A victim is hit by a van with a national logo on the side. The driver wore that company's uniform and followed that company's app. Yet weeks later, that same company insists it has nothing to do with the crash.
That contradiction sits at the center of the single most important — and most misunderstood — question in delivery truck accident law: who actually pays when a carrier's driver injures someone.
Key Takeaways
- Major carriers use contractor structures (Amazon DSP, FedEx Ground ISP) specifically to shield themselves from liability — but that shield breaks when the parent controls the driver's work.
- A single delivery crash can involve four, five, or six liable parties. Identifying everyone is what makes full recovery possible.
- Critical evidence — telematics, route data, contractor agreements — can be automatically deleted within 30 to 90 days. Speed matters.
- Texas generally allows two years from the crash date to file, but the evidence deadline is far shorter.
Why delivery cases are not ordinary car accident cases
A delivery truck accident is built on three things an ordinary fender-bender is not: corporate contractor structure, algorithm-driven route pressure, and federal regulatory gaps.
The contractor structure is the headline issue. Amazon's Delivery Service Partner program and FedEx Ground's independent service provider model exist primarily to put legal distance between the parent brand and the person driving the van. On paper, the driver works for a small contractor — one that rarely carries enough insurance to cover a catastrophic injury. A firm like The León Law Firm is built to pierce that structure rather than accept it.
Route pressure is the engine underneath it. Modern delivery routes are generated by software that calculates stops per hour and scores every driver. When the algorithm decides a route should take eight hours, the driver gets that route, whether or not eight hours is realistic. The result is speeding, distracted scanning, and fatigue baked directly into the workday.
Then there are the regulatory gaps. Federal hours-of-service rules that protect against long-haul trucker fatigue apply only to vehicles above a certain weight. Many delivery vans fall below that threshold, so the federal fatigue protections that cover an 18-wheeler driver do not cover the person driving through residential neighborhoods.
The crashes these conditions produce
Once the pressure built into the job becomes clear, the crash patterns stop looking like accidents and start looking like outcomes. Most delivery truck crashes trace back to one or more of the same recurring causes:
- Driver fatigue. Routes designed for software efficiency, not human limits. Many drivers work 10- to 12-hour shifts six days a week, with the worst pressure during the holiday season when volume spikes.
- Speeding and distracted driving to hit quotas. When a route requires 25 stops in an hour, there is no margin for caution. Drivers handle scanners, GPS apps, and signature pads while moving — their eyes leave the road dozens of times per stop.
- Backing-up accidents. Most vans have poor rear visibility, and backing in driveways and tight residential streets accounts for a large share of pedestrian and cyclist injuries.
- Undertrained drivers. Contractor models routinely put drivers on routes after a few days of training. Real commercial driving skill takes years.
- Vehicle defects and skipped maintenance. High-mileage fleets with deferred service are prone to brake failures, tire blowouts, and steering problems.
Because so many of these crashes involve pedestrians, cyclists, and unprotected residential road users, the injuries skew severe even at moderate speeds — traumatic brain injury, spinal cord damage, multiple fractures, internal injuries, and, in the worst cases, wrongful death.
The contractor defense, and how it actually breaks
When a carrier says "that's a contractor matter, not our concern," it is making a legal bet — that the victim will accept the label and walk away.
Texas law generally looks at the real relationship between the parties, not just the paperwork. If the parent carrier or contractor controlled the driver's route, schedule, vehicle, uniform, performance metrics, and pay — and most do — there is often a viable claim against multiple parties despite the contractor label.
That is exactly how a $7 million delivery driver crash settlement came together. Through aggressive discovery, the legal team obtained the contractor agreement, route assignments, onboarding records, GPS and telematics data, and internal communications about driver complaints. The evidence showed a company controlling every meaningful aspect of the driver's work while denying responsibility for that control.
Everyone who might owe a victim money
The number of defendants in a delivery case directly affects the amount of compensation available. A seasoned delivery truck accident lawyer pursues every viable defendant rather than settling with the first insurer that responds.
- The driver and the contractor — the legal employer of record, carrying the primary insurance policy.
- The parent carrier (Amazon, FedEx, UPS) — reachable through joint-employer status, agency relationships, or direct-negligence claims for inadequate training and oversight. This is where the biggest legal battles happen.
- The vehicle owner — sometimes the contractor, sometimes the parent, sometimes a leasing company, each with its own coverage.
- The property owner — if unsafe loading or hazardous conditions contributed.
- The vehicle or parts manufacturer — when a defective brake or steering component failed, rather than due to simple maintenance neglect.
Delivery liability is more complex than almost any other vehicle accident case, which is why it belongs within a firm's broader commercial vehicle and 18-wheeler practice rather than being treated as a routine car wreck.
What to do in the hours after a delivery crash
When physically able, an injured person can take these steps to protect both health and any future claim:
- Seek medical attention immediately, even when feeling fine — adrenaline masks serious injuries, and traumatic brain injury symptoms can take days to appear.
- Call 911 and confirm a police report is filed. Note the report number.
- Photograph everything and identify the carrier. Capture the logo, the uniform, and the plate — and note both the carrier brand and the smaller contractor name, which is often critical to the case.
- Decline to give a recorded statement to any insurer, no matter how friendly, and avoid posting about the crash on social media.
- Preserve evidence and act fast. Keep the wrecked vehicle and all medical records, then consult a lawyer before the company completes its own investigation.
How long a victim has
Under Texas law, an injured person generally has two years from the date of the crash to file a personal injury lawsuit, and two years from the date of death in a wrongful death case. Special rules may apply to minors and to claims against governmental entities.
Two years sounds long. It is not. The evidence that wins delivery cases — GPS and telematics data, route assignments, algorithmic scoring, internal communications — can begin disappearing within 30 to 90 days unless a legal hold is in place. The filing deadline is not the one that matters most.
How the carriers fight these claims
Knowing the tactics in advance takes away their power. In nearly every delivery case, the same playbook appears:
- The "contractor matter" brush-off from the parent carrier, paired with a fast, lowball offer from the contractor's insurer — timed to land before victims understand the long-term cost of their injuries.
- Recorded statements are engineered to lock in small inconsistencies for later use against the claimant.
- Aggressive comparative-fault allegations. Texas follows a modified comparative negligence rule: a person found 51% or more at fault generally recovers nothing, so insurers push hard to assign blame to the victim.
- Buried policy limits and driver-blaming. Insurers rarely disclose the full coverage structure, and the parent carrier may publicly criticize its own driver to protect the brand while quietly arguing the brand cannot be sued at all.
The counter is evidence gathered quickly: a scene investigation within 24 to 48 hours before skid marks fade and nearby surveillance footage is overwritten, doorbell-camera footage from neighboring homes, telematics, the algorithmic route the driver was assigned, and the contractor agreement that reveals how much control the parent actually held.
The bottom line
A national carrier's legal team is working on the case within hours of the crash. Their goal is to limit who can be sued and close fast. No victim has to face that alone — and none should accept the contractor label as the final answer.
When a delivery truck or van injures someone anywhere in Texas, the safest first move is to consult a lawyer who handles these cases before signing anything — ideally one whose commercial vehicle and 18-wheeler practice is built for exactly this fight. The León Law Firm offers free, bilingual case reviews. Hablamos Español. The firm works on a contingency basis, with no fee unless it recovers.