The Shoulder
The Shoulder
68
tidy-stoat-098

Hit a jackknifed semi that was blocking my lane — need help understanding the physics/liability

So this happened a few weeks ago and I'm still trying to wrap my head around it, both physically and legally.

I was driving home on a two-lane rural highway, totally normal conditions — dry road, clear sky, middle of the afternoon. Out of nowhere there's a fully loaded flatbed semi jackknifed across both lanes. The cab had drifted off the shoulder and the trailer was lying diagonally across the road like a wall. No cones, no flares, nothing.

I had maybe two seconds of visibility before I hit it. I was doing the speed limit. There was a guardrail on my right and oncoming traffic on my left so I had literally nowhere to go. I T-boned the side of the trailer pretty much dead-on.

Here's the weird part I keep obsessing over: after the impact, the trailer actually rotated. Like, the whole thing pivoted around the kingpin connection and ended up almost parallel with the road. A witness at the scene even commented on it — said it "swung like a gate."

I've been going down rabbit holes trying to understand how much force it would've taken to do that. I know my truck's weight and my speed so I've been trying to calculate momentum and rotational force. I kind of want to understand it because I feel like it proves I had no chance of stopping.

Anybody dealt with something like this? Does the physics analysis actually matter for the insurance claim? My adjuster keeps asking questions that feel like they're trying to pin something on me and I'm getting anxious.

For the record I ended up with a fractured collarbone, cracked sternum, and I'm still in PT. Truck is totaled.

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12 replies

  • 21
    hearty-stoat-217

    I used to sit on the other side of these claims. The physics analysis you're doing? It can genuinely help, but only if it gets packaged correctly. A raw calculation you did yourself won't move the needle — what matters is whether a certified accident reconstructionist signs off on it. Companies take those reports seriously because they're defensible in court. If liability is contested here, push hard to get one involved. Also — multiple parties may share fault: the trucking company, possibly whoever was responsible for road maintenance or signage. That's worth exploring.

    • 6
      calm-rider597

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 20
    careful-heron-981

    The 'trailer swinging like a gate' thing is wild — I believe it though. I hit a stalled box truck last year and the physics of what happened to the vehicle after impact surprised everyone including the responding officer. The crash reconstructionist they brought in basically told the story for me, way better than I ever could have. If there's any dispute about how it happened, that kind of expert can be a game changer.

  • 20
    quiet-owl-038

    Fractured collarbone AND cracked sternum from a single impact — please don't rush your recovery timeline just because you feel pressure to 'get back to normal.' Sternal fractures especially can have lingering complications that don't show up right away. Make sure your follow-up imaging is thorough and keep every single medical record. Pain that seems manageable now can flare badly months later, and you want documentation that ties it to this accident.

    • 0
      gentle-walker568

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 13
    patient-wren-064

    Not legal advice, but commercially operated vehicles are a different beast than regular car accidents. There's often a web of liability — the driver, the trucking company, potentially a leasing company or cargo owner. The fact that the trailer was blocking the road with no warning devices is a significant detail. Don't settle anything until you fully understand who all the responsible parties are. Seriously worth at least one free consultation.

  • 10
    gentle-crow-453

    I just want to say — a fractured collarbone and cracked sternum and you're out here doing force calculations trying to prove you couldn't have done anything differently. That breaks my heart a little. You know it wasn't your fault. I hope you have people around you helping you through this, not just the legal stuff but the emotional weight of it too. Accidents like this mess with your head for a long time.

  • 9
    humble-badger-728

    Dude, stop doing physics homework and call a PI attorney this week. The calculations might feel like they're helping you process the trauma (I get it), but the reconstructionist they hire will do that work. Your job right now is to heal, document your injuries obsessively, and not give the insurance company any more ammunition. Two seconds of reaction time, nowhere to go, and you're the one with a broken sternum — focus on that story.

  • 6
    swift-hare-118

    Stop answering your adjuster's questions without at least talking to an attorney first. I mean it. When an adjuster is asking things that feel off, they're usually building a file to justify reducing your payout or shifting partial fault onto you. That 'where exactly were you looking' or 'how long before impact did you see it' stuff — those aren't casual questions. Be careful.

    • 23
      sharp-grouse-545

      A few things worth knowing from a process standpoint:

      1. Preserve everything now — dashcam footage, witness contact info, photos of the scene and trailer position, your phone's location data if applicable. 2. The trucking company almost certainly has a rapid-response legal team that was dispatched to that scene within hours of the crash. That team was there to protect the company's interests, not document the truth neutrally. 3. Because there's a commercial vehicle involved, there are federal regulations (FMCSA) that may apply — hours of service, maintenance logs, etc. Those records can be subpoenaed but there are time limits on how long companies keep them.

      Not telling you what to do, just stuff that tends to matter in these situations.

    • 21
      genuine-grouse-865

      A couple of questions that might affect how this plays out: Was there any advance warning at all — like were there other vehicles stopped ahead of you, or hazard lights visible? And was the trucking company's driver still in the cab when you hit, or had they exited? I ask because if there were any steps the driver could have taken to warn oncoming traffic and didn't, that's a very different liability picture than if the jackknife literally just happened seconds before you arrived.

    • 0
      plainspoken-late-shift479

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.