When an 18-wheeler inflicts serious damage, the legal process often begins while your family is still dealing with the medical crisis. Injuries such as spinal cord damage, brain trauma, amputation, severe burns, or death leave no doubt about the severity of the situation. Bills arrive before the full impact is clear. Meanwhile, the trucking company might already be taking steps to secure its records and insurance details.
A Nashville catastrophic truck accident lawyer at Ponce Law can step in early, preserve evidence, and deal with the insurance pressure while you focus on healing. A skilled truck accident attorney can also look beyond the driver to the carrier, broker, maintenance company, loading company, or other business tied to the wreck. Ponce Law is local to Middle Tennessee and is the only law firm in the area with RoadProof, a tool that connects to Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) traffic camera footage.
Catastrophic truck crashes often involve more extensive damage than minor injury claims because the harm they cause can affect medical care, work, mobility, independence, and long-term daily life. A claim must account for emergency care, surgery, rehabilitation, home modifications, loss of earning capacity, future treatment, and the day-to-day loss of independence. In fatal truck crashes, the focus also shifts to the financial and personal harm the family is left with.
A Nashville attorney must also account for the size and force of commercial vehicles in a severe truck wreck case. A loaded tractor-trailer can destroy the smaller vehicle, but the damage photos do not tell the whole story. We use medical records, treating doctors’ opinions, life-care planning, and wage evidence to connect the wreck to long-term losses. The defense may argue that treatment is too expensive, injuries came from a prior condition, or the crash did not cause every problem. That is why early records must be accurate and detailed.
Truck companies often control the evidence that may explain how the accident happened. This can include:
Federal Hours of Service rules limit how long many commercial drivers can drive and stay on duty, including an 11-hour driving limit after 10 consecutive hours off duty for property-carrying drivers.
After a catastrophic truck collision, our Nashville legal team can send preservation letters before records are lost or overwritten. RoadProof can also help when a crash happens near TDOT cameras on highways or other high-traffic roads. That footage can be especially useful when the trucking company says the injured person cut off the truck, stopped suddenly, or caused the crash. These videos can show lane position, timing, braking, traffic flow, and how the collision unfolded.
Catastrophic truck cases require attention to the injured person’s future. A settlement demand should not rely only on current bills. It should also address follow-up care, therapy, medication, medical equipment, household support, and the injury’s impact on work and family responsibilities over time.
A catastrophic truck wreck changes how a person lives, works, travels, and receives care. The insurance company may know that, but it may still pressure you for a statement or settlement before your medical future is fully known. Ponce Law can investigate the crash, seek RoadProof footage when available, review trucking records, and pursue damages supported by the evidence.
Talk with a Nashville catastrophic truck accident lawyer at Ponce Law today. Our firm offers a No Fee Guarantee®, which means you do not pay attorney fees unless we recover money for you.