Employer Liability for Trucking Accidents in North Carolina

semi truck on the warehouse. shipping and receiving cargo

Personal injury law is based on the idea that someone who hurts another person should have to compensate them for the harm they’ve caused. In the case of most car accidents, that means the driver who caused the crash – or, more often, their insurer – has to pay for the losses of others involved in the accident.

But what about truck accidents? After all, the trucking company likely has much deeper pockets than the truck driver who caused the crash. Furthermore, the driver was working for the company at the time, and they wouldn’t have been in that situation at all but for their employer.

Depending on the circumstances, a trucking company may bear vicarious or direct liability for a truck accident, giving injured victims the right to seek compensation from the company and their insurers rather than just the driver.

How Vicarious Liability Might Apply to a Truck Accident Case

When a truck driver causes an accident due to negligence, people injured in the crash can hold the driver liable for their losses. However, injured truck accident victims may also have a legal claim against the trucking company that employed the at-fault driver.

In negligence cases, employers may have vicarious liability for injuries caused by the negligent or reckless acts of their employees committed during the employees’ job duties. Many truck drivers are categorized as independent contractors instead of direct employees. While trucking companies are not vicariously liable for the negligence of actual independent contractors, many truckers are misclassified. The law looks at the true relationship, not the label.

Will an Employer Always Be Held Liable?

Regardless of whether the driver is actually an employee or an independent contractor, trucking companies may bear direct liability for a truck accident when the company’s negligence causes or contributes to the accident, including through:

  • Negligent hiring – Trucking companies may negligently hire drivers when they fail to conduct adequate background checks that would reveal a driver’s unsuitability, such as a poor driving record, multiple past accidents, or lack of certification.
  • Negligent training – A trucking company may cause a truck accident when it fails to train a driver correctly, and that lack of training leads to the driver’s error that triggers the crash.
  • Negligent supervision – Trucking companies may bear responsibility for a truck accident through inadequate supervision of their drivers, such as failing to have procedures to monitor driver performance. Negligent supervision may include companies instructing or encouraging drivers to engage in unsafe behaviors like speeding or violating hours of service rules.
  • Negligent retention – Negligent retention may occur when a trucking company learns that the truck driver poses a significant risk of causing an accident yet continues to let the driver work.

Holding NC Trucking Companies Accountable

Trucking companies have significant resources to help them avoid liability for a truck accident. You need experienced legal counsel to help you hold the trucking company accountable for your injuries and losses.

At Ward Black Law, our attorneys are ready to tirelessly pursue the financial relief and justice you deserve. Let us thoroughly investigate the accident to obtain evidence of the truck driver’s and trucking company’s negligence, build a compelling case to show the company’s fault, and aggressively negotiate to secure a full settlement. If the company still won’t accept liability, we won’t hesitate to take them to court.

Talk to Our Experienced North Carolina Truck Accident Lawyers Today

If you’ve suffered injuries in a truck accident in North Carolina, get legal help to pursue maximum financial recovery by holding the trucking company liable for the crash. Contact Ward Black Law today for a free initial case review to speak with our North Carolina trucking accident attorneys about your case.