“Labor Omnia Vincit” McKay Law​

Sallisaw, OK Overloaded Truck Accident Lawyer

Wrecks involving improperly loaded trucks are entirely preventable yet alarmingly common in Sallisaw, OK. When cargo is improperly loaded or distributed, the resulting crashes are often fatal. McKay Law represents overloaded truck accident victims throughout OK. Commercial trucking weight regulations exist because overloaded trucks are dangerous—including total vehicle weight, axle weight, and load distribution requirements. Overloaded trucks pose unique dangers—trucks need much more distance to stop and become harder to control. Common causes of overloaded truck accidents include the predictable consequences of trucks carrying more weight than they can handle. Improperly distributed loads create similar risks even within weight limits. Liable parties may include the trucking company, the driver, cargo loaders, shippers who provided the load, freight brokers, and maintenance contractors. Companies that loaded the truck face liability—when they overloaded the truck, provided false weight documentation, or failed to properly secure the cargo. Our Sallisaw overloaded truck accident attorneys move fast to preserve evidence—weigh station records, cargo manifests, bills of lading, the truck’s black box and ELD data, driver hours-of-service records, maintenance histories, shipping documents, and post-accident weight measurements. FMCSA rules support liability—violations dramatically strengthen your case. Common harm includes TBIs, life-altering disabilities, and fatalities. We recover all available damages including hospital costs, ongoing treatment, missed income, suffering, and survivor damages. When trucking companies systematically ignored safety regulations, exemplary damages can be pursued. Trucking companies and their insurers dispatch rapid response teams to crash scenes—you need an attorney who can match them. Every client we represent is handled on a contingency fee basis—no fees unless we recover. Critical evidence must be preserved fast. Call McKay Law now for a free consultation with a Sallisaw, OK overloaded truck accident lawyer who will hold every responsible party accountable.

Settlements Won
0 +
Million Dollars Won
0 +
Google 5 Star Reviews
0 +
Overloaded Truck Accident Lawyer in Sallisaw, OK | McKay Law

Overloaded Truck Wreck Lawyer in Sallisaw, OK | McKay Law

The Basics of Overloaded Truck Crash Cases

Trucks loaded beyond legal limits cause devastating crashes. Trucks must stay within federal weight limits for good reason — overloaded trucks can’t brake properly, can’t be controlled at speed, and put massive stress on tires, axles, brakes, and the roadway itself. When a truck is overloaded — usually to maximize profit per trip — the risk falls on everyone else. McKay Law advocates for overloaded truck accident victims in Sallisaw and throughout Oklahoma.

Truck Weight Limits

Trucks operating on Oklahoma roads must comply with weight limits:

  • Federal 80,000-pound limit
  • 20,000 pounds per single axle
  • 34,000 pounds per tandem axle
  • State limits
  • Permits for oversize

Breaking weight limits is illegal and creates strong liability evidence.

Dangers of Overloaded Trucks

  • Bad brakes — brakes can’t stop overloaded trucks effectively
  • Longer stops — stopping distance increased
  • Brake fires — overloaded trucks suffer brake fires
  • Failed brakes — brake failures occur
  • Failed tires — tire failures from overloading
  • Higher rollover risk — rollover risk increases
  • Jackknifing — trailer folding more likely
  • Reduced control — overloaded trucks are harder to control
  • Worse crashes — severity multiplied
  • Roadway damage — pavement deterioration

Common Types of Overloaded Truck Crashes

  • Rear-end wrecks
  • Crashes from brake system failures
  • Crashes from tire blowouts
  • Rollover crashes
  • Jackknife crashes
  • Control loss wrecks
  • Cargo spill crashes
  • Underride/override crashes

Common Injuries From Overloaded Truck Crashes

These crashes tend to be devastating:

  • Severe head trauma
  • Spinal cord injuries and paralysis
  • Crushing trauma
  • Multiple severe fractures
  • Internal bleeding
  • Loss of limbs
  • Severe burns
  • Whiplash and neck injuries
  • Major soft-tissue injuries
  • Mental and emotional trauma
  • Wrongful death

