最高法院裁决:货运经纪公司可因使用危险承运商承担责任


2026年5月14日 / 美国东部时间下午4:26 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻(CBS News)

记者兼制片人 迈克尔·卡普兰

美国最高法院周四以全票一致作出裁决,一名在半挂卡车撞车事故中致残的男子可以起诉安排货物运输的经纪公司,这对公路安全倡导者来说是重大胜利,此前他们一直就不安全的货运公司以及卡车撞车事故造成的大量死亡和受伤情况敲响警钟。

哥伦比亚广播公司新闻上月的一项调查揭露了陆路货运需求激增的普遍规模及其致命后果——部分原因是越来越多的人在线购物,以及这种需求给美国货运车队带来的压力。

最高法院驳回了货运行业的论点,即要求大型物流公司对合作承运商的安全背景进行筛查是不公平且会加重负担的。

法院的一致裁决为肖恩·蒙哥马利的诉讼继续推进扫清了道路。2017年,在伊利诺伊州,一名超速行驶的卡车司机撞上了他停放的车辆,导致蒙哥马利失去了一条腿。蒙哥马利起诉了美国最大的货运经纪公司C.H.罗宾逊,正是该公司将货物分包给了涉事司机和货运公司。诉讼声称,C.H.罗宾逊本应知晓该公司存疑的安全记录。

这家经纪公司——以及特朗普政府和其他大型货运利益集团——辩称,允许此类诉讼继续进行会让他们在一系列复杂的州法律下承担责任。他们还辩称,他们不应为安全筛查负责,他们表示安全筛查是联邦政府的职责,由联邦政府为承运商颁发执照。

代表蒙哥马利和其他撞车事故受害者的律师迈克尔·莱泽曼表示,这一裁决可能会给经纪公司施加压力,促使它们淘汰危险司机。

“除非有人雇佣他们,否则他们不会驾驶8万磅重的车辆上路,”莱泽曼说,“而很多时候,雇佣他们的正是C.H.罗宾逊这样的大型经纪公司。”

哥伦比亚广播公司新闻的调查记录了数千家货运公司如何通过更换新名称来逃避联邦监管。调查发现,数十家此类公司曾承接C.H.罗宾逊经纪的货物运输业务,其中一些公司引发了严重撞车事故。

其中一个案例:2022年平安夜发生在俄亥俄州的撞车事故,造成一家四口全部遇难。涉事卡车由BLF货运公司运营,该公司此前曾使用另外三个名称运营,每个名称都曾被监管机构标记为存在安全隐患。

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2022年平安夜发生在俄亥俄州75号州际公路的致命撞车事故现场,一辆半挂卡车(左)越过中央分隔带,撞上一辆SUV和一辆皮卡。俄亥俄州州警

BLF的经营者亚历山大·德尔加多在哥伦比亚广播公司新闻获得的一份证词中表示,C.H.罗宾逊的一名代表在他之前的公司因安全问题被政府勒令停业后,曾指导他“再开一家”货运公司。

C.H.罗宾逊在一份声明中表示,BLF“通过双重分包货物欺骗了C.H.罗宾逊,这违反了联邦法律和我们的承运商协议”,并表示德尔加多的指控“来自一位可信度存疑的承运商老板”。

哥伦比亚广播公司新闻对数百万份交通部记录进行的独家分析发现,仅自2021年以来,政府就批准了至少1万家这类改头换面的“变色龙承运商”。这些经营者通常使用与有严重安全问题记录的已倒闭公司相同的管理人员、设施或设备。

哥伦比亚广播公司的数据分析显示,这类承运商在美国公路上构成了巨大的危险;它们涉及严重撞车事故的概率是未更名公司的四倍。在过去五年中,至少有141人在与这些运营商相关的撞车事故中丧生,1800人受伤。

尽管政府多次承诺打击“变色龙承运商”,但联邦监管机构仍在继续无视自身数据中明显的危险信号。哥伦比亚广播公司新闻的调查发现,超过3万家承运商使用虚假或无法送达的注册地址,例如“NOMORE, GONE, GA”。尽管自2015年以来货运公司数量激增了31%,但联邦机动车货运安全管理局(FMCSA)的员工人数却减少了10%。

这家总部位于明尼苏达州的C.H.罗宾逊曾在芝加哥上诉法院维持的一项裁决中驳回了该诉讼,但蒙哥马利向最高法院提起了上诉。

艾米·科尼·巴雷特大法官写道,经纪公司声称能保护其在州法院免于承担责任的联邦交通法豁免条款中,包含了涉及机动车安全的豁免条款。

“因此,要求C.H.罗宾逊在选择承运商时尽到普通注意义务,涉及机动车——最明显的是将运输货物的卡车。因此,蒙哥马利的过失雇佣索赔属于该法律的安全例外范围,”她写道,裁定该诉讼可以继续推进。

