Truck Accident Spinal Injury Accidents in San Jose
San Jose is one of California's highest-volume jurisdictions for Truck Accident Spinal Injury cases. Local factors — freeway density, port traffic, construction activity, and commercial property concentration — shape both the frequency and the legal landscape of spinal cord injury claims arising in the city.
The same California law that governs statewide SCI claims applies in San Jose, but local conditions create important practical differences. San Jose's government entity defendants — including the Santa Clara County Superior Court's jurisdiction and relevant public agencies — require government tort claims within six months under Government Code section 911.2, a deadline that must be tracked separately from the general two-year statute of limitations. Courthouse procedures, local expert witness pools, and jury composition also differ from other California jurisdictions in ways that affect SCI litigation strategy.
For the full legal framework governing Truck Accident Spinal Injury cases under California law, including rights analysis, fault determination, insurance layers, and evidence requirements, see the Truck Accident Spinal Cord Injury statewide guide.
California Law That Applies to Your Case
Truck accident SCI cases in California involve both state tort law and federal FMCSA regulations (49 CFR Parts 390–399). Carrier violations of hours-of-service, vehicle maintenance, driver qualification, or cargo securement requirements constitute negligence per se under California Evidence Code section 669. FMCSA minimum insurance of $750,000 (49 CFR Part 387) is the federal floor for interstate carriers. Multiple defendants are common: the driver, motor carrier, truck owner, trailer owner, and cargo loader may all bear liability. The statute of limitations is two years under CCP section 335.1. ELD and black box data must be preserved immediately.
For a full analysis of each of these rules — including comparative fault, insurance requirements, damage caps, and court procedures — see the California legal guide.
Part 392 of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations governs operation of commercial motor vehicles. Violations of FMCSA regulations that cause a spinal cord injury can constitute negligence per se under California Evidence Code section 669, establishing breach of duty without requiring additional expert proof of unreasonableness.
Courts and Procedures in San Jose
Personal injury lawsuits for Truck Accident Spinal Injury cases arising in San Jose are filed in the Unlimited Civil Division of the local Superior Court. Under California Code of Civil Procedure section 395, cases may be filed in the county where the injury occurred or where the defendant resides or has principal offices. All spinal cord injury cases — which routinely involve millions of dollars in claimed damages — are filed in the unlimited civil division, not the limited civil division.
Government entity claims against San Jose agencies require a written tort claim filed with the appropriate entity within six months of the incident under Government Code section 911.2. Failure to comply bars the lawsuit entirely. After rejection of the government claim, the injured person has six months to file the lawsuit.
Santa Clara County Superior Court — Downtown
191 N. First Street, San Jose, CA 95113
What to Do After a Truck Accident Spinal Injury in San Jose
- Call 911 and do not move. Local emergency services respond to serious injury accidents in San Jose. Wait for emergency responders to stabilize the spine before any movement. Improper movement can worsen an incomplete spinal cord injury.
- Accept full emergency evaluation and spinal imaging. San Jose's Level I trauma centers include Santa Clara Valley Medical Center (751 S. Bascom Ave.), Regional Medical Center of San Jose (225 N. Jackson Ave.). For SCI rehabilitation: Stanford Health Care, Palo Alto. Emergency room imaging records are the medical foundation of any SCI claim.
- Document the scene and preserve all evidence immediately. Photograph the accident location, any hazardous conditions, and all parties and vehicles involved. Send written preservation demands for surveillance footage within 48 hours. Scene conditions and footage are overwritten quickly.
- File a government tort claim within six months if a public entity is involved. Any claim against the City of San Jose, county agencies, or state entities must include a written government tort claim under Government Code section 911.2 before a lawsuit can proceed. This deadline runs concurrently with the two-year civil statute of limitations.
- Follow all prescribed medical treatment without gaps. Gaps in treatment are used by defense insurers to argue the injury has resolved or was less severe than claimed. Attend all specialist appointments, rehabilitation, and follow-up visits as scheduled.
- Confirm the applicable statute of limitations. California CCP section 335.1 provides two years from the date of injury for most SCI claims. Government entity deadlines are shorter. Filing the wrong deadline for the wrong defendant type is an irreversible error in California personal injury practice.