Were you injured in a cargo truck accident in Minnesota?
At Johnston | Martineau PLLP, we pursue full recovery for people injured by cargo trucks across Minnesota, and we do so on a contingency basis.
If a cargo truck has injured you in Minnesota, the question of who is responsible is rarely limited to the driver alone. The company that loaded the freight, the carrier, and the business that shipped the goods may each share fault. Our Minnesota cargo truck accident lawyer investigates how the load was handled, identifies every liable party, and pursues the compensation your injuries warrant. At Johnston | Martineau PLLP, we represent injured people across the state on a contingency basis, and we welcome the opportunity to review your case.
Cargo Truck Accident Lawyer Minnesota
A cargo truck accident is a crash involving a truck that hauls freight, whether a box truck, a straight truck, or a trailer loaded with goods. When freight is loaded carelessly or left unsecured, it can shift, fall, or throw the truck off balance. The result is a collision that a properly loaded truck might have avoided.
Responsibility in these cases often extends past the person behind the wheel. Our Minnesota cargo truck accident attorneys examine how the freight was loaded and secured, who was responsible for that work, and whether the carrier followed the rules that apply to hauling goods.
Types of Cargo Truck Accidents We Handle in Minnesota
Freight moves through Minnesota around the clock, and the way it is loaded has as much to do with safety as the way it is driven. When something goes wrong with the load, the cause points toward who is responsible. Below are the cargo truck crash scenarios our Minnesota truck accident lawyers handle most often.
- Unsecured and shifting cargo. Freight that is not properly restrained can slide or spill during a turn or a sudden stop. We examine the loading records and the securement the driver was required to use.
- Falling cargo and road debris. Items that come loose can fall into traffic and strike other vehicles, sometimes well after the truck has passed. We trace the load back to whoever secured it.
- Overloaded or unbalanced trucks. Too much weight, or weight placed poorly, lengthens stopping distance and makes the truck harder to control. We review weigh tickets and loading practices.
- Rollovers. A high or uneven load raises the risk of a tip on ramps and curves. We study speed, route, and how the freight was distributed.
- Rear-end crashes. A heavily loaded truck needs a long distance to stop, and a driver who follows too closely can strike the vehicle ahead with great force.
- Loading and unloading incidents. People are hurt at docks and ramps when freight is handled carelessly, before the truck ever returns to the road.
Why Choose Johnston | Martineau PLLP as my Cargo Truck Accident Lawyer in Minnesota?
The lawyer you retain will influence how your case unfolds. What follows explains why injured people trust our firm with cargo truck claims.
Focused on Commercial Truck Litigation
Freight cases often involve more than one company, and our truck accident lawyer in Minnesota is prepared to pursue each party that shares the blame. Christopher P. Martineau concentrates on truck collisions, wrongful death, and serious motor vehicle crashes, and his membership in the Academy of Truck Accident Attorneys reflects a practice devoted to trucking litigation. That focus matters when a cargo claim reaches the carrier, the shipper, and the company that loaded the freight.
Recognized Results for Injured Clients
Christopher A. Johnston has built his career on commercial truck litigation and is admitted in Minnesota, Iowa, the Eighth Circuit, and the federal district court. He has been named a Super Lawyer five times and belongs to the Million Dollar Advocates Forum, a distinction reserved for trial lawyers with verdicts or settlements of at least one million dollars. Across the firm's work for injured people, our clients have recovered millions of dollars. We handle cargo truck cases on a contingency basis, so no fee is owed unless we recover for you.
What Is Important to Understand About a Cargo Truck Accident Case?
Cargo claims often involve several companies and a paper trail that reaches from the shipper to the road. Minnesota's weight and load rules and the federal standards for securing freight both come into play, and federal regulators classify a large truck as any vehicle rated above 10,000 pounds. The sections below walk through the parts that matter most in these claims.
Damages, Liability, and Compensation for Cargo Truck Accident Cases
Liability is a matter of fault, and a cargo case can place it on the driver, the carrier, or the company that loaded the freight. How much you ultimately recover also depends on comparative fault, the rule that reduces an award by your own share of responsibility. The damages available under Minnesota law generally include:
- Medical care already provided, as well as the future treatment your recovery will require
- The wages you have lost, along with any lasting reduction in your capacity to earn a living
- Compensation for physical pain and the emotional hardship that follows a serious injury
- The continuing costs of a permanent or disabling condition
- Repair or replacement of your vehicle and other property
- The losses borne by a family when a crash results in death
What Are Important Aspects of a Cargo Truck Accident Case?
Cargo claims are strongest when the evidence is gathered early. Several points deserve particular attention.
- Preserving the loading records, weigh tickets, and bills of lading that show how the freight was handled
- Determining who can be sued when a shipper, a loader, and a carrier all had a role
- Applying the Minnesota truck accident laws that govern commercial freight
- Documenting the full extent of your injuries from the outset
What Is the Cargo Truck Accident Case Timeline?
No two claims move at the same speed, but most follow a recognizable order. Here is the general path.
- Our first step is a careful assessment of the crash, the injuries you sustained, and everyone who may share responsibility for them.
- We then move to preserve the truck, the freight records, and any data that could otherwise be altered or lost over time.
- As your treatment proceeds, we wait for your condition to stabilize so that the claim reflects the true and full extent of your injuries.
- With the evidence assembled, we prepare and present the insurer a documented demand for the compensation you are owed.
- Should the insurer decline to negotiate in good faith, we are prepared to file a lawsuit and continue building the case.
- When no fair offer follows, we are ready to bring your case before a jury.
What Should You Bring to Your Cargo Truck Accident Consultation?
The more you can bring, the sooner we can assess your claim. If you have them, please gather:
- Photographs of the scene, the truck and its load, the vehicle damage, and your injuries
- The names and contact information for anyone who witnessed the collision or its immediate aftermath
- Any report prepared at the scene, along with the name of the agency that investigated the crash
- Your medical records and bills, together with documentation of the income and work you have lost
You do not need everything to meet with us. During the consultation, we will review what happened, answer your questions, and explain the next steps in plain language.
What Are Important Minnesota Legal Resources for Cargo Truck Accident Cases?
Minnesota publishes the statutes and crash data behind these claims, and you can review the primary sources yourself. The resources below cover the filing deadline, the fault rule, and where to find statewide crash data.
- The general six-year deadline for injury claims is set in Minn. Stat. § 541.05; wrongful death claims follow a separate three-year deadline.
- Minnesota's modified comparative fault rule appears in Minn. Stat. § 604.01, which bars recovery when your fault is greater than the party you are suing and reduces damages by your share.
- The Minnesota DPS crash facts reports summarize statewide crash data each year.
- The MnDOT crash data pages provide additional statewide crash resources.
Reach Out to Johnston | Martineau PLLP to Schedule a Consultation
A cargo truck crash can leave you with injuries that reshape daily life, and you should not sort out the legal side alone. Johnston | Martineau PLLP handles these claims on a contingency basis, so there are no attorney fees unless we recover for you. When you reach out, we will review your case and explain your options without pressure. Contact us to learn how our Minnesota cargo truck accident lawyer can help with your case.