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How a Truck Accident Lawsuit Works in Texas: Every Phase, Start to Finish
If you’ve been hit by an 18-wheeler, the legal process can feel as overwhelming as the injury itself. The stakes are higher than an ordinary car wreck, the opposing side is better funded, and the clock is already running. Understanding how a truck accident lawsuit actually unfolds in Texas is the first step toward protecting what you’re owed.
Key Takeaways
- A claim and a lawsuit are not the same thing — most truck cases start as insurance claims.
- Texas gives you two years from the crash date to file; miss it, and you usually lose the right to recover.
- Texas uses a 51% fault bar — more than half the blame means no recovery.
- Several parties may be liable: the driver, the carrier, a maintenance contractor, or a cargo loader.
- Most cases settle through negotiation or mediation, not trial.
Claim first, lawsuit second
Most truck accident cases don’t begin in a courtroom. They begin as an insurance claim against the trucking company’s insurer. Your attorney investigates, notifies the insurer, and sends a demand for payment. Many cases resolve here and never become lawsuits.
A lawsuit is filed when the insurer disputes fault or refuses to pay fair value. Filing is often a negotiating move, not a declaration that you’re headed to trial. It signals you’re prepared to present the case to a jury — and that alone can change how seriously an insurer treats your claim.
The phases of a truck accident lawsuit
While every case is different, most follow a recognizable path:
- Medical treatment first. Your health comes first, and prompt care creates the records that later support your claim.
- Investigation. Your team pulls the police report, finds witnesses, requests maintenance history, and preserves electronic data before it disappears.
- Demand and negotiation. Once your injuries stabilize, your attorney sends a demand package laying out liability and losses. Many cases settle here.
- Filing suit. If the insurer won’t pay fairly, a lawsuit is filed within the two-year deadline.
- Discovery. Both sides exchange evidence and take depositions. A large share of cases settles here once the value is no longer a guess.
- Mediation. Texas courts frequently send parties to a neutral mediator, and many cases resolve there.
- Trial. The exception, not the rule — but preparing as if a trial is coming is often what produces a full-value settlement.
Why truck cases are more complicated than car crashes
A wreck with an 18-wheeler isn’t just a bigger car accident. A fully loaded tractor-trailer can legally weigh up to 80,000 pounds, which is why these crashes cause far worse injuries. The legal side is harder too: federal safety rules a carrier can be caught breaking, several parties who may share blame and carry separate insurance, and electronic evidence that can vanish if no one preserves it fast. You can see how liability gets established against trucking companies on the firm’s Texas 18-wheeler accident lawyer page.
The two Texas rules that catch victims off guard
The two-year deadline. Texas generally gives you two years from the date of the crash to file a personal injury lawsuit. It sounds like plenty of time, but investigations take months and evidence degrades fast. Waiting is the most common way people lose an otherwise strong case.
The 51% fault bar. Texas follows modified comparative fault. If you’re found more than 50 percent responsible, you recover nothing. At 50 percent or less, your recovery is reduced by your share of fault. If your damages are $100,000 and you’re 20 percent at fault, you recover $80,000. Insurers know this rule cold, which is why they work so hard to shift blame onto victims.
How long does it take?
It depends on injury severity and case complexity. Straightforward cases with clear fault may resolve in a few months. Serious-injury or disputed-fault cases often take a year or more, especially once discovery begins. One timing point matters: you generally shouldn’t settle before you reach maximum medical improvement, because the full cost of a serious injury isn’t known until your condition plateaus.
What to do before you talk to an adjuster
Insurance adjusters are trained to minimize payouts, and anything you say early can be used to reduce your recovery. That’s why many injured people talk to a lawyer before they speak with an adjuster at all.
The bottom line
A truck accident lawsuit in Texas is a marathon with a hard deadline, not a sprint. Knowing the phases, the two-year limit, and the 51% rule puts you in a stronger position from the start. To learn about the firm behind your case — founded in 1995, bilingual, with a smaller caseload and a record $13 million train-collision verdict — see about The León Law Firm.
The León Law Firm, P.C.
1 Sugar Creek Center Boulevard
Sugar Land
TX
77478
United States