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Quincy Truck Accidents Information
Truck Accidents representation for residents of Quincy, Norfolk County, Massachusetts. The first telephone consultation is offered without charge.
The Quincy answer in plain language
A Quincy, Massachusetts truck collision is governed by the same no-fault and tort-threshold rules as any auto case under M.G.L. c. 90 sec. 34M and c. 231 sec. 6D, but commercial trucks add a layer of federal regulation. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations at 49 C.F.R. Parts 390 to 397 set hours-of-service limits, inspection duties, and driver-qualification standards, and a violation can establish negligence. Liability often extends beyond the driver to the motor carrier, the broker, and the trailer or cargo owner. The truck's electronic logging device and engine data must be preserved before they are overwritten, which is why early counsel matters. The three-year limitations period under M.G.L. c. 260 sec. 2A applies. Jim Glaser Law evaluates Quincy, Massachusetts truck cases at no cost. Truck matters are accepted on contingency, meaning no attorney's fee unless and until the matter resolves with a recovery to the client; case-related costs and expenses are addressed in the written fee agreement.
Commercial truck collisions in Massachusetts involve federal motor-carrier safety rules, multiple potentially liable parties, and electronic data that must be preserved early. Jim Glaser Law represents injured Massachusetts residents in truck cases and never represents motor carriers or their insurers. Quincy matters are handled under the same Massachusetts framework that applies statewide.
Engaging the firm from Quincy
The shortest path between a Quincy reader and a Jim Glaser Law attorney is the telephone number printed on this page. The intake desk routes the call, the substantive attorney call follows at no charge, and the written fee agreement (if the matter is accepted) governs everything that follows. Nothing in the agreement obligates the client to advance attorney fees on a contingency case before there is a recovery; the agreement also spells out which case-related costs the firm fronts and which it bills back at conclusion.
Quincy sits in Norfolk County, Massachusetts, with a population of approximately 101,636 per the most recent Census estimate. Norfolk County matters of this category are heard and administered through the appropriate Norfolk County forums and are evaluated under the same Massachusetts framework that applies to every truck accidents matter in the Commonwealth.
Quincy hugs Boston's southern shore and is served by the MBTA Red Line at North Quincy, Wollaston, and Quincy Center stations. The city's commercial spine stretches along Hancock Street through Quincy Center and toward Quincy Point and Houghs Neck. Civil matters originate at the Quincy District Court on Dennis Ryan Parkway and at the Norfolk County Superior Court in Dedham for amounts above the District threshold. South Shore Hospital in Weymouth and Carney Hospital handle the bulk of the medical records that surface in Quincy injury cases. Marina Bay, Squantum, and Adams Shore are the residential neighborhoods most often named in slip-and-fall and premises matters. The Wollaston Beach reservation draws heavy summer foot traffic. Quincy was incorporated as a town in 1792 and as a city in 1888. The city covers roughly 16 square miles along Boston's southern shoreline. Quincy ZIP codes span 02169 through 02171, with Quincy Center at 02169 and North Quincy at 02171.
Questions Quincy readers ask most
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Where are Quincy truck accidents cases heard?
Quincy truck accidents matters are handled through the appropriate Massachusetts forum for the case type. Telephone (617) JIM-WINS for guidance specific to your matter.
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What is the filing deadline for truck accidents matters originating in Quincy?
The deadline is set by Massachusetts law (not by city), generally three years from the date of the incident under M.G.L. c. 260, sec. 2A for civil tort claims. Some matters carry shorter deadlines (workers comp notice, claims against a public entity). Telephone (617) JIM-WINS for the deadline that applies to your facts.
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Will my Quincy matter go to court?
Most matters do not. The majority resolve through pre-suit negotiation with the carrier or counterparty. Litigation is reserved for cases where a fair pre-suit resolution is not available. The decision to file suit is made jointly by the firm and the client.
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What is the fastest way to get my Quincy truck accidents question answered?
Two options. Call (617) JIM-WINS for a free first telephone consultation, available 24 hours a day. Or use the Ask the AI feature on this site for a Massachusetts-specific information answer in seconds, with the option to escalate to a real consultation when ready.
