
Doing The Right Thing After The Accident
Cell Phone Bans are Unenforced and Ineffective
Driver Safety is Important for Teens
Billion Dollar Corporation Learns Tough Lesson About Distracted Driving
Hit By an Uninsured Driver? You Have More Options Than You Think
How Pedestrian Accidents Occur
How Most Bicycle Accidents are Caused
Remember the Rules for Pedestrians
Be Safe and Share the Road With Motorcyclists
Sick Truckers Forge Bogus Health Certificates to Stay on the Road
The Common Causes of Truck Accidents (Part One)
Common Causes of Truck Accidents (Part Two)
Trucks are Built for Freight, Not Safety
Bigfoot, Flat Earth and Insurance: Eight Popular Insurance Coverage Myths
Customers are Being Overcharged by Insurance
Bad Faith Laid Bare: Allstate Fights to Keep Documents Secret
Will California Become The New Gulf Coast?
Groundbreaking New Law in The Pacific Northwest
Big Pharma Gets New Federal Testing Guidelines
Cheap Foreign Goods May Have Hidden Costs
OxyContin: Pharmaceutical Company Addicts Thousands for Profit
The FDA: Is There a Doctor In The House?
Medical Errors That Should Never Happen
Hospitals and HMO's are Charging for Medical Errors
The Fallacy of "Between You and Your Doctor"
Blood Thinner Overdose Nearly Kills Quaid Twins
Secondary Impacts in Sports Can Kill
TWA Flight 800: Ten Years and Nothing has Changed
Why You Should Choose Lewis & Tompkins to Represent You
New Continuance Policy for Prince George's County District Court
Civil Rules of Civil Procedure - D.C. Superior Court
D.C. Casefilexpress Filing Instructions
D.C. Superior Court Multidoor Dispute Resolution Forms and Instructions
Judge Wetzel's Discovery Checklist for Virginia Trial Attorneys
What Will Lewis and Tompkins Do For You? (Part 2 of 2)
What Will Lewis and Tompkins Do For You? (Part 1 of 2)
What Happens During a Lawsuit?
Crane Collapses are a new epidemic
Lewis and Tompkins is a Washington, D.C. law firm that specializes in helping those who have been injured in accidents due to no fault of their own. It has been out experience that there is no traffic accident that is as destructive and potentially deadly than those involving commercial trucks. If you or a loved one has been injured in a truck accident in the D.C. Metro area, contact Lewis and Tompkins for a free legal consultation today.
Trucks and tractor trailers are unique in commercial shipping because they have to share roads and highways with people. They have to do their business in extremely close proximity with other vehicles that are much smaller and much more vulnerable. So as a result, the rules and regulations regarding trucks are very specific and very stringent.
Trucks are commercial vehicles. This means that they are built and operated for the sole purpose of making money. They haul every conceivable item that you can think of in great quantities from one place to another.
They are not the only vehicles to do so. Boats haul freight, as do planes and trains. But trains travel on tracks that were built for that specific purpose. Not everyone can fly. Nor can everyone simply pilot an enormous shipping vessel.
The legal weight for an eighteen wheeler is 80,000 pounds. That’s 40 tons to you or me. And that’s without any oversize or overweight permits. In comparison, the average automobile weighs over somewhere around 5,000 lbs. A car being hit by a tractor trailer (even at a low rate of speed) goes through enormous physical damage.
The average length of an eighteen wheeler varies greatly depending on the type of cab being driven. But the overall average is 70-80 ft. long. The length of an eighteen wheeler's cab usually averages between 245" to 265" wheelbase. This is measured from the center of the rear wheel to the center of the steer.
The length of time to stop an eighteen wheeler is 40% greater than that of an automobile, although it does depend on the weight of their load, road conditions, and other factors. But all things being equal, it does take much longer to bring a truck to a complete stop. You should also consider that eighteen wheels do not mean eighteen brakes. Eighteen wheelers only have ten brakes, and while they are required to be anti-lock brakes, the momentum involved is much greater than in an automobile.
Insurance on tractor trailers is made to reflect the enormous damage that they can do. Tractor trailers require a base limit of $750,000 on their primary liability insurance. In contrast, minimum liability insurance for automobiles is $25,000 for one person injured, $50,000 for two people injured, and $20,000 for property damage. The insurers are assuming that if there is an accident involving a tractor trailer, then people are going to get hurt. There is no such thing as a “fender bender” when a truck is involved.
People would make the assumption that when trucks aren’t carrying a trailer (a practice which is called “bobtailing,”) that they are somehow less dangerous. In fact the opposite is true. The truck still outweighs even the largest of SUV’s, and the control of the truck is lessened dramatically when the trailer isn’t attached. Insurers know this as well, which is why “bobtail” insurance is almost as pricey as regular freight insurance.
In other words, tractor trailers are dangerous. A collision with one, whether it is carrying freight or not, is practically guaranteed to cause the victims major physical injuries, assuming they survive at all.
But just because a truck is insured is no reason to assume that the insurance company will be acting in your best interests. In fact they will be acting in their best interests, and only theirs. They will deny responsibility. They will reject medical claims. And they will do everything in their power to minimize the amount of money that they have to pay out in claims.
This is true with automobile accident insurers, and this behavior is multiplied with tractor trailers, which often have more than one insurance policy. The driver may have one policy, while the trailer may have another, while the freight in the trailer has a separate policy as well. Determining which insurance policy is going to assume responsibility can be a nightmare, especially if representatives from each of them are pointing fingers either at the other policies or towards the victim.
If you have been injured in an accident with a truck or tractor trailer, it goes without saying that you will need aggressive and experienced legal representation to get fair treatment from the insurers. If you or a loved one has been injured in a truck accident in the D.C. Metro area, contact Lewis and Tompkins today.
Lewis & Tompkins
927 15th Street N.W., 9th Floor
Washington, DC 20005
Phone: 202-296-0666