Truck Accidents matters in Visalia
Freight Traffic Through Visalia
Visalia sits in the heart of one of California's busiest freight regions. Highway 99 runs just west of the city and carries an enormous volume of tractor-trailers moving goods and agricultural products up and down the Central Valley. Highway 198 connects that corridor to Visalia and the foothills, drawing trucks through the city. The region's farms, packing houses, and distribution centers also put heavy agricultural trucks, tankers, and equipment on rural roads like Avenue 256 and the county routes around town.
When a fully loaded truck collides with a passenger vehicle, the enormous weight difference means the people in the smaller vehicle suffer the worst injuries, including spinal damage, traumatic brain injuries, and death. A serious truck case demands a fast, thorough investigation.
Why Truck Cases Demand Early Action
Truck crashes are governed by federal motor carrier safety rules on top of California law. Drivers must follow hours-of-service limits, carriers must maintain their fleets, and electronic logging devices, driver qualification files, and onboard data can show whether a rule was broken. This evidence can be erased or lost within weeks, so sending a preservation letter early is essential. Attorney Ghazaryan acts quickly to secure the logs, maintenance records, and telematics data.
Responsibility often extends beyond the driver to the trucking company, a cargo loader, a maintenance contractor, or a parts manufacturer, and identifying every party matters because a single driver's insurance may not cover catastrophic harm. Cases from Visalia crashes are generally filed in the Tulare County Superior Court, and a public-road defect triggers a short government claim deadline. The firm handles the investigation and the insurers so your family can focus on recovery.
What a Serious Truck Claim Can Recover
Because truck crashes on the Highway 99 and 198 corridors so often cause life-altering injuries, the stakes in these cases are high, and so is the available insurance. Federal law requires interstate motor carriers to carry substantial liability coverage, far more than the typical driver, so a properly built case can reach the resources needed for catastrophic harm. Victims treated at Kaweah Health Medical Center in Visalia may face surgeries, long rehabilitation, and a permanent change in their ability to earn a living.
A full claim can include past and future medical expenses, lost income and diminished earning capacity, the cost of long-term care or home modifications, and pain and suffering, with punitive damages possible where a carrier knowingly ignored safety rules. Attorney Ghazaryan brings in reconstruction and medical experts where the case warrants and handles the aggressive defense lawyers trucking insurers hire, so your family is not left negotiating alone against a company built to minimize what it pays.
Our attorney
How Mihran M. Ghazaryan helps with truck accidents
Truck cases are won or lost in the first days, so Mihran M. Ghazaryan moves immediately to preserve the evidence — the electronic logging device, the driver's hours-of-service records, and the truck's onboard data — before it can be overwritten. He identifies every responsible party (driver, carrier, broker, and their separate insurers) and applies the federal motor-carrier rules that govern these cases, building the claim for the larger exposure a commercial policy carries.
Types of truck accidents we handle
Tractor-trailer and 18-wheeler crashes
Often involve fatigue, improper loading, or maintenance failures. We send a preservation letter immediately and pursue ELD and ECM data.
Delivery-truck and box-truck collisions
Last-mile delivery has driven a surge in inexperienced drivers under tight schedules. Liability often runs to the carrier, not just the driver.
Underride and override collisions
Catastrophic injury cases. Vehicle conspicuity, guard equipment, and applicable FMCSA standards all matter.
Damages
What compensation can cover
Every truck accident claim is different, but California law allows injured plaintiffs to seek several categories of damages. We build each one with documentation — medical records, wage statements, expert opinions — so nothing is left on the table.
Medical expenses
Emergency care, hospitalization, surgery, rehabilitation, and the future treatment your providers say you'll need.
Lost wages
Income you lost while recovering — and, where the injury affects your ability to work, diminished future earning capacity.
Pain and suffering
Compensation for physical pain, emotional distress, and the ways the injury has changed how you live day to day.
Property damage
Repair or replacement of your vehicle and other property damaged in the incident.
Out-of-pocket costs
Transportation to appointments, medical equipment, household help, and the other expenses an injury forces on you.
How we work
- 1
Free, no-pressure consultation
We listen first. We answer your questions. There is no fee for the initial conversation — and you decide whether to engage us at the end of it.
- 2
Investigation and evidence preservation
Police reports, scene photos, witness statements, vehicle data, surveillance video, medical records. The earlier we collect, the harder it is for the other side to reshape the story later.
- 3
Treatment, demand, and negotiation
We coordinate with your providers, document the full extent of damages — medical, lost income, pain — and present a demand backed by evidence. We push back firmly when an insurer lowballs.
- 4
Litigation when necessary
Most matters settle. When an insurer refuses to be reasonable, we file. Preparing every case as if it will be tried is what makes the settlement number move.
What to do right away
- Call 911 and request medical evaluation on scene.
- Photograph the truck — license plate, USDOT number, MC number, trailer markings.
- Get the trucking company's name, not just the driver's.
- Save any clothing or vehicle parts as evidence.
- Contact us before speaking with the trucking company's insurer or a 'rapid response' team.
The information on this website is for general information purposes only. Nothing on this site should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. This information is not intended to create, and receipt or viewing does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship.
Deadlines that matter
Most California personal-injury claims must be filed within two years of the injury (Code of Civil Procedure §335.1). Miss the window and the court will almost always dismiss the case, no matter how strong it is.
Claims against government entities are much shorter — generally a written claim within six months (Government Code §911.2). Crashes involving city vehicles, public buses, or dangerous public-road conditions can fall under this rule.
Exceptions exist in both directions — discovery rules, minors, continuing violations, out-of-state defendants — so don't assume your deadline has passed or that you have time to spare. Call (818) 539-7969 and we'll tell you exactly where you stand.
