Reviewed by Larry Peters, Attorney licensed in Tennessee, Mississippi, Arkansas, Texas, Kentucky, and Georgia · Last reviewed: June 2026.
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A collision with a fully loaded tractor-trailer is not just a bigger car wreck — it is a different kind of case, governed by federal law and defended by people who go to work within hours of the crash. Germantown sits at the edge of one of the busiest freight regions in America: the Memphis metro moves goods for FedEx, dozens of distribution centers, and the rail and river terminals that make this a national logistics hub. Those trucks roll down the TN-385 Bill Morris Parkway, along US-72/Poplar, and through the I-240 and I-269 interchanges that ring the city. When one of them causes a serious injury, Southern Injury Attorneys know how to hold the entire trucking operation accountable — with no fee unless we win.
Sources: NHTSA 2023 large-truck crash data; FMCSA federal gross-vehicle-weight limit; Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-3-104.
What makes an 18-wheeler crash different from a car wreck
Physics is the first difference. A loaded tractor-trailer can weigh up to 80,000 pounds — roughly twenty times a typical passenger car — so when the two collide, the people in the smaller vehicle absorb almost all of the force. That is why truck crashes produce so many catastrophic and fatal injuries even at moderate speeds. Nationwide in 2023, about 82% of the people killed in large-truck crashes were not riding in the truck.
The legal side is just as different. Trucking companies answer to a thick book of federal safety regulations that ordinary drivers never face. They usually carry insurance policies many times larger than a personal auto policy — commercial coverage often starts at $750,000 or $1,000,000 and climbs from there. And they protect those policies aggressively: many carriers dispatch a rapid-response team to the scene within hours, taking photographs and lining up their defense before the injured person has left the hospital. Going up against that machinery takes a lawyer who knows how trucking cases work.
Who can be held liable in a Germantown truck accident
One of the most valuable parts of a truck case is identifying everyone who shares the blame, because each defendant may carry separate insurance. The truck driver is only the starting point. Liability can extend to the motor carrier (the trucking company) for negligent hiring, training, or supervision; to a broker or shipper who pushed an unrealistic schedule; to the company that loaded the cargo if a shifting or overweight load caused the wreck; to a maintenance contractor that failed to fix bad brakes or tires; and to a parts or truck manufacturer when defective equipment is involved.
Under federal law, a motor carrier is generally responsible for the drivers operating under its authority, which can make the company directly liable for a crash. Sorting out these relationships — carrier, owner-operator, lessor, broker, shipper — is one of the first things we do, because the right defendants are often hidden behind layers of corporate paperwork.
The federal rules that win truck cases
Commercial trucking is regulated by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA). Those rules create duties that, when broken, become powerful evidence of negligence:
- Hours-of-service (HOS) limits. Drivers may generally drive up to 11 hours after 10 consecutive hours off duty, within a 14-hour window. Violating these limits points straight to fatigue.
- Electronic logging devices (ELDs). Most trucks must record drive time electronically, creating a digital trail of how long the driver had been on the road.
- Commercial driver licensing and training. Carriers must verify qualifications and keep drivers who are not properly licensed off the road.
- Drug and alcohol testing. Federal rules require testing after certain crashes — and post-crash testing failures are devastating to the defense.
- Inspection and maintenance. Brakes, tires, lights, and coupling devices must be inspected and repaired on a strict schedule.
When a carrier cuts corners on any of these duties, the violation can establish negligence and, in serious cases, support a claim for punitive damages.
The evidence that disappears — and why speed matters
Trucking evidence has a short shelf life. The truck’s electronic control module (the “black box”) records speed, braking, and throttle in the seconds before impact, but it can be overwritten or lost when the truck is repaired or returned to service. ELD logs, dispatch records, driver qualification files, and maintenance histories are only required to be kept for limited periods. Dashcam and nearby business surveillance video is often recorded over within days.
That is why one of the first things we do is send a spoliation (evidence-preservation) letter demanding the carrier preserve the truck, its data, and its records. The earlier we are involved, the more of this evidence still exists. Waiting can mean the most important proof in your case is gone before anyone looks for it.
