Truck Accident Attorney · San Juan, TX
San Juan Truck Accident Lawyer
A dedicated San Juan office, right on the I-2/US-83 truck corridor.
Hidalgo County
Our San Juan office at 101 S. Nebraska Ave, Ste 5, sits beside the I-2/US-83 expressway — one of the heaviest commercial truck routes in Hidalgo County, funneling freight between the Pharr-Reynosa bridge and points east. When an 18-wheeler crash happens on Business 83, the expressway, or along Nebraska Avenue, The Relentless Lawyer is right in your community and ready to investigate the company at fault.
Chris Sanchez and his bilingual team take on the motor carrier, not just the driver — sending spoliation letters to lock down the black-box data and logs, auditing the company's FMCSA record, and tracing liability up the chain to brokers and shippers. Your case review is free, and you owe nothing unless we win.
Where truck crashes happen in San Juan
We handle commercial truck cases from across San Juan, including crashes along these freight routes:
- Business 83
- I-2 / US-83 Expressway
- Nebraska Avenue
- Raul Longoria Rd
- Basilica of Our Lady of San Juan
Commercial truck accident FAQs
Why is a commercial truck accident case different from a car accident?
Trucking companies are governed by federal safety rules (the FMCSA regulations) that ordinary drivers are not, and the evidence is different: electronic logging device (ELD) black-box data, driver hours-of-service logs, dispatch records, and maintenance files. There are also usually multiple liable parties and much larger insurance policies. Proving a trucking case means investigating the carrier itself — not just the driver — which takes a lawyer who handles these cases specifically.
What is a spoliation letter and why does it matter after a truck crash?
A spoliation letter is a formal legal demand that orders the trucking company to preserve evidence — the ELD/black-box data, the driver's logs, the dashcam footage, the maintenance records — instead of letting it be deleted or written over. Black-box data can be overwritten in a matter of days. Sending these letters immediately is one of the most important early steps in a trucking case, and it's why you should call a lawyer right away rather than wait.
Who can be held liable in a commercial trucking accident?
Often more than one party. Liability can fall on the truck driver, the motor carrier that employed or contracted the driver, the freight broker that hired the carrier, the shipper that loaded the cargo, the company responsible for maintenance, and sometimes the manufacturer of a defective part. Each one may carry its own insurance. We investigate the entire chain so your recovery isn't limited to a single driver's policy.
What is the hours-of-service rule and how does it prove fault?
Federal hours-of-service rules limit how long a commercial driver can be behind the wheel before mandatory rest — generally no more than 11 driving hours after 10 consecutive hours off. The electronic logging device records this automatically. When the ELD data shows a driver exceeded those limits or the carrier falsified the logs, it's powerful, documented evidence of a federal safety violation that helps establish the trucking company's negligence.
Hit by a commercial truck in San Juan? Talk to us today.
Free, no-obligation case review. The sooner we start, the more of the carrier's evidence we can preserve.