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In most cases, the answer is “Yes, you may sue the company too.”  An injured party can sue the company as well as the driver, though there are exceptions. If a driver is in the course and scope of hi...

In most cases, the answer is “Yes, you may sue the company too.”  An injured party can sue the company as well as the driver, though there are exceptions.


If a driver is in the course and scope of his employment at the time he injures someone in a car or truck wreck, the company is generally liable for the injuries under the doctrine of Respondeat Superior.  This old Latin phrase translates to mean that the master is financially responsible for the wrongdoing of the servant.  In present-day Georgia, that principle exists to this day.  If the employer admits that the employee was on duty at the time of a collision, then the employer is also responsible for damages automatically if the employee is proven to be at fault for the wreck.  An experienced truck accident lawyer can help you in this instance.


In some cases, the employer may dispute whether the employee was in the course and scope of their employment at the time of the collision.  The employer may claim that the employee was off duty or that he or she was on an unauthorized personal break, not on company business.  For instance, suppose a delivery driver operating a company van is supposed to be travelling to a customer’s home for a scheduled delivery, but instead decides to drive to Walmart first for some personal items.  Suppose that employee hits someone in the Walmart parking lot.  Is the employer responsible?  Maybe not.  The employer may dispute responsibility since the employee was not on the business of the company at the time.


Even under the scenario where the employer is not responsible, the auto insurance covering a company vehicle the employee drove when they caused the wreck should still cover the incident.  So long as that driver had permission to be driving that vehicle at the time of the collision, insurance should still apply.  However, if the employee is driving his or her own vehicle, and not a company car, then the injured victim may be stuck with the personal liability insurance policy of the employee, the dollar limits of which are probably much lower than a corporate insurance policy.

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