Big Rig Driver Flees After Fatal I-80 Crash in Placer County | What CA Hit-and-Run and Trucking Liability Law Says

Fatal I-80 Big Rig Hit-and-Run | CA Trucking Law

From Tom Feher, Esq.

“Trucking hit-and-run cases survive in California even when the driver is never identified. We've recovered seven figures from the motor carrier and its insurer in cases where the cab driver was never found, because federal motor carrier regulations and California's vicarious liability rules put the trucking company on the hook for negligent hiring, supervision, and vehicle maintenance. The fled-scene fact often strengthens the family's case rather than weakening it.”

Thomas Feher, Esq. · Founding Attorney, Feher Law APC · 50+ jury trials to verdict · $150M+ recovered · Super Lawyers 2022-2026

A westbound big rig hauling a water tank-trailer lost control on Interstate 80 near the Placer Hills Road overcrossing in Placer County around 11:10 p.m. on Tuesday, May 26, 2026, striking the concrete center divider. The trailer detached, crossed into the eastbound lanes, and was struck by a pickup truck. The pickup driver, a man from Colfax, was pronounced dead at the scene. The big rig driver fled. Under California Vehicle Code 20001, leaving the scene of a fatal collision is a felony punishable by up to four years in state prison, and the trucking company can be civilly liable for the family’s wrongful death damages even if the driver is never found.

Key Takeaways

  • Vehicle Code 20001: Fleeing a fatal collision in California is a felony with up to four years in state prison plus restitution.
  • Trucking company liability: Under California’s respondeat superior doctrine plus FMCSA 49 CFR 390.11, the motor carrier is liable for the driver’s negligence and for negligent hiring, supervision, training, and maintenance.
  • Two-year deadline: Wrongful death claims under CCP 335.1 must be filed within two years of death. Wait too long and the case is barred regardless of merit.
  • Identification is not required: Civil claims can proceed against the trucking company even if the fled driver is never criminally identified, because the rig’s registration identifies the carrier.
  • Feher Law has recovered $150M+ for California injury and wrongful death clients. We handle commercial trucking cases on contingency — you pay nothing unless we win.

Free Case Evaluation – No Fee Unless You Win

If you lost a family member in a commercial trucking crash in California, Feher Law can investigate the motor carrier, preserve the rig’s ECM data, and pursue the trucking company’s policy. Call (310) 340-1112 or visit our California truck accident attorney page for a free consultation.

What Happened on I-80 Near Truckee

California Highway Patrol reports the collision happened around 11:10 p.m. Tuesday, May 26, 2026, on westbound Interstate 80 near the Placer Hills Road overcrossing. The big rig was hauling a water tank-trailer. The cab struck the concrete center divider, and the trailer detached and entered the eastbound lanes, where the pickup truck collided with it.

The pickup driver, a Colfax resident, was pronounced dead at the scene. The big rig driver left before officers arrived. CHP confirmed the rig’s owner and operator are cooperating with the investigation. Anyone with information about the driver is asked to contact CHP at (530) 401-9910.

What California Law Says About Hit-and-Run Trucking Crashes

California treats fleeing a fatal collision differently from fleeing a minor fender-bender. Vehicle Code 20001 makes it a felony to leave the scene of a crash involving injury or death. The penalty range is 16 months, two years, or four years in state prison, plus court-ordered restitution to the victim’s family. Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations also require commercial drivers to remain at the scene and notify authorities under 49 CFR 392.6.

The criminal charge is separate from the civil wrongful death claim. The family does not need a criminal conviction to recover civilly. A wrongful death lawsuit under California Code of Civil Procedure 377.60 allows the surviving spouse, children, or other heirs to recover economic losses, loss of love and companionship, and funeral and burial expenses.

Why the Trucking Company Can Still Be Liable Even If the Driver Fled

In commercial trucking cases, the family’s recovery typically does not come from the driver personally. It comes from the motor carrier’s commercial insurance policy. Federal law requires interstate motor carriers to carry minimum liability insurance of $750,000, and most carriers hauling specialized cargo carry $1 million to $5 million. California also imposes vicarious liability on the motor carrier for the driver’s on-duty negligence under the respondeat superior doctrine.

Beyond vicarious liability, the family can pursue direct negligence claims against the trucking company itself. These include negligent hiring (failing to check the driver’s record), negligent supervision (failing to enforce hours-of-service limits), negligent training, and negligent maintenance of the rig and trailer-attachment hardware. A trailer that detaches from a moving rig is almost always the result of inadequate inspection or coupling-device maintenance, both of which are the carrier’s direct legal duty under 49 CFR 396.

Preserve the Evidence Now

Commercial trucking evidence disappears quickly. Engine control module data, driver logs, and maintenance records are typically retained for only 30 days unless preserved by a litigation hold letter. Call (310) 340-1112 within the first week of a fatal trucking crash to lock down the evidence.

