Truck driver fatigue is a well-documented, preventable cause of serious commercial vehicle crashes in New York. Federal regulations exist because the industry knows a fatigued driver behind the wheel of a fully loaded commercial truck creates a foreseeable risk of catastrophic harm. When those regulations are violated and someone is seriously hurt, evidence often appears in the driver’s logs and the company’s scheduling records long before the crash.
Truck driver fatigue accident claims in New York focus not only on what may have happened at the moment of impact but also on the driver’s hours in the days before and on what the company may have known.
How Fatigue Creates Danger
Driver fatigue impairs reaction time, judgment, and situational awareness in ways that parallel the effects of alcohol intoxication. A fatigued driver operating a vehicle that can weigh up to 80,000 pounds fully loaded cannot respond to changing traffic conditions with the speed and precision required for highway driving.
Fatigue follows predictable patterns, intensifying during overnight hours and early afternoon when alertness naturally drops. Extended highway driving worsens the effect. Warning signs include lane drifting, delayed reactions, and microsleep events lasting seconds, which precede serious crashes. In a commercial truck traveling at highway speed, those seconds determine whether the vehicle stops in time.
The Regulatory Framework
Federal law places specific and measurable limits on commercial driver hours precisely because the relationship between fatigue and crash risk is well established.
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration limits commercial drivers to 11 hours of driving after 10 consecutive hours off duty, requires a 30-minute break after 8 hours of driving, and sets weekly caps of 60 to 70 hours depending on the carrier’s schedule. If a driver exceeds those limits and a crash occurs, that violation establishes a direct basis for negligence liability. If a company’s scheduling, dispatch pressure, or compensation structure encourages drivers to violate hours-of-service rules, the company bears independent liability for creating the conditions that produced the fatigued driver.
Fatigue is rarely solely the driver’s failure. It is frequently the predictable outcome of a system that prioritizes delivery timelines over safety compliance.
Building the Case
Fatigue cases have a distinctive evidentiary profile that sets them apart from other truck accident claims. Electronic logging device data provides a precise record of driving time, rest periods, and discrepancies between logged hours and actual truck operation. GPS tracking documents route timing and speed. Dispatch records and internal communications reveal if scheduling pressure contributed to hours-of-service violations. Driver qualification files show whether prior violations were known to the company.
Most of this evidence is controlled by the trucking company and can be overwritten without a legal preservation demand. Trucking companies send investigators within hours of a serious crash to control the documentary record. Early legal involvement ensures the full picture of the driver’s hours and the company’s practices is preserved for the injured person’s case.
Every case at Subin Law is built for trial from the start. In fatigue cases where the evidence exists in systems controlled by the opposing party, that preparation begins immediately.
What These Cases Involve
Truck driver fatigue accidents cause traumatic brain injury, spinal cord damage, complex fractures, permanent disability, and fatalities. High-speed rear-end collisions and loss of control incidents, the most common crash types in fatigue cases, produce injuries of extreme severity.
Trucking companies contest fatigue claims aggressively, challenging whether the driver was fatigued, whether logs accurately reflected driving hours, and whether company practices contributed to the violation. Building a record that shows the driver’s condition before the crash and links the company’s practices to that condition requires thorough investigation and professional analysis.
Subin Law takes a limited number of serious cases so each receives focused attention and a strategy built around its specific facts. Consultations are free and confidential. No attorney fees are charged unless compensation is recovered.
Contact Subin Law to discuss your case.