Germantown’s truck corridors
Germantown’s crash risk is shaped by the freight network around it. The TN-385 Bill Morris Parkway is a high-speed route that connects I-240 to I-269 and carries commercial traffic skirting the southern edge of the city. US-72/Poplar Avenue brings delivery and box trucks to the retail corridors, and the nearby I-240 and I-269 loops feed the warehouses and distribution centers of the larger Memphis logistics market. Mixing 80,000-pound trucks with local commuter and shopping traffic at interchanges and signalized intersections is a recipe for severe collisions — rear-end underrides, lane-change sideswipes, and jackknifes among them.
Catastrophic injuries and larger insurance
Because of the forces involved, truck crashes frequently cause traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage and paralysis, multiple fractures, internal organ injuries, amputations, and death. These are exactly the injuries that generate enormous medical bills and lifelong care needs. The flip side is that commercial policies are far larger than the minimum auto coverage Tennessee drivers carry, so a properly built truck case can reach the compensation a catastrophically injured family actually needs — if the full extent of the harm and every layer of coverage is documented.
Tennessee’s one-year deadline and 50% fault rule
Tennessee gives you just one year from the date of the crash to file a lawsuit (Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-3-104), one of the shortest deadlines in the nation. Tennessee also applies modified comparative fault under McIntyre v. Balentine: your recovery is reduced by your share of fault and barred entirely if you are 50% or more at fault. Trucking defense teams know this and will try to shift blame onto you, which is one more reason to have your own investigation underway quickly.
What to do after a Germantown truck crash
- Call 911 and get the crash documented by police.
- Get medical care immediately — truck-crash injuries are often worse than they first feel.
- Photograph the trucks, placards, company names, and DOT numbers if you safely can.
- Do not speak to the trucking company’s insurer or sign anything before talking to a lawyer.
- Call Southern Injury Attorneys right away so we can preserve the truck’s data before it is lost.
In short: A Germantown 18-wheeler crash is a federal-law case with large insurance, multiple possible defendants, and evidence that vanishes within days. Acting fast — and within Tennessee’s one-year deadline — protects both your proof and your right to full compensation. Call 800-224-5546.
What our Germantown-area clients say
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Frequently asked questions
Do you handle truck accidents in Germantown and Shelby County?
Yes. We are Tennessee-licensed truck accident lawyers and we represent people injured in 18-wheeler, semi, box-truck, and delivery-truck crashes throughout Germantown, Collierville, Cordova, Bartlett, and all of Shelby County. The consultation is free.
How is a truck accident claim different from a car accident claim?
Truck cases are bigger and more complex. A loaded 18-wheeler can weigh up to 80,000 pounds, so injuries are far more severe. Trucking companies are governed by federal FMCSA rules, often carry multiple insurance layers, and frequently send a rapid-response team to the scene. There can also be several at-fault parties beyond the driver.
Who can be held responsible for an 18-wheeler crash?
Liability can extend past the driver to the trucking company (motor carrier), a broker or shipper, the company that loaded the cargo, a maintenance contractor, and even a parts or truck manufacturer. Each may carry separate insurance, which is why identifying every responsible party matters so much.
Why do I need to act quickly after a truck crash?
Critical evidence disappears fast. The truck’s black box can be overwritten, ELD logs and maintenance records have limited retention, and video is recorded over within days. We send an evidence-preservation letter early so this proof is not lost. Tennessee also limits you to one year to file suit.
How much is a Germantown truck accident case worth?
It depends on the severity of your injuries, the available commercial insurance, and the strength of the liability evidence. Because truck policies are far larger than ordinary auto policies, properly documented serious-injury cases can reach substantial value. We give you an honest assessment after reviewing your records.
What are the federal hours-of-service rules?
Truck drivers generally may drive up to 11 hours after 10 consecutive hours off duty, within a 14-hour window. Electronic logging devices record this time. Violations are strong evidence that fatigue contributed to a crash.
What if the trucking company says the crash was partly my fault?
Tennessee uses modified comparative fault. You can still recover as long as you are less than 50% at fault, though your award is reduced by your percentage of fault. Defense teams often try to shift blame, which is why an independent investigation is important.
What does it cost to hire your firm?
Nothing up front. We work on a contingency fee and are paid only if we win. The initial consultation is free.
This page provides general legal information about Tennessee personal injury law and is not legal advice. Reading it or contacting us does not create an attorney-client relationship.