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Do I need to come to a Boston office to be represented by Jim Glaser Law?
No. Jim Glaser Law represents clients across Massachusetts, including Quincy, by telephone, video, and in-person where helpful. The first conversation is by telephone.
How truck accidents cases proceed under Massachusetts law
A commercial truck collision in Quincy starts inside the same Massachusetts no-fault structure as any auto case, but it rarely ends there. The first stage is the injured person's own Personal Injury Protection (PIP) coverage under M.G.L. c. 90 sec. 34M, which pays the first $8,000 of medical bills and lost wages regardless of fault. The second stage is the third-party liability claim, which must clear the tort threshold under M.G.L. c. 231 sec. 6D. With a heavy truck, the mechanism of injury is severe enough that the threshold (medical bills over $2,000, or a fracture, permanent injury, disfigurement, or substantial sensory loss) is usually met without difficulty. What changes the case is who can be held responsible and what evidence exists to prove it.
Liability in a Quincy, Norfolk County truck case extends well beyond the driver. The motor carrier that employs or contracts the driver, the broker that arranged the load, the cargo owner that loaded or sealed the trailer, and the maintenance vendor that serviced the brakes can each bear responsibility depending on the facts. Commercial carriers operate under the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations at 49 C.F.R. Parts 390 to 397, which govern driver qualification, hours of service, vehicle inspection, and cargo securement. The electronic logging device mandate at 49 C.F.R. Part 395 requires most interstate trucks to record driving hours electronically, and a violation of the hours-of-service limits is a common thread in fatigue-related collisions.
The defining urgency in a truck case is evidence preservation. The electronic logging device data and the engine control module (the truck's black box, which captures speed, braking, and throttle input in the seconds before impact) can be overwritten or lost if the carrier is not put on notice quickly. A spoliation letter that demands preservation of the device data, the driver qualification file, the maintenance and inspection records, the dispatch and routing logs, and any onboard camera footage is one of the first steps in a Quincy matter. The standard three-year limitations period under M.G.L. c. 260 sec. 2A still governs the lawsuit, but the practical clock on the electronic evidence runs in days and weeks, not years, which is why early counsel matters more here than in an ordinary car case.
Massachusetts statutes and case law
- M.G.L. c. 90 sec. 34M. Personal Injury Protection (PIP); first-party medical and wage benefits regardless of fault, applies to the occupants of the vehicle struck by the truck.
- M.G.L. c. 231 sec. 6D. Tort threshold for pain and suffering; readily met in truck cases given the severity of injury, fracture, or permanent harm.
- M.G.L. c. 260 sec. 2A. Three-year statute of limitations for the tort claim, though electronic evidence must be preserved within days or weeks.
- M.G.L. c. 231 sec. 85. Modified comparative negligence; recovery reduced by the claimant's share of fault and barred above 50%.
- M.G.L. c. 175 sec. 113L. Mandatory uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage; a recovery route where an at-fault carrier or driver lacks adequate limits.
- 49 C.F.R. Parts 390 to 397. Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations governing driver qualification, hours of service, vehicle inspection and maintenance, and cargo securement.
- 49 C.F.R. Part 395. Hours-of-service rules and the electronic logging device mandate; a violation is a frequent factor in fatigue-related truck collisions.
Common truck accidents case patterns in Quincy
- Rear-end or jackknife collision on a Quincy highway where the truck could not stop in time: the engine control module data on speed and braking becomes central.
- Underride collision where a passenger vehicle slides beneath the trailer: catastrophic injury cases that turn on guard equipment and conspicuity.
- Blind-spot lane-change in Norfolk County where the truck merged into an occupied lane: mirror, camera, and driver-training records drive liability.
- Fatigued-driver collision tied to an hours-of-service violation under 49 C.F.R. Part 395: the electronic logging device records expose driving beyond the legal limit.
- Improperly secured or overloaded cargo that shifted or fell: liability can reach the cargo owner and the loading party, not only the driver.
- Brake or maintenance failure: the carrier's inspection and maintenance records under the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations become the focus.