Who Pays

Several entities may bear liability:

  • The truck driver
  • The trucking company
  • The shipper
  • The cargo loader
  • The freight broker
  • Logistics companies

Trucking Company Liability

Trucking companies often bear primary liability:

  • Bad hiring decisions — placing unsafe drivers
  • Negligent training — insufficient driver education
  • Negligent supervision — inadequate supervision
  • Knowing overloading — intentional weight violations
  • Driver pressure — coercing drivers to overload
  • Maintenance failures — maintenance failures

Shipper and Loader Liability

Other parties in the cargo chain may bear liability:

  • Bad loading
  • Failure to weigh cargo
  • Misrepresenting cargo weight
  • Loading trucks beyond legal limits
  • Improper cargo securement
  • Failing to warn drivers of overweight loads

FMCSR Rules

Federal trucking rules:

  • 80,000-pound federal limit
  • Strict weight enforcement at weigh stations
  • Driver duties
  • Carrier weight responsibility
  • Vehicle inspection requirements

Federal rule violations create strong evidence of negligence.

What You Must Prove

  • Duty — There were duties owed.
  • Breach — Standards were violated.
  • Causation — The overloading caused or contributed to the crash and your injuries.
  • Concrete Harm — Medical costs, lost income, pain and suffering, and other losses.

What Strengthens an Overloaded Truck Case

  • Official accident documentation
  • Records of truck weights at weigh stations
  • Dispatch records
  • Cargo and load records
  • Trucking company records
  • Driver files
  • Service and inspection history
  • ELD data
  • Dashcam and onboard camera footage
  • Scene and load documentation
  • Video evidence
  • Expert weight reconstruction
  • Eyewitness accounts
  • Medical records

What Compensation Looks Like

Damages in these cases are usually substantial:

  • Healthcare costs
  • Lifetime care costs
  • Lost wages and reduced earning capacity
  • Property damage
  • Pain and suffering
  • Diminished quality of life
  • Loss of consortium
  • Survivor damages for surviving family
  • Significant punitive damages

Punitive Damages in Overloaded Truck Cases

Punitive damages typically apply when:

  • Knowing weight violations
  • History of weight violations
  • Pressuring drivers to violate rules
  • Falsified records
  • Profit motive

Filing Deadline

The deadline in Oklahoma is 2 years from the date of the crash to file (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Wrongful death claims carry the same 2-year deadline. Quick action is critical because ELD data, weight records, and other electronic evidence can be destroyed.

How McKay Law Approaches Overloaded Truck Cases

We get to work immediately to lock down weight records, ELD data, and dispatch records, investigate weight records, weigh station data, and load documentation, engage trucking and reconstruction specialists, pursue every defendant in the chain, push for the largest possible punitive damages, and prepare every case as if it will go to trial.

Common Questions

Q: How do you prove a truck was overloaded?

A: Multiple evidence sources establish overweight status.

Q: What does it cost to hire McKay Law?

A: Zero upfront. No fee unless we recover.

Q: Can I sue both the trucking company and the shipper?

A: Definitely. Liability spans the entire cargo chain.

Q: Can I get punitive damages?

A: Yes, in many cases — especially repeat or knowing violations.

Q: How do federal weight limits apply?

A: Trucks on Interstate highways have an 80,000-pound federal limit.

Q: Should I give the trucking company’s insurance a recorded statement?

A: No. Refer them to your attorney.

Q: What is the deadline to file?

A: Two years from the date of the crash (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Don’t wait — preservation letters need to go out fast.

Overloaded Truck Accident Claims in Sallisaw, OK

Overloaded trucks cause crashes that wouldn’t have happened with properly loaded vehicles. The extra weight changes how the vehicle handles, increases braking distance significantly, overloads vehicle components, drives crashes that wouldn’t otherwise happen. These crashes are often catastrophic. An attorney familiar with these specialized claims navigates the unique legal framework these cases involve.

Why Overloaded Trucks Cause Distinctive Crashes

Braking Distance Increases Dramatically

Increased weight extends braking distance.

