This page provides general legal information about freight accidents in San Francisco, California. It does not provide legal advice. Consult a licensed California attorney before making any legal decisions.
Courts & Filing in San Francisco
Freight accident civil lawsuits from San Francisco are filed in San Francisco County Superior Court at San Francisco Superior Court. Government entity claims require a six-month administrative claim before any lawsuit. FMCSA-regulated carrier cases typically run two to four years from filing to resolution due to multi-defendant complexity.
Unlimited civil freight accident cases (over $35,000 — which includes virtually all serious truck accident cases) are filed in the civil department of San Francisco County Superior Court. Cases involving multiple defendants — the carrier, shipper, truck owner, and maintenance company — may be designated complex under California Rules of Court Rule 3.400, which provides for a dedicated complex civil department and streamlined pretrial procedures.
Primary civil courthouse for freight accident lawsuits from San Francisco and San Francisco County. Government entity claims (Caltrans, port authorities) require a six-month administrative claim under Government Code Section 945.4 before the lawsuit can be filed in any court. USDOT and FMCSA records are federal sources that supplement California court filings.
California and FMCSA Law — San Francisco Cases
All freight accident claims from San Francisco involving interstate commerce are governed by: FMCSA federal regulations creating specific duties and negligence per se theories; California tort law governing damages, comparative fault (Li v. Yellow Cab Co.), and multi-defendant liability (Proposition 51); California's two-year statute of limitations (CCP Section 335.1); and the Government Claims Act (Government Code Section 945.4) for any government entity defendants.
Freight Activity in San Francisco
San Francisco has port of san francisco cargo operations; bay bridge and us-101 freight access corridors; dense urban delivery environment with limited truck routing options; i-80 eastbound freight gateway. The freight-specific accident exposure in San Francisco reflects this concentration of commercial vehicle activity. CHP and FMCSA roadside inspection data for the San Francisco area establishes the local enforcement environment and the frequency of FMCSA violations by carriers operating in this corridor.
Insurance Landscape — San Francisco Freight Accidents
FMCSA-regulated carriers operating in San Francisco must maintain minimum insurance of $750,000 to $5,000,000 depending on cargo type under 49 CFR Section 387.9. Large national carriers operating in the San Francisco area typically carry substantially higher policy limits plus umbrella coverage. The full insurance stack — primary, umbrella, truck owner, and shipper policies — must be identified through discovery in any serious freight accident case from San Francisco.
What Type of Freight Accident?
Select your freight accident type for San Francisco-specific legal information including courts, FMCSA regulations, and California law.
Frequently Asked Questions — San Francisco
Where do I file a freight accident lawsuit in San Francisco?
Freight accident civil lawsuits from San Francisco are filed in San Francisco County Superior Court at San Francisco Superior Court, 400 McAllister St, San Francisco, CA 94102. Claims against the City of San Francisco, San Francisco County, the Port of Los Angeles, or other government entities require a written administrative claim within six months under Government Code Section 945.4 before any lawsuit.
How long do I have to file a freight accident claim in San Francisco?
Two years from the date of the accident under CCP Section 335.1 for claims against private carriers. Six months for government entity claims under Government Code Section 945.4. ELD records and EDR data subject to carrier deletion policies must be preserved through immediate written demand well before the statute expires.
What makes San Francisco a high-freight-accident area?
San Francisco has port of san francisco cargo operations; bay bridge and us-101 freight access corridors; dense urban delivery environment with limited truck routing options; i-80 eastbound freight gateway. This combination of commercial vehicle types and traffic volume generates elevated freight accident exposure compared to non-freight-corridor areas.
Does FMCSA apply to freight accidents in San Francisco?
Yes. All commercial motor vehicles operating in interstate commerce through San Francisco are subject to FMCSA 49 CFR regulations including hours-of-service limits (Part 395), ELD requirements, brake standards (Part 393), and minimum insurance of $750,000 for general freight (Part 387). FMCSA violations are evidence of negligence per se in San Francisco County Superior Court civil litigation.
Can I sue Caltrans after a freight accident in San Francisco?
Potentially. If a road defect, inadequate signage, or dangerous highway design maintained by Caltrans contributed to the freight accident in San Francisco, a Government Claims Act claim must be filed with Caltrans within six months of the accident under Government Code Section 945.4. The dangerous condition of public property theory under Government Code Section 835 governs the substantive liability analysis.
What evidence should I preserve after a freight accident in San Francisco?
Preserve immediately: photographs of the scene, all vehicles, skid marks, and road conditions; the truck's license plate and USDOT number; witness names and contact information. Then, through an attorney: send a written ELD and EDR preservation demand to the carrier; request the police report; pull the carrier's FMCSA SAFER database record; and obtain the truck's FMCSA inspection history.
Nearby Cities
Find a Licensed Freight Accident Attorney in San Francisco
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