and TxDOT cameras on I-35W, I-30, and Loop 820 capture the crash, but the footage overwrites quickly.
- Maintenance and inspection records. These show the deferred brake, tire, and component work that turns a mechanical failure into a liability case.
The practical way to protect all of it is a spoliation letter, a written demand that legally requires the carrier to hold the black box, the logs, and the maintenance file before any of it is overwritten. The sooner a lawyer sends it, the more of the evidence survives.
Alliance Freight and Barnett Shale Energy Trucks
Texas reports more fatal large-truck crashes than any other state, and Fort Worth carries two heavy truck industries most metros do not: an intermodal freight hub and a natural-gas field directly under the city.[2]
- The AllianceTexas hub and BNSF rail yards, on the north side, where containers move between rail and truck and feed distribution traffic onto I-35W and US-287.
- Barnett Shale energy trucks, the frac-sand haulers, water trucks, and rig-moving equipment that service the gas wells beneath the metro, heavier and harder to stop than ordinary traffic.
- I-35W and Loop 820, the spine and the ring, where freight and commuter traffic meet at the busiest interchanges in the county.
- I-30 and I-20, the east-west corridors carrying freight between Fort Worth, Dallas, and points beyond.
- US-287 and the Chisholm Trail Parkway, the corridors feeding the northwest energy region and the southern suburbs.
Energy trucking adds its own wrinkle, including a federal hours-of-service exception for some oilfield operations that can shape a fatigue case. Knowing which rules apply is part of building it.
The strange thing about Fort Worth trucking is how much of it is local. The Barnett Shale runs under neighborhoods, so the frac-sand and water trucks are not out on some remote oilfield road, they are on the street near a school, heavy and slow to stop. When one of them causes a crash, the chain of contractors behind it is usually longer than the company name on the door.
What a Fort Worth Truck Injury Claim Recovers
Truck crash awards run higher than car-crash cases because the injuries are more severe, the policies are larger, and more parties share the liability. Texas does not cap the everyday damages in an injury case, so the claim is valued by the evidence.
- Past and future medical care, including surgery, ICU, rehabilitation, and lifetime care for the most serious injuries.
- Full lost wages and lost earning capacity when an injury keeps you from your work.
- Pain, suffering, and mental anguish, with no statutory cap in an ordinary truck case.
- Disfigurement and permanent impairment, including an amputation or a brain injury.
- Life-care costs for a catastrophic injury requiring ongoing support.
- Wrongful death and survival damages for a family that lost someone in the crash.
- Exemplary damages for gross negligence, such as a DUI driver or falsified logs, capped under Section 41.008.[3]
Because the commercial policy at stake can be worth many times an auto policy, the insurer fights to shift fault onto you, which makes the early evidence work all the more important.
After a Fort Worth Truck Crash
The steps you take in the first days shape what the claim can become.
- Get medical care at a trauma center if needed, because internal, spinal, and brain injuries do not always announce themselves at the scene.
- Document the truck. Photograph the DOT number on the cab door, the carrier name, both plates, the cargo, and the scene.
- Do not give the carrier's adjuster a recorded statement or sign a release before you understand your rights.
- Get a lawyer on the evidence fast, so a spoliation letter can lock down the black box, ELD, and maintenance records before they are gone.
- Mind the deadline. Texas generally allows two years to file under Section 16.003, and a claim involving a government vehicle can require formal notice within months.[4]