San Antonio drivers see H-E-B delivery vehicles every day—everything from grocery delivery vans to larger box trucks and tractor-trailers serving stores and distribution routes. When one of those vehicles causes a crash, the injury claim often feels different than a typical two-car wreck. You are usually dealing with a professional driver, a corporate safety program, and an insurance team that evaluates claims using internal procedures and documentation you may never see unless it is requested and preserved early.
Quick Answer
If you were hit by an H-E-B delivery vehicle in San Antonio, you can generally pursue a claim the same way you would after any at-fault crash—but the evidence and the timeline matter more because commercial fleets often have driver logs, route data, maintenance records, onboard cameras, and corporate reporting.
In Texas, most personal injury and wrongful death lawsuits must be filed within two years of the date the claim accrues, with limited exceptions.
Texas also uses proportionate responsibility rules. If you are found more than 50% responsible, you cannot recover damages.
Practical next steps: get medical care, report the crash, preserve evidence (photos, witnesses, dashcam), and be careful with recorded statements until you understand what information the insurer is trying to lock in.
Why H-E-B Delivery Vehicle Claims Feel Different Than “Regular” Car Wrecks
Most H-E-B delivery crashes still come down to familiar negligence issues—following too closely, unsafe lane changes, failure to yield, distracted driving, or speed. The difference is how liability and damages get evaluated when a commercial fleet is involved:
- More documentation exists (driver logs, training files, maintenance records, onboard data).
- More parties may be involved (driver, employer, contractor, maintenance vendor, loading team).
- Commercial policies and risk protocols often drive early claim decisions and negotiation posture.
- Evidence can disappear quickly unless it is requested and preserved.
If the vehicle involved is a “commercial motor vehicle” subject to federal safety rules, additional compliance issues may become relevant—such as hours-of-service limits and inspection/maintenance obligations.
Who Can Be Responsible in an H-E-B Delivery Truck Accident?
Liability is case-specific. Depending on who owned the vehicle, who employed the driver, and what caused the crash, the responsible parties can include:
| Potentially Responsible Party | Example Issues That May Matter | Common Evidence Sources |
|---|---|---|
| Delivery driver | Speed, unsafe lane change, distracted driving, following distance | Witnesses, dashcam video, phone records (if obtainable), crash report |
| H-E-B (employer) | Negligent training/supervision, safety policy enforcement, route pressures | Training records, policies, prior incident history, internal reporting |
| Contractor/subcontractor (if used) | Employment/agency disputes, control over driver and route | Contracts, dispatch records, vehicle ownership/lease documents |
| Maintenance provider | Brake/tire/steering issues, overdue inspections | Work orders, inspection reports, maintenance schedules |
| Loader/warehouse operations | Improper loading, shifting cargo, overweight conditions | Load tickets, manifests, photos, inspection notes |
Fleet compliance can become evidence of negligence
For certain fleets and vehicles, federal rules can support a negligence theory (or help rebut defenses). Examples include:
- Hours of service limitations for certain property-carrying drivers.
- Systematic inspection, repair, and maintenance obligations for motor carriers controlling the vehicle.
Not every H-E-B delivery vehicle will fall under the same regulatory scheme; the specifics depend on the vehicle, operation, and facts of the route.
What Texas Law Means for Your Recovery
1) The two-year deadline is real
In many Texas injury and wrongful death matters, the general limitations period is two years from accrual, with exceptions that may apply in specific situations.
Do not assume an insurance claim “in progress” pauses the deadline.
2) Proportionate responsibility (the “51% bar”)
Texas proportionate responsibility rules can reduce damages based on fault allocation—and can bar recovery entirely if a claimant is found more than 50% responsible.
This is why commercial insurers often push early narratives like “unsafe lane change,” “sudden stop,” or “failure to keep a proper lookout.”
3) Minimum liability coverage exists, but serious injuries can exceed it
Texas sets minimum financial responsibility amounts for motor vehicle liability coverage (often described as 30/60/25).
In a serious truck crash, damages can exceed minimums quickly—so identifying all applicable policies and responsible parties can matter.
What To Do After an H-E-B Delivery Truck Crash in San Antonio
Immediate checklist (first 24–72 hours)
- Get evaluated medically, even if symptoms feel “minor” at first.
- Photograph: vehicle positions (if safe), damage, skid marks, road conditions, and visible injuries.
- Identify witnesses and obtain contact information.
- Preserve video: dashcam, nearby businesses, and home security footage (ask quickly—many systems overwrite).
- Do not repair or dispose of the vehicle until it is documented if the crash severity warrants it.
