USPS Vehicle Accident Claims in Muskogee, OK
A crash with a USPS vehicle is not a normal auto accident case. The United States Postal Service is a federal entity. That status governs every aspect of the claim. An attorney familiar with claims against federal agencies brings the specialized procedural knowledge these claims require.
Why USPS Accidents Aren’t Regular Accidents
The Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) provides the exclusive remedy for tort claims against federal entities like USPS.
Generally, you cannot sue the federal government. The FTCA waives that immunity in a limited way that lets injured parties pursue claims for tort claims caused by federal workers on duty.
But the waiver is conditional. Failure to follow FTCA procedure ends the case before it starts.
The Administrative Claim Requirement
The procedural step most plaintiffs don’t know about: A claim must be presented to USPS before any court action.
What This Means Practically
Before any court complaint, the injured party must file SF-95 with USPS.
This step cannot be skipped. Going to court before completing the administrative process results in the case being dismissed, regardless of the merits.
The Administrative Process Timeline
After USPS receives the administrative claim, USPS has six months to accept, deny, or fail to respond to the claim.
While USPS is processing the claim, no lawsuit can be filed.
After the six-month period, the injured party gains the right to sue.
Critical Deadlines
FTCA requires SF-95 submission within two years.
A six-month deadline begins running upon denial.
Neither can be extended for normal reasons. Either missed deadline kills the case.
The SF-95 Itself Matters Enormously
SF-95 is not just a procedural requirement.
The damages stated on the form sets the ceiling for any eventual recovery, with very limited exceptions for newly discovered facts.
An SF-95 that undervalues damages permanently limits the case. This is why proper attorney involvement before filing the SF-95 is critical.
Who’s Liable, and How Liability Works
The USPS Driver
The mail carrier is the direct cause of the negligence. Per the FTCA’s mechanics, the United States — not the individual driver — is the proper defendant.
This has implications. The postal worker isn’t a defendant. The federal government is the named defendant.
Other Drivers
When another motorist contributed to the crash, standard state-law claims can be brought against them, alongside the federal claim against USPS.
Vehicle and Component Manufacturers
Where mechanical defects contributed, claims against manufacturers proceed under state law.
What’s Different About FTCA Cases
No Jury Trial
Bench trials only. This eliminates the unpredictability of jury verdicts. Damages tend to be more conservative.
No Punitive Damages
Punitive damages are not available against the federal government. Even where conduct would otherwise support punitive damages in state court.
State Law Applies to the Underlying Negligence
Although the case is in federal court, the underlying negligence law is the state law where the crash occurred. Comparative fault, damages caps, and other state-law issues apply.
Federal Court Jurisdiction
If administrative resolution fails, the case proceeds in federal district court. This creates different procedural rules and case dynamics than state court litigation.
Common USPS Crash Scenarios
Delivery Stop Crashes
USPS vehicles stop constantly. Stops in active traffic create predictable crash patterns.
Pedestrian Crashes
USPS routes go through pedestrian-heavy areas. Pedestrian-involved USPS wrecks account for many cases.
Backing-Up Crashes
Reverse-driving crashes cause recurring crashes.
Long-Life Vehicle (LLV) Issues
The white right-hand-drive mail vehicles have been in service for decades. Vehicle-related crash factors may be involved.
Highway and Long-Haul Crashes
USPS operates long-haul trucks for mail transportation between facilities. These wrecks bring in heavy-truck injury patterns.
Critical Steps After a USPS Crash
Photograph the Postal Vehicle and Scene
The postal vehicle will likely be moved. Document everything before the truck leaves.
Get the Vehicle and Driver Information
USPS vehicles have identifying numbers appear on the vehicle.
Get a Police Report
Make sure law enforcement is called. Without a police report, the case becomes much harder to prove.
Identify Witnesses
Bystanders, other drivers, and anyone who saw the crash strengthen the case.
Get Medical Attention Immediately
Prompt medical attention anchors the medical claim.
Contact a USPS Accident Attorney Quickly
The SF-95 filing deadline cannot be extended for typical reasons. Early counsel protects the procedural foundation.
Damages Available Under FTCA
FTCA-available damages include comprehensive medical care, missed work, permanent occupational limitations, property damage, pain and suffering, and wrongful death and survivor damages. Recovery is bounded by the administrative claim amount.
Punitive damages are not available.
Attorney Costs
USPS accident attorneys work on contingency. FTCA contains fee restrictions — with specific percentage limits.
Don’t Wait — FTCA Deadlines Are Brutal
FTCA’s two-year filing requirement is one of the most strictly enforced procedural deadlines in injury law. Unlike state-law statutes of limitations, Federal courts apply FTCA timing rules rigidly.
Procedural errors in the administrative claim destroy the case. The form must be completed correctly.
Getting legal help right away is essential. State limitations periods may seem longer than two years, but the FTCA’s two-year administrative deadline is the controlling timeline for USPS cases. Free consultations are standard — there’s no reason to delay.