C.H.罗宾逊还面临与其经纪的其他货物运输相关的类似诉讼,其中两起在哥伦比亚广播公司新闻的调查中被重点提及。

C.H.罗宾逊的首席法律官多萝西·卡珀斯在一份声明中表示,公司对法院的裁决感到失望。

“我们的心始终与卡车事故的受害者同在。安全是我们的立身之本——我们的员工和他们的家人也行驶在这些道路上,我们的业务依赖于安全的货运交付,”卡珀斯在声明中说,“虽然我们对法院的裁决感到失望,但我们将继续负责任地运营,支持更有力的联邦执法,并与监管机构、承运商和客户合作,完善全国安全体系,为全国范围内安全、可靠的运输提供支持。”

Supreme Court rules trucking broker can be held responsible for using dangerous haulers

May 14, 2026 / 4:26 PM EDT / CBS News

By Michael Kaplan Reporter and Producer

The Supreme Court ruled unanimously Thursday that a man maimed in a tractor-trailer crash could sue the broker who arranged the load, a major win for highway safety advocates who have sounded alarms about unsafe trucking companies and the high number of deaths and injuries in truck crashes.

A CBS News investigation last month revealed the widespread scope — and deadly consequences — of the explosion in demand for overland shipping, in part because more people shop online, and the strain that demand has placed on America’s trucking fleet.

The high court rejected arguments from the trucking industry that it would be unfair and burdensome to hold big logistics companies responsible for screening the safety backgrounds of the haulers they work with.

The court’s unanimous decision clears the way for the continuation of a lawsuit by Shawn Montgomery, who lost part of his leg when a speeding truck driver slammed into his parked vehicle in Illinois in 2017. Montgomery sued C.H. Robinson, the country’s largest freight broker and the one that contracted the load to a driver and trucking firm. The lawsuit claimed C.H. Robinson should have been aware of the firm’s questionable safety record.

The broker — along with the Trump administration and other large trucking interests — argued that allowing such lawsuits to go forward would expose them to liability under a convoluted mix of state laws. They also argued they should not be held responsible for safety screening that they say is the role of the federal government, which licenses haulers.

Michael Leizerman, an attorney who represented Montgomery and other crash victims, said the ruling could put pressure on brokers to weed out dangerous drivers.

“They don’t end up behind the wheel of an 80,000-pound vehicle unless someone hires them to do so,” Leizerman said. “And many times that’s the large brokers like C.H. Robinson.”

The CBS News investigation documented how thousands of trucking companies have evaded federal oversight by reincarnating under new names. The investigation found dozens of such companies that have hauled loads brokered by C.H. Robinson, some resulting in severe crashes.

One example: the 2022 Christmas Eve crash in Ohio that killed four members of a single family. The truck was operated by BLF Truck Transportation, a company that had previously operated under three other names each of which had been flagged by regulators for safety concerns.

The aftermath of a deadly 2022 Christmas Eve crash on I-75 in Ohio where a semi-truck (left) crossed the median and slammed into an SUV and a pickup. Ohio State Highway Patrol

Alexander Delgado, the operator of BLF, testified in a deposition obtained by CBS News that a representative from C.H. Robinson coached him to “open up another” trucking company after his previous company faced a government shutdown for safety problems.

In a statement, C.H. Robinson said BLF “deceived C.H. Robinson by double brokering a load, which is a violation of federal law and our carrier agreements” and said Delgado’s allegation “comes from a carrier owner whose credibility is in question.”

CBS News’ exclusive analysis of millions of Department of Transportation records found the government approved at least 10,000 of these reconstituted “chameleon carriers” just since 2021. The operators often use the same officers, facilities, or equipment as defunct companies with serious safety concerns on their records.

CBS’ data analysis revealed these kinds of carriers represent a profound danger on American highways; they are four times more likely to be involved in severe crashes than companies that are not reincarnated. Over the last five years, at least 141 people have died and 1,800 have been injured in crashes involving these operators.

Despite repeated promises of government crackdowns on chameleon carriers, federal regulators continue to miss blatant red flags in their own data. The CBS News investigation identified over 30,000 carriers using fake or undeliverable registration addresses, such as “NOMORE, GONE, GA”. While the number of trucking firms surged by 31% since 2015, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) workforce has decreased by 10%.

The Minnesota-based C.H. Robinson had gotten the lawsuit dismissed in a ruling affirmed by an appeals court in Chicago, but Montgomery appealed to the Supreme Court.

Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote that the federal transportation law exemptions that the broker said protected it from liability in state courts include an exemption for cases involving motor vehicle safety.

“Requiring C.H. Robinson to exercise ordinary care in selecting a carrier therefore concerns motor vehicles — most obviously, the trucks that will transport the goods. So Montgomery’s negligent-hiring claim falls with the (law)’s safety exception,” she wrote, determining that the lawsuit can move forward.

C.H. Robinson is the subject of similar lawsuits related to other loads it brokered, including two profiled in the CBS News investigation.

Dorothy Capers, chief legal officer at C.H. Robinson, said in a statement that the company was disappointed in the court’s ruling.

“Our hearts continue to go out to the victims of truck accidents. Safety is foundational to who we are — our employees and their families travel these same roads, and our business depends on safe freight delivery,” Capers’ statement said. “While we are disappointed in the Court’s decision, we will continue to operate responsibly, support stronger federal enforcement, and work constructively with regulators, carriers, and customers to strengthen the national safety system and support safe, reliable transportation across the country.”

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