San Jose Commercial Truck Attorney for Spinal Cord Injury Cases
Dedicated representation for San Jose commercial truck victims with a spinal cord injury
If you or a loved one suffered a spinal cord injury in a commercial truck collision in San Jose, you are facing both a life-changing injury and a legally complex claim. Attorney Michael Martinovsky provides personal, hands-on representation to San Jose commercial truck victims — in English, Spanish, and Russian — with no fee unless we win.
Commercial Truck crashes and spinal cord injury in San Jose
San Jose is the largest city in the Bay Area and the hub of Silicon Valley, with dense commuter traffic and major freight routes feeding the South Bay. Commercial truck collisions are among the most devastating crashes on California roads. A loaded tractor-trailer can weigh up to 80,000 pounds — roughly 20 times a typical passenger car — so even a low-speed impact can cause catastrophic, life-altering injuries. These cases are also legally complex: federal safety regulations apply, multiple companies may share liability, and critical electronic evidence can disappear within days.
Spinal cord injuries are among the most catastrophic outcomes of a serious collision. Damage to the spinal cord can cause partial or complete paralysis (paraplegia or quadriplegia), loss of sensation and motor function, and lifelong loss of bladder, bowel, and respiratory control. Many spinal cord injuries are permanent.
Why these cases are high value
Federal law requires interstate trucking companies to carry far higher insurance limits than ordinary drivers — generally $750,000, and up to $5 million for hazardous loads — compared with California's $30,000 per-person minimum for a private car. Combined with the severity of truck-crash injuries, that means a properly investigated truck case can access substantially larger sources of recovery.
Compensation available in a California spinal cord injury claim
Full compensation in a San Jose commercial truck case involving a spinal cord injury may include economic damages — past and future medical care, lost wages and diminished earning capacity, rehabilitation, and the cost of home or vehicle modifications — and non-economic damages for pain, suffering, disfigurement, and loss of enjoyment of life. Because spinal cord injuries often require lifelong medical care, attendant care, home and vehicle modification, and result in lost earning capacity, the lifetime cost can reach several million dollars. Accurately documenting future medical needs and lost income is essential to a full recovery.
The legal framework
- Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSR) govern driver hours of service (49 C.F.R. Part 395), driver qualification (Part 391), drug and alcohol testing (Part 382), and vehicle inspection and maintenance (Part 396). A documented violation can be powerful evidence of negligence.
- Multiple liable parties. Beyond the driver, claims may lie against the motor carrier (under respondeat superior and for negligent hiring, training, or retention), the trailer owner, the freight broker or shipper, and maintenance contractors — each potentially carrying separate insurance.
- Higher mandatory insurance. Interstate carriers must meet the financial-responsibility minimums of 49 C.F.R. § 387.9; many also carry multimillion-dollar excess coverage that must be identified.
Local context: San Jose
Serious commercial truck collisions in San Jose frequently occur along U.S. Highway 101, Interstate 280, Interstate 680, State Route 87 (Guadalupe Parkway), and State Route 85. A lawsuit arising from a San Jose crash is generally filed in the Santa Clara County Superior Court in downtown San Jose, located at 191 North First Street, San Jose, CA 95113, and Attorney Martinovsky is experienced litigating in Santa Clara County courts.
Evidence to preserve
Critical evidence in a commercial truck case can disappear quickly. In a spinal cord injury claim, preserving the following early can be decisive:
- Electronic Logging Device (ELD) hours-of-service data
- the engine control module ("black box") — speed, braking, and throttle before impact
- the driver qualification file and post-crash drug and alcohol testing
- maintenance, repair, and inspection records for the tractor and trailer
- the bill of lading, dispatch records, and dashcam footage
Time limits to bring a California claim
California generally allows two years from the date of injury to file a personal injury lawsuit (Code of Civil Procedure § 335.1), and wrongful death claims are subject to the same two-year period. When a government entity is involved — for example, a publicly owned vehicle or a dangerous public road — a formal claim must usually be filed within six months under the Government Claims Act (Government Code § 911.2). Because deadlines can be shorter and physical evidence fades quickly, it is important to act promptly after a San Jose commercial truck collision.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who can be held liable in a commercial truck accident?
Liability can extend beyond the driver to the trucking company (motor carrier), the trailer owner, the freight broker or shipper, a maintenance contractor, and the manufacturer of a defective part. Identifying every liable party matters because each may carry separate insurance.
Why should I act quickly after a truck crash?
Much of the most valuable evidence — ELD logs, the engine black box, and maintenance records — is controlled by the trucking company and can be lawfully overwritten on a routine schedule. An attorney can send a spoliation (evidence preservation) letter to lock it down.
How much is a spinal cord injury case worth in California?
There is no fixed amount — value depends on the severity of the injury, the lifetime cost of care, lost earning capacity, pain and suffering, and the available insurance. Because spinal cord injuries are often permanent and extraordinarily expensive, these cases are typically high value, which makes identifying every source of insurance coverage critical.
Where would my San Jose commercial truck case be filed?
A lawsuit arising from a collision in San Jose is generally filed in the Santa Clara County Superior Court in downtown San Jose, located at 191 North First Street, San Jose, CA 95113. Attorney Martinovsky is experienced litigating in Santa Clara County courts.
This page provides general legal information about California law, not legal advice for any specific case. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. For advice about your situation, speak with an attorney.
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Injured in a San Jose Commercial Truck Crash? Get Answers.
Attorney Martinovsky offers a free, no-obligation consultation in English, Spanish, or Russian.