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How Much Insurance Do Trucking Companies Have?

 

This page will look at the minimum insurance requirements for big rig trucks. Under federal law, all commercial trucks with a gross weight over 10,000 pounds must carry minimum liability insurance. The minimum amount of required insurance varies depending on the cargo:

CARGO MINIMUM INSURANCE
Normal $750,000
Hazardous $1,000,000
Tank Over 3500 Gal. $5,000,000

Truck Driver Insurance: MCS-90

Before 1980, if you can believe it, the required insurance limits were $100,000 per accident, $300,000 per occurrence, and $50,000 for property damage. To better protect motorists, the federal government now requires that any carriers (generally tractor-trailer shipping companies) involved in interstate commerce and registered with the Department of Transportation must have some insurance. Specifically, the government requires an MCS-90 (Motor Carrier Safety-90) endorsement to pay out in case of injury or death caused by a carrier’s shipping activities. Because the MCS-90 is mandated by federal law, it exists in every carrier’s insurance policy regardless of whether it’s in the written terms or not. If you are injuring a truck that MCS-90 should cover, you have a policy that conforms even if the policy’s language contains different laws. Maryland does many of the same things, rewriting insurance policies with mandatory statutory language and coverage.

MCS-90 requires the insurance company to attempt to cover the victim’s damages anyway, usually up to a minimum of $750,000. This guarantees that victims of at-fault negligent carriers will be able to recover some of their damages. It is a safety net – just a small one in some cases – designed to protect innocent victims from nonresponsive carrier insurers. There are three ways — bond, insurance, or self-insurance — trucking companies can use to meet the financial responsibility requirements.

The MCS-90 often provides broader exposure than the underlying insurance policies. For example, some truck insurance policies exclude using non-specified vehicles or leased or non-owned vehicles, environmental restoration, and accidents caused by excluded drivers. These are frequently occurring fact patterns our lawyers see in truck accident injury and death cases. Despite the language of the policy, the MCS-90 trumps, and the insurer must respond to these situations as if the policy covered them. (Similarly, Maryland’s legislative scheme for uninsured motorist claims often supersedes the policy language between the insurer and the insured.)

Judges are split on the issue of whether the MCS-90 endorsement extends to accidents happening within a single state. Nonetheless, most courts, particularly the federal circuit courts that have examined this matter, have concluded that the MCS-90 endorsement does not apply to incidents arising from entirely intrastate journeys.

According to this viewpoint, known as the trip-specific approach, the MCS-90 endorsement provides vehicle coverage solely when actively transporting property across state lines.

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Exceptions to Truck Insurance Requirements

However, there are several restrictions on the MCS-90. For example, the truck involved in the accident must be working for a “for hire” motor carrier. “For hire” means that another is paying the drivers to transport goods, and this evaluation is made on a truck-by-truck basis. Sometimes, courts must examine the very nature of a business to see if it’s “for hire.” Additionally, the truck had to have been acting in interstate commerce. What exactly interstate commerce is can be a murky and convoluted issue, but it is again controlled by federal law. And finally, often suing the driver is not enough. Some MCS-90 provisions will only pay out if the award is against the carrier instead of the driver.

Accidents involving commercial trucking vehicles can be very costly. For instance, a jury in Maryland awarded a nearly $8 million verdict for a catastrophic tractor-truck crash that severely injured a fellow driver. While $750,000 is a nice guarantee for American drivers in most cases, it does not protect against anything resembling the full risks involved in truck accident cases.

Of course, you must remember that many trucking companies have a lot of assets. If you are in a crash with a big company like FedEx, Roadway Express, YRC Freight, Schneider National, JB Hunt Transport, UPS, or another company with a considerable fleet and billions in assets, the point of how much coverage the trucking company has is academic. But there are too many fly-by-night companies. It is also essential to look for other possible defendants, like the broker or the shipper, if you are running up against coverage issues. Our firm has much experience getting to the broker and the shipper in truck accident cases.

Remember, there is another path to finding insurance coverage beyond the insurance policy’s limits. The broker and shipper may also have liability in a truck accident case. This can quickly turn a $1 million case into a $5 million case.

Hiring a Truck Accident Lawyer for Your Case

Sometimes, the most challenging issue in a truck accident case is sorting out the insurance issues. We can sort them out. One of our lawyers is an insurance law professor, and our firm has a tight handle on these issues. Whether you are a victim or a referring lawyer, if you need help with your case, call 800-553-8082 or get a free online consultation.

Finding Coverage in Truck Accident Cases

Handling Truck Accident Cases: What Lawyers Need to Know

What Are the Minimum Insurance Requirements for Big Trucks?

Under federal law, large commercial trucks (big rigs) must carry certain minimum levels of liability insurance. The current minimum insurance requirements for big trucks are as follows:

WEIGHT / CARGO MINIMUM INSURANCE
Over 10,000 lbs. / Non-Hazardous Cargo $750,000
Over 10,000 lbs. / Hazardous Cargo $1,000,000
Portable Tanks in Excess of 3,500 Gallons $5,000,000

What is the Average Compensation Payout in a Big Truck Accident Case?

An average settlement amount in a severe truck accident claim (involving significant injuries) is around $70,000 to $105,000. The average jury verdict against big commercial trucking companies is $510,000. The potential value of an individual case will depend heavily on the severity of the plaintiff’s physical injuries.

Has there been any effort to increase commercial truck insurance requirements?

The $750,000 insurance requirement was instituted in 1980. The amount in 1980 would be worth approximately $5 million today. So Congressman Chuy Garcia proposed such an increase. But the bill has yet to make its way to the House floor.

Don’t Most Trucking Companies Have Enough Assets to Pay Any Settlement or Verdict, Anyway?

The insurance amounts are unimportant when dealing with a large trucking company. But many small trucking companies have no tangible assets. These companies are often already in bankruptcy before a lawsuit is even filed. In these cases, the victim is sometimes left with only the minimum insurance coverage if the search for additional insurance fails (such as broker and shipper liability).

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