Obtain the crash report
Texas crash reports are handled through TxDOT’s crash records systems and related request processes. (Texas Department of Transportation)
If you are a person “directly concerned” or have a “proper interest,” Texas law provides circumstances where crash report access is permitted. (Texas Department of Transportation)
How the Insurance Process Typically Plays Out With a Large Fleet
This is a common pattern in commercial vehicle claims:
- Early contact and recorded statement request
The adjuster may push for a recorded statement before you have full medical information. A recorded statement can lock you into details about speed, distance, and symptoms. - Liability positioning
Expect questions designed to set up proportionate responsibility: lane position, braking, signal use, visibility, following distance, distraction. - Document requests and authorizations
You may be asked to sign broad medical authorizations. Consider limiting disclosures to what is reasonably relevant to the claimed injuries. - Medical evaluation window
Insurers often watch for “gaps” in treatment and argue they reflect lack of injury or causation issues. - Damages review and negotiation
Adjusters usually evaluate medical specials, treatment consistency, diagnosis support, wage documentation, and future care needs.
Evidence That Often Matters in H-E-B Delivery Vehicle Claims
Here is a practical documentation table clients can use:
| Evidence Item | Why It Matters | What You Can Do Now |
|---|---|---|
| Photos/video of scene and vehicles | Captures angles, damage, road conditions | Save originals; back them up |
| Witness info | Independent liability support | Get names/numbers; short statements if possible |
| Medical records + billing | Proves injury and damages | Keep a folder; request itemized bills |
| Wage proof | Supports lost income claims | Save pay stubs, HR letters, tax forms |
| Crash report | Baseline facts, parties, diagram | Request through TxDOT systems |
| Fleet records (logs, maintenance, training) | Can show fatigue, inspection issues, policy violations | Preserve via written request when appropriate; fleets may have systematic maintenance duties under federal rules in covered operations |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Waiting too long to get treatment (or ignoring symptoms that develop days later).
- Downplaying injuries in early calls (“I’m fine”) that later get used against you.
- Giving a detailed recorded statement before you understand the full fact pattern.
- Posting about the crash on social media while the claim is open.
- Assuming the company will “do the right thing” because it is local and well-liked. Insurance decisions are still driven by liability analysis, documentation, and rules.
Attorney Insight: The “Fleet Evidence” Clock Starts Immediately
In commercial delivery crashes, some of the most valuable evidence may be time-sensitive: onboard video that overwrites, route data, dispatch communications, and maintenance/inspection documentation tied to the specific vehicle. Where federal safety rules apply, records related to driver time limits and vehicle maintenance can become relevant to liability and safety practices.
A practical approach is to treat the case like a documentation project from day one: stabilize medical proof, confirm employment and wage loss proof, and preserve liability evidence early—especially anything controlled by the fleet.
How Long Does an H-E-B Delivery Truck Accident Claim Take in San Antonio?
Every case is different, but timelines often depend on:
- Whether liability is admitted or disputed (including proportionate responsibility arguments)
- How long medical treatment lasts and whether future care is expected
- The availability of insurance coverage and whether multiple parties are involved
- Whether the claim resolves pre-suit or requires litigation (and the litigation schedule)
Also keep the legal filing deadline in mind; many Texas injury claims have a two-year limitations period.
FAQs
Can I sue H-E-B after a delivery truck accident in San Antonio?
Potentially, yes—depending on who employed the driver, who owned the vehicle, and what negligence is supported by the evidence. Many cases resolve through insurance without a lawsuit, but suit may be necessary in disputed or high-damage matters.
What if the driver says I caused the crash?
That is where Texas proportionate responsibility becomes critical. Your recovery can be reduced by your share of fault, and if you are found more than 50% responsible you may be barred from recovery.
Do federal trucking rules apply to an H-E-B delivery vehicle?
Sometimes. It depends on the vehicle and operation. When applicable, rules about hours-of-service and systematic inspection/maintenance can become relevant to safety and negligence issues. (FMCSA)
How do I get the crash report?
Texas crash report access and purchasing is generally handled through TxDOT crash records systems and request procedures. (Texas Department of Criminal Justice)
How long do I have to file a lawsuit in Texas?
Often, two years from accrual for personal injury and wrongful death claims, with limited exceptions that can apply in particular situations. (Texas Statutes)
Next Steps If You Were Hurt in an H-E-B Delivery Truck Crash
If you want to protect your claim, focus on:
- Medical documentation (consistent care and clear records).
- Liability preservation (photos, witnesses, video sources, crash report).
- Avoiding early “lock-in” statements until the facts and injuries are known.
- Tracking losses (wages, out-of-pocket expenses, time missed, and future care recommendations).
Ryan Orsatti Law
4634 De Zavala Rd, San Antonio, TX 78249
Phone: 210-525-1200
“This blog is for informational purposes only, not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Past results do not guarantee future results.”