If you were hit by a commercial truck in Georgia, you may be wondering whether you can sue the trucking company—not just the driver. The answer is yes, in many cases, Georgia law allows crash victims to bring a claim against the company that owns or operates the truck. But whether you can do that depends on the facts of the crash, the relationship between the driver and the company, and what caused the wreck.
Below is a straightforward explanation of when and how a trucking company can be held legally responsible after a crash in Georgia.
In Georgia, a trucking company can be held responsible for a crash caused by one of its drivers under a rule called “respondeat superior.” This rule is found in Georgia Code § 51-2-2. It says that an employer is legally responsible for harm caused by an employee if the employee was doing their job at the time.
So, if a truck driver was making a delivery, driving a regular route, or otherwise working for the company when the crash happened, you may be able to sue the company as well as the driver.
This doesn’t apply if the driver was off the clock or doing something personal at the time of the crash. But if the driver was on duty—even if they made a mistake or broke a rule—the company can usually be held liable.
Some trucking companies try to avoid responsibility by calling their drivers “independent contractors” instead of employees. But Georgia law looks at how much control the company had over the driver’s work—not just the job title.
Under Georgia Code § 51-2-5, a company can still be responsible if it kept control over how the driver did the job, even if the driver was paid as a contractor. If the company set the schedule, dictated routes, or required the driver to follow company policies, there’s a good chance they can still be held accountable.
It’s not always clear-cut, and sometimes it takes digging into company records and contracts to prove this kind of control.
In some cases, it’s not just about what the driver did. You may also have a claim against the trucking company based on its own actions. This is called direct liability.
Examples of direct liability include:
In Georgia, these kinds of claims are allowed under general negligence rules. To prove this kind of claim, you’d show that the company had a legal duty to act with care, didn’t meet that duty, and caused the crash as a result.
Most trucking companies doing business in Georgia also have to follow federal safety regulations. These rules come from the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), and they cover things like:
If a company breaks these rules, and that leads to a crash, it can help support your claim under Georgia negligence law. The rules themselves don’t create a private lawsuit right, but they show what safety standards the company was supposed to follow.
For example, if a company allowed a driver to stay on the road far longer than federal hours-of-service rules permit—and the driver fell asleep at the wheel—you can point to that as evidence of negligence.
You might think the company whose name is on the side of the truck is automatically the company you can sue. But in some cases, the truck is owned by one company, driven by a driver working for a second company, and hauling goods for a third.
Under Georgia law, the company that had control over the trip—or the driver—at the time of the crash is the one that’s usually responsible.
To sue a trucking company, you need evidence. Depending on the situation, this could include:
In serious crashes, this kind of evidence can disappear quickly if no one acts to preserve it. A legal tool called a “spoliation letter” can be used to formally tell the company not to delete or destroy anything that might be relevant.
In Georgia, you typically have two years from the date of the crash to file a personal injury lawsuit. This is set by Georgia Code § 9-3-33. If you miss this deadline, you may lose your right to sue—even if the trucking company was clearly at fault.
If a death resulted from the crash, the same two-year deadline usually applies for a wrongful death claim, although different rules can come into play depending on the facts.
If the company involved is a government contractor or state agency, shorter deadlines and special notice requirements may apply. It’s important not to wait too long.
If you’re successful in your case, the trucking company may be required to pay for:
In rare cases, Georgia law also allows for punitive damages under Georgia Code § 51-12-5.1, but only when the company’s behavior was especially reckless—such as knowingly sending out a truck with faulty brakes or ignoring repeated safety warnings.
The key point is that Georgia law allows you to sue a trucking company when they are at fault—whether directly (because of something they did) or indirectly (because of what their driver did while working for them). The law doesn’t automatically make the company liable just because it owns the truck. But in many cases, the company can and should be held responsible.
That’s what makes these cases so fact-specific. To answer the question—“Can you sue the trucking company?”—you need to look at what the company did, what the driver was doing at the time, and how the crash happened.
If you’ve been hurt in a crash with a commercial truck in Atlanta, the trucking company may be legally responsible—but you won’t know for sure until someone looks closely at the facts. To find out what legal options you have, contact experienced Atlanta truck accident lawyers at Butler Kahn by calling (678) 940-1444 or contacting us online for a free consultation.