Typical timeline for a Quincy truck accidents matter
The first days after a Quincy truck collision are about preservation, not negotiation. PIP is opened on the injured person's own policy, medical treatment begins, and a preservation demand goes to the carrier for the electronic logging device data, the engine control module download, the driver qualification file, and the maintenance records. Because this electronic evidence can be overwritten on a routine cycle, the early notice is what protects the case.
Months three through twelve are the investigation and demand phase. The carrier's records are reviewed against the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations, the driver's hours are reconstructed, and the chain of responsible parties (driver, motor carrier, broker, cargo owner, maintenance vendor) is identified. Once treatment plateaus, a demand sets out the medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and any permanency, often against more than one insurance policy because commercial carriers and brokers carry separate coverage.
If pre-suit resolution is not reached, suit must be filed within three years under M.G.L. c. 260 sec. 2A and proceeds in Norfolk County Superior Court for matters over $50,000. Truck cases involve more discovery than ordinary auto cases (corporate depositions, expert reconstruction, regulatory analysis), so the litigation window typically runs longer, though most filed cases still resolve before trial.
What can be recovered in a truck accidents case
- Past medical expenses (the bills paid by PIP, health insurance, and out of pocket).
- Future medical expenses (anticipated surgery, therapy, and ongoing care for serious truck-collision injuries).
- Past lost wages and future lost earning capacity where the injury limits the ability to work.
- Pain and suffering, including the effects of permanent injury or disfigurement, where the tort threshold is met.
- Loss of consortium for a spouse affected by the injury.
- Recovery against multiple policies (driver, motor carrier, broker, cargo owner) where more than one party bears responsibility.
More questions Quincy residents ask about truck accidents
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Who can be held responsible for my Quincy truck accident besides the driver?
Responsibility in a commercial truck case often extends beyond the driver to the motor carrier that employed or contracted the driver, the broker that arranged the load, the cargo owner that loaded or sealed the trailer, and the maintenance vendor that serviced the truck. Commercial carriers operate under the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations at 49 C.F.R. Parts 390 to 397, and a violation of those rules can establish negligence. The first telephone consultation with Jim Glaser Law identifies every party who may bear responsibility for your Norfolk County collision.
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Why does evidence have to be preserved so quickly after a Quincy truck crash?
Commercial trucks carry an electronic logging device that records driving hours and an engine control module (a black box) that captures speed, braking, and throttle input before impact. This data can be overwritten on a routine cycle if the carrier is not put on notice. A preservation demand sent early protects the electronic logging device data, the engine control module download, the driver qualification file, and the maintenance records before they are lost. That is why early counsel matters more in a truck case than in an ordinary car case.
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What are the federal trucking rules and how do they affect my Quincy case?
Interstate commercial trucks operate under the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations at 49 C.F.R. Parts 390 to 397, which govern driver qualification, hours of service, vehicle inspection and maintenance, and cargo securement. The electronic logging device mandate at 49 C.F.R. Part 395 limits how many hours a driver may operate. A violation of these rules, such as driving beyond the legal hours, can help establish that the carrier or driver was negligent in your Quincy collision.
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How long do I have to file a Quincy truck accident claim?
The lawsuit generally must be filed within three years of the collision under M.G.L. c. 260 sec. 2A. The practical deadline for preserving electronic evidence, however, runs in days and weeks, not years, because the electronic logging device and engine control module data can be overwritten. The sooner the carrier is put on notice, the more of the case-critical record is preserved for your Norfolk County matter.
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Does Jim Glaser Law handle Quincy truck accident cases on contingency?
Truck cases accepted by the firm are handled on contingency, which means no attorney's fee unless and until the matter resolves with a recovery to the client; case-related costs and expenses are addressed in the written fee agreement. Truck cases often involve expert reconstruction, corporate depositions, and regulatory analysis, and the firm typically advances those costs and is reimbursed from any recovery. The first telephone consultation is offered without charge.
This sub-entry constitutes legal information, not legal advice. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Attorney advertising under Mass. R. Prof. C. 7.1 to 7.5. Responsible attorney: Jim Glaser, Massachusetts.