Trucks carrying excess weight requires significantly more distance to stop than a properly loaded truck.

This produces crashes from inadequate stopping distance.

Mechanical Strain on Systems

Overloading overloads brake components, tire systems, suspension, steering systems, drivetrain, frame.

System overload generates failures:

  • Brake failures from heat buildup
  • Tire blow-outs from overload
  • Spring failures
  • Steering component failures

Handling and Stability Compromise

Excessive weight especially when improperly distributed impair handling.

Vehicles can become unstable, making maneuvering difficult.

Rollover Risk Increases

Improperly loaded trucks create elevated rollover risk.

Cargo Shifting and Spilling

Improperly secured cargo moves during driving, impacting handling.

Cargo can escape from the truck.

Federal and State Regulatory Framework

FMCSA Weight Regulations

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration sets weight limits.

Federal trucking weight regulations cover:

  • GVW limits
  • GCW limits
  • Per-axle weight limits
  • Tire load capacity ratings
  • State-level permits

Federal weight violations can support negligence per se claims.

State Weight Limits

State-specific weight rules in addition to federal limits.

Bridge Limits and Bridge Formula

Federal bridge limits determines maximum loads for specific bridges.

Permits for Oversized Loads

Heavy haul permits are necessary for overweight loads.

CDL Requirements

Drivers operating overweight vehicles may exceed their authorization.

Who Can Be Held Liable?

The Trucking Company

The truck operator carries primary liability for ensuring proper loading.

The Driver

Truck operators may share liability for operating an unsafe load.

The Cargo Loader

The party responsible for loading can face direct liability for inadequate loading.

The Shipper

The shipping party can face liability for misrepresenting cargo weight.

Cargo Owners

The cargo owner can face liability when they had knowledge of the overload.

Vehicle Owners

Where the vehicle owner is different from the trucking company can create separate liability.

Brokers

Brokers can face liability where they chose an unsafe carrier.

Vehicle and Component Manufacturers

For crashes involving vehicle defects exacerbated by overload can implicate manufacturers.

Maintenance Companies

Where vehicle maintenance failures contributed can create separate liability.

Common Causes of Overloading

Negligent Loading

Inadequate loading process drives many overloads.

Pressure to Maximize Cargo

Profit-driven overload causes intentional violations.

Inadequate Weighing Procedures

Failure to weigh.

Misrepresentation of Cargo Weight

Shippers providing false weight information generates many overloads.

Cargo Shifting and Settling

Cargo settling may exceed axle limits.

Negligent Hiring of Drivers

Drivers who don’t recognize overload conditions can compound problems.

How These Cases Get Built

Weight Determination

Establishing actual weight matters significantly.

Determining weight involves:

  • Public weigh station records
  • Internal records
  • Cargo documentation
  • Shipper records
  • Post-crash weight verification

Vehicle Maintenance Records

Maintenance documentation expose deferred maintenance.

FMCSA Compliance History

Federal compliance records reveal patterns of compliance or violation.

Driver Records

Driver documentation reveal training adequacy.

Communications

Internal communications expose company-level conduct.

Expert Testimony

Specialized expertise establish overload contribution.

Vehicle Data

Vehicle electronic records capture pre-crash data.

Witness Statements

Independent observers.

Common Insurance Defenses

“The Truck Wasn’t Actually Overloaded”

Weight disputes.

This requires comprehensive weight evidence.

“Overload Wasn’t a Substantial Cause”

Causation challenges.

Comprehensive accident reconstruction provides causation evidence.

“Compliance With Permits”

Defense argues weight permits authorized the load.

Permits don’t excuse all conduct, operators still have duties.

“The Shipper Misrepresented the Weight”

Defense pushes liability to the shipper.

This can be a real issue, though the carrier still has duties to verify.

“Comparative Fault”

Defense pushes shared-fault arguments.

“Federal Regulations Were Followed”

FMCSA compliance defenses. FMCSA compliance doesn’t fully satisfy duty.