Deadlines Victim Families Need to Know

The most important California deadlines for wrongful death families in this case category are:

  • Two years to file (CCP 335.1): Wrongful death lawsuits must be filed within two years of the date of death. Missing this deadline almost always ends the case.
  • Six months for any government claim: If a public entity such as Caltrans or the county had any role (defective roadway, sign, or guardrail), Government Code 911.2 requires a written claim within six months. This is a hard deadline.
  • One year for property damage and medical liens: Some related claims have shorter periods.

The wrongful death clock starts on the date of death, not the date the criminal investigation concludes or the date the driver is identified.

What Families Should Do in the First Week

  1. Request the CHP traffic collision report. Even the preliminary report identifies the rig’s registration, the motor carrier, and the carrier’s USDOT number. That number is the entry point to the federal SAFER database and the carrier’s full inspection and crash history.
  2. Send a litigation hold / spoliation letter to the motor carrier. Without one, the company’s evidence-retention policy may destroy ECM data and driver logs within 30 days.
  3. Do not give a recorded statement to the trucking company’s insurance carrier. Their job is to limit the payout. Anything said in those first calls is used during later negotiations.
  4. Document the funeral, burial, and pre-death medical expenses. Every receipt is a recoverable damages line item.
  5. Consult a California trucking attorney before signing anything. A general personal injury lawyer rarely has the FMCSA and motor carrier deposition experience these cases require.

Speak With a California Trucking Attorney Today

Feher Law has handled commercial trucking cases across California for two decades. We work on contingency — you pay nothing unless we recover for your family. Call (310) 340-1112 or request a free case evaluation.

What to Expect When You Work With Feher Law

  1. Free, confidential intake: We listen first. No fee, no obligation, no pressure. We tell you whether we believe the case is viable in the first call.
  2. Evidence preservation within 24-48 hours: Spoliation letters, FOIA requests for CHP records, USDOT history pulls, and witness contact before memories fade.
  3. Carrier and insurer identification: We trace the USDOT number to every layer of insurance coverage, including primary, excess, and umbrella policies.
  4. Settlement negotiation with carrier-side adjusters: Most of our trucking cases resolve without trial, but we prepare every case as if it will. That preparation is what moves the offer.
  5. Trial when settlement undervalues the case: Thomas Feher has tried over 50 cases to verdict. Defendants and their insurers know it.

Why California Trucking Crash Families Choose Feher Law

Thomas Feher has spent two decades representing California families in catastrophic injury and wrongful death cases, including commercial trucking, motor vehicle, and premises liability claims. The firm has recovered over $150 million for clients across Los Angeles, Long Beach, the South Bay, and throughout California. Tom has tried more than 50 cases to verdict and has been named to Super Lawyers every year from 2022 through 2026.

Feher Law handles every California trucking case on contingency. There is no fee unless we win, and the consultation is free. We work with FMCSA-experienced experts, reconstruction engineers, and medical specialists to build the family’s economic and non-economic damages case from day one.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the family sue the trucking company if the driver was never identified?

Yes. California civil claims against the motor carrier proceed independently of the criminal investigation. The rig's registration identifies the carrier, and the carrier is vicariously liable for the driver's on-duty negligence regardless of whether the driver is identified or convicted.

What is the wrongful death deadline in California?

Two years from the date of death under California Code of Civil Procedure 335.1. If any public entity contributed to the crash, a written government claim must be filed within six months under Government Code 911.2.

How much insurance does a California commercial trucking company carry?

Federal law requires interstate motor carriers to carry minimum liability of $750,000. Carriers hauling specialized cargo such as water tankers commonly carry $1 million to $5 million in primary coverage, plus excess and umbrella policies that can stack on top.

What evidence matters most in a fled-scene trucking case?

Engine control module data, driver hours-of-service logs, dashcam footage, dispatch records, maintenance records for the trailer coupling device, and the carrier's USDOT inspection and crash history. Most of this evidence is destroyed within 30 days unless a litigation hold letter is sent.

Does it matter that the crash happened in Placer County, not Los Angeles?

No. California state law applies statewide. Feher Law represents California families regardless of crash location, and we routinely handle cases in counties throughout the state. Where the case is filed depends on the carrier's principal place of business and where the crash occurred, both of which we evaluate during intake.

How long do California trucking wrongful death cases take to resolve?

Most resolve in 14 to 28 months from filing, depending on insurance coverage layers and whether the carrier disputes liability. Cases with cooperative carriers and strong evidence preservation settle faster. Cases requiring trial typically run 24 to 36 months total.

Last reviewed by Thomas Feher, Esq. – May 2026

About the Author

Tom Feher is a trial lawyer, founder and CEO of Feher Law, APC. His firm specializes in litigating and trying catastrophic injury, wrongful death and employment cases throughout California. At just 40 years old, he has tried over 50 jury trials to verdict. 

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