Castroville Sand Truck (Frac Sand) Accident Lawyer
If a sand truck (frac sand) hit you in Castroville in the last 24 months, you may be entitled to 3–7x the insurance company's first offer — even if you were partially at fault. Get a written case review in 60 minutes, by a real Texas attorney, free — whether or not you hire anyone.
312 Texas cases · $87,400 median net recovery · 4.9★ Google (1,247 reviews)
Here's what's happening to you right now
You're reading this from a couch, a hospital bed, or maybe from the side of a road in Castroville. Your body hurts in ways you didn't know it could. The sand truck (frac sand) company's insurance adjuster has probably already called you — sometimes within ninety minutes of the wreck. She sounded helpful. She asked if you'd answer "just a few questions." That call is not what it sounds like.
You're also worried about things you haven't said out loud. Whether the rent gets paid. Whether your boss is going to be patient. Whether you might have done something wrong. Whether the bills piling up on your kitchen counter are going to eat through whatever you get.
All of that is normal. None of it is what determines whether your case is real. What determines that is a specific set of Texas legal rules — and a specific timeline — that the trucking company's attorneys know better than you do.
Before you keep reading — download this
The Texas Truck Accident Victim's Bill of Rights — an 18-page PDF written by Texas-licensed attorneys. Names every right you have under Texas law after a commercial vehicle accident. Free. Instant. Email only.
Why we offer this: because most accident victims don't read it until after they've already said something to the adjuster they can't unsay. We'd rather you have it now.
The Texas legal framework — in plain English
Castroville sand truck (frac sand) cases sit at the intersection of two bodies of law: federal trucking regulations (FMCSA) and Texas state tort law. Here's what you need to know.
- You have 2 years from the date of the accident to file suit. Texas CPRC §16.003(a). Miss this window and your case is gone, regardless of merit.
- Texas uses a 51% bar rule for fault. If a jury finds you 50% or less at fault, you recover that percentage of damages. At 51%+, you recover nothing. Texas CPRC §33.001.
- There is no general damage cap on Castroville sand truck (frac sand) cases. Texas caps medical malpractice (CPRC §74.301), but that cap does not apply to motor vehicle accidents. Compensatory damages are uncapped. Punitive damages are capped under Texas CPRC §41.008.
- FMCSA rules govern this driver. 11-hour driving / 14-hour on-duty / 70-hour 8-day Hours of Service rules. ELD data is preservable evidence under 49 CFR §395.8.
- The minimum commercial insurance is $750,000. 49 CFR §387.9. Most reputable carriers carry $1M to $5M primary plus excess.
Castroville-specific context: corridors, carriers, hospitals
Most-traveled Castroville corridors
Why now matters — three real clocks
The statute of limitations is the most-discussed clock, but it is actually the slowest one. Two faster clocks usually decide cases:
- The adjuster timing window (24–72 hours). Adjusters are assigned within 90 minutes of the accident. The longer you wait to learn what you can and cannot say to them, the more locked-in your case becomes.
- The evidence preservation window (30 days). Most truck stop surveillance is overwritten in 14–30 days. ELD records can be modified or "lost." Skid marks fade. Witnesses move. A spoliation letter in week 1 versus week 4 produces dramatically different evidence outcomes.
- The medical documentation window (immediate). Gaps in treatment in the first 30 days are the single largest reason adjusters discount claims. Continuous documented treatment changes case value.
Get your free 60-minute written case review
A real Texas attorney reads what you write. You get a written assessment by email within 60 minutes. We do not call you.
Other commercial vehicles in Castroville
Frequently asked questions about Castroville sand truck (frac sand) accidents
How long do I have to file a Castroville sand truck (frac sand) lawsuit?
Texas gives you 2 years from the date of the accident to file suit under Civil Practice and Remedies Code §16.003(a). Wrongful death claims also have a 2-year deadline running from the date of death (§16.003(b)). Limited tolling exceptions apply to minors and persons of unsound mind under §16.001.
Get a written assessment of your timeline →What is my Castroville sand truck (frac sand) case worth?
We've referred 312 Texas commercial vehicle cases to date with a median net-to-client recovery of $87,400. The bottom 25% recovered under $14,000; the top 10% over $480,000. Your case range depends on injury severity, fault percentage, and available insurance — our written review provides specifics.
Get your range in writing in 60 minutes →What if I was partially at fault for the accident?
Texas uses a modified comparative negligence rule with a 51% bar (CPRC §33.001). If a jury finds you 50% or less responsible, you can still recover damages — reduced by your percentage of fault. If 51% or more, recovery is barred. The most common reason victims unknowingly inflate their fault percentage is by giving recorded statements to adjusters too early.
Should I talk to the insurance adjuster?
You are not legally required to give a recorded statement to the other side's insurance adjuster. They are trained to ask specific questions that, depending on your answers, can sharply reduce what you can recover. Until you understand which questions you do and do not have to answer, the safest course is to politely decline a recorded statement.
Get the free Insurance Adjuster Scripts →What court will my Castroville case be in?
Medina County state district courts handle most Castroville commercial vehicle cases initially, but cases with out-of-state carriers are frequently removed to the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas.
How are Texas attorney fees structured?
Personal injury attorneys in Texas almost universally work on contingency. The most common arrangement is 33–40% of the gross recovery if the case settles before suit is filed, and 40% if suit is filed. You pay nothing if there is no recovery.
Why do you decline 38% of cases?
Because the attorneys we work with will not accept a referral they don't believe has real merit. If we sent them weak cases, they would stop accepting our calls. So we tell people honestly when a case doesn't appear viable — and when possible we point them to free resources that can help with the part of their situation that is recoverable.
Adjuster already calling? Get this on your phone.
Insurance Adjuster Scripts — the 12 questions adjusters routinely ask, the legal basis for refusing each, and the exact words to use. PDF + 9-minute audio. Free.
Why we offer this: because the questions adjusters ask sound innocent and aren't. Knowing what they're really asking changes what they can do with your answers.
Ready when you are.
A real Texas attorney reads what you write. You get a written assessment by email in 60 minutes — even on weekends. No phone calls from us. Free, whether or not you hire anyone.
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