Damages in Overloaded Truck Cases

Recoverable losses include include:

  • Hospitalization, surgical, and rehabilitation costs
  • Lost wages
  • Permanent occupational limitations
  • Out-of-pocket vehicle costs
  • Loss of enjoyment of life
  • Loss of consortium
  • Exemplary damages where company-level overload was egregious

Punitive Damages Considerations

Punitive damages apply in certain scenarios:

  • Repeated overload conduct
  • Company-driven overload
  • Deliberate violations
  • Falsified records to conceal overloading
  • Failure to implement weight verification procedures

Critical Steps After an Overloaded Truck Crash

Call Police Immediately

Law enforcement involvement.

Document the Truck

Capture the truck’s identifying numbers, DOT number, and visible details.

Document Cargo and Loading

If cargo is visible at the scene, document what’s visible.

Photograph the Crash Scene

Comprehensive scene documentation.

Identify Witnesses

Other drivers, bystanders, and witnesses.

Get a Police Report

Insist on official documentation.

Get Medical Attention Immediately

Quick medical attention protects against later disputes.

Preserve the Truck

Truck preservation is critical for inspection.

Don’t Speak With Trucking Company Insurers Without Counsel

Trucking companies have aggressive claims operations. Statements without counsel create problematic admissions.

Preserve Vehicle Data Through Legal Demands

Move quickly to preserve electronic evidence.

Attorney Costs

Overloaded truck accident attorneys earn fees only on recovery. Specialty expertise costs advanced by the firm.

Move Quickly

Multiple time pressures apply. Vehicle data, ELD records, and electronic evidence require formal preservation steps.

All relevant business records may need to be preserved through legal action.

The truck and its cargo can be moved or modified.

Operational changes after a crash, making evidence of pre-crash practices critical to preserve.

The legal time limit sets a hard cutoff.

Engaging counsel right away positions the case for the substantial recovery these cases can produce.

McKay Law Is Your Sallisaw Advocate After A Overloaded Truck Accident

A truck loaded beyond its safe capacity is a nightmare waiting to happen. Federal and state regulations fix strict weight limits for commercial trucks for a reason — every additional pound increases stopping distance, stresses brakes and tires beyond their designed tolerances, raises the vehicle’s center of gravity, and makes the rig harder to control in emergencies. When trucking companies, shippers, and cargo loaders bypass those limits to squeeze more profit out of each haul, the consequences crash on the innocent motorists, pedestrians, and cyclists sharing the road. Overloaded trucks cause brake failures on long downhill grades, blowouts that propel tire debris into oncoming traffic, rollovers on sharp turns and exit ramps, cargo spills that block lanes, and crashes where the truck simply can’t stop in time. At McKay Law, we tackle overloaded truck cases by wasting no time to gather weigh station records, bills of lading, shipping manifests, dispatch logs, maintenance records, and the truck’s electronic logging device data.

 

These cases frequently include multiple defendants beyond just the driver — the trucking company that pushed the haul, the shipper that falsified the cargo weight, the loading facility that negligently filled the trailer, and the broker who arranged the shipment without verifying compliance. When you join the McKay Law family, we manage the investigation across every potential defendant and target every applicable commercial policy. We fight for complete compensation for emergency airlift and trauma care, surgeries, ICU and prolonged hospitalization, ongoing rehabilitation, future medical needs, in-home and long-term care, mobility aids and home modifications, vehicle replacement, missed paychecks, loss of livelihood, the deep pain and suffering of coming through a wreck of this magnitude — and in the most devastating cases, the wrongful death of a precious life. Call us right away at (866) 679-9651 or contact us online to arrange your free consultation and place a firm that knows how to take on the trucking industry on your side.

Video Testimonials

The McKay Law Difference

See why so many others choose McKay Law, PLLC

With over 300 five-star reviews, McKay Law, your local Personal Injury Law Firm has earned the trust and gratitude of our clients. Every case we handle is unique, and every client’s story matters. Don’t just take our word for it—hear directly from our clients about their experiences and why they confidently recommend us to others.

All Our Practice Areas

Scroll to Top