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ATRI study provides information of lawsuits aimed at trucking industry 2025-12-05

ATRI study provides information of lawsuits aimed at trucking industry

A new study delves into the continuing issue of lawsuits aimed at truckers and carriers.

The American Transportation Research Institute (ATRI) earlier this week released new research on the scope of tort litigation in the trucking industry and the factors that influence case outcomes. Also included are new updates on: 

  • third-party litigation financing

  • carrier policies and procedures that impact the likelihood of lawsuits

  • whether Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations represent full compliance or minimum standards

  • a new plaintiff focus on product liability suits

Using a variety of federal and industry litigation data sources, the research analyzes six years of truck tort cases. In 2022 alone, the report estimates that there were 12,817 state truck-tractor tort cases, as many as 147 of which were improperly prevented from reaching federal court – where cases are often more protected from potential bias. The largest half of awards – those most damaging to the industry – rose at an average rate of 5.7 percent per year.

ATRI said the report identifies numerous factors that statistically lead to higher awards, including types of negligence (such as improper hiring or onboarding) and injuries (such as moderate and severe traumatic brain injury). It found that settlements were lower than verdicts in cases with awards of $5 million or more but higher than verdicts with awards under $1 million. Three types of alleged negligence were statistically correlated with defense victories, including improper turn, improper merge, and failure to yield.

Trial strategies were alsos analyzed. ATRI said it was discovered that counterclaims – where evidence of plaintiff negligence was presented – did not result in statistically lower awards, underscoring jury bias faced by motor carriers. Non-medical awards were more than 10 times higher than medical awards in 17.8 percent of cases, indicating the presence of exaggerated non-medical claims, according to ATRI.

“Both frivolous and excess litigation pose grave challenges to the trucking industry today. They drain significant time and resources that could otherwise be spent on improving industry operations and safety,” said Nathan J. Meisgeier, Werner Enterprises president and chief legal officer. “ATRI’s data-driven insights on case outcomes are a valuable resource for decision makers.”