This page provides general legal information about Rideshare Accident accidents in Sacramento, California. It is not legal advice. Consult a licensed California attorney for guidance specific to your case.
Rideshare Accident Accidents in Sacramento
Rideshare Accident accidents in Sacramento are governed by California law — specifically PUC § 5433 and SB 371 (eff. January 1, 2026), which establish the three-period TNC insurance framework and set the $60,000 per person UM/UIM cap for third-party uninsured driver crashes — adjudicated in Sacramento County Superior Court (Gordon D. Schaber Courthouse, 720 9th St.). This page covers how that law applies in Sacramento's specific legal, procedural, and insurance context.
When a rideshare accident occurs in Sacramento, SPD or CHP responds to injury accidents within city limits. The resulting collision report — obtainable from the responding agency's records unit typically within 5–10 business days — is foundational evidence for any personal injury claim. Obtaining the full report (not the abbreviated version issued at the scene) is the first evidence step after any Sacramento accident.
California's two-year statute of limitations under CCP § 335.1 governs the filing deadline for private-party claims arising from Sacramento accidents. For accidents involving government entity vehicles — city fleet cars, transit authority buses, or state agency vehicles — the six-month Government Claims Act deadline under Government Code § 911.2 is the operative procedural requirement, beginning on the accident date with no grace period. Identifying government vehicle involvement at the Sacramento accident scene is the most time-sensitive legal determination after any California accident.
For medical evaluation following a Sacramento accident, UC Davis Medical Center or Sutter Memorial Hospital provides same-day evaluation. Same-day medical documentation creates the strongest causal link between the accident and any injury — a critical foundation for the personal injury claim regardless of which court ultimately hears the case.
See the full California Rideshare Accident legal guide for comprehensive coverage of the applicable law, evidence requirements, and the typical claim resolution process.
Which court handles rideshare accident cases in Sacramento?
Rideshare Accident personal injury cases in Sacramento are filed in Gordon D. Schaber Courthouse at 720 9th St., Sacramento, CA 95814. Park in Capitol Mall area garages. eFiling required for unlimited civil. Filing windows 8:00am–4:00pm. Trial timelines 24–30 months. Elk Grove branch serves the southern county. State agency vehicle claims require government tort claim filed with ORIM — not with the court.
How long do I have to file a rideshare accident claim in Sacramento?
The general statute of limitations is two years from the accident date under CCP § 335.1. For government entity vehicle involvement, a written tort claim is required within six months under Government Code § 911.2. File an SR-1 with the California DMV within 10 days. The most time-critical evidence preservation obligations — camera footage and, in truck cases, FMCSA driver logs — have windows of 24–72 hours and six months respectively.
What California law applies to rideshare accident accidents?
The primary statute governing rideshare accident accidents in California is PUC § 5433. California's pure comparative fault system from Li v. Yellow Cab Co. (1975) applies statewide — injured persons may recover even with partial fault. The two-year statute of limitations under CCP § 335.1 governs private party claims. See the full California Rideshare Accident legal guide for comprehensive coverage of the applicable law.
What is California's minimum auto insurance for rideshare accident claims in Sacramento?
California's minimum liability insurance is $30,000 per person / $60,000 per occurrence / $15,000 for property damage effective January 1, 2025 under SB 1107. These minimums apply statewide including in Sacramento. When the at-fault driver's coverage is insufficient to cover your damages, your own UIM coverage may supplement recovery. For rideshare accidents, SB 371's $60,000 per person UM cap (eff. January 1, 2026) applies to third-party uninsured driver crashes during Period 3.
Where can I find a licensed attorney for a rideshare accident in Sacramento?
Use the State Bar of California attorney finder to locate licensed personal injury counsel in Sacramento. Most California personal injury attorneys work on contingency — no fee unless the case succeeds. Justia's Sacramento attorney directory also provides a searchable list of licensed California counsel.
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This page is educational. To find a licensed California attorney who handles Rideshare Accident cases in the Sacramento area, use these verified directories.