
The León Law Firm, P.C. has released a comprehensive rideshare accident guide addressing a critical gap in how Texas crash victims understand and pursue injury claims against Uber and Lyft. The guide details the regulatory and insurance framework that governs rideshare liability — a framework that, according to the firm, most victims never see explained clearly before accepting a settlement.
At the center of the guide is Texas Insurance Code Chapter 1954, which establishes four distinct coverage periods that determine which insurance policy applies at the moment of a crash. When the app is off, only the driver’s personal auto insurance is in play. When the driver is logged in and waiting for a ride request, contingent coverage of $50,000 per person, $100,000 per accident, and $25,000 in property damage activates — but only if the driver’s personal insurer denies the claim first. Once a driver is en route to pick up a passenger or actively transporting one, Uber and Lyft’s full $1 million commercial liability policy applies. Identifying which period was active at the moment of impact is not a formality — it is the single factor that can separate a five-figure denial from a seven-figure recovery.
The guide also highlights a second liability pathway that the firm says is routinely missed: direct negligent-hiring claims against rideshare corporations under Texas House Bill 1733. Enacted in 2016, HB 1733 requires Transportation Network Companies to conduct background checks on all drivers before deployment. When Uber or Lyft approves a driver with disqualifying criminal history, prior DWIs, or a reckless driving record, the corporation — not just the driver — may be held directly liable for resulting injuries. This claim theory bypasses the employee classification debate entirely. The firm evaluates every rideshare case for HB 1733 exposure as a standard step, noting that many attorneys who handle vehicle accident claims are unfamiliar with the regulatory nuances that make this theory viable in Texas litigation.
Among the guide’s 10-step post-crash protocol, one action stands out as the most time-sensitive: screenshotting the Uber or Lyft app immediately after impact and before closing it. That single screenshot locks in which coverage period applies and removes the insurer’s most common defense — that the app was inactive at the time of the collision. The protocol also advises all injured parties to avoid giving recorded statements to any insurer before consulting legal counsel, as initial settlement offers in rideshare cases routinely fall below actual claim value once future medical costs, lost income, and non-economic damages are properly calculated.
The guide covers all victim categories — passengers in the rideshare vehicle, occupants of other cars, pedestrians, cyclists, and rideshare drivers injured by third-party negligence. Each group faces a different insurance activation sequence. The León Law Firm’s experience extends across the full spectrum of serious vehicle injury claims, including cases involving 18-wheeler accident liability where similar insurance layering and corporate negligence theories determine case value.
Victims pursuing rideshare injury claims may recover economic damages including medical bills, lost wages, rehabilitation costs, and future care needs, as well as non-economic damages covering pain and suffering, emotional distress, and permanent disability. In cases where negligent hiring created the conditions for the crash, punitive damages may also be available under Texas law. The firm operates on a contingency-fee basis with no upfront costs, offers free consultations, and provides bilingual English and Spanish services. The León Law Firm’s trial record includes a $13 million verdict secured in a Texas personal injury case in 2023.
The full guide is available at The León Law Firm’s website. Internet marketing services and content strategy by ASTOUNDZ — a national digital marketing agency built for law firms that compete to win.
The León Law Firm, P.C.
1 Sugar Creek Center Boulevard
Sugar Land
TX
77478
United States

