Abogados de Accidentes de California • Car Accident Lawyers of California
Expert legal representation — Mission Hills, California
Free Consultation: Call 661-383-9387 today. No fee unless we win. Hablamos Español: 661-669-7362
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1. Freeway Accidents Attorney Serving Mission Hills
California's freeways are among the busiest and most dangerous in the nation. High speeds, heavy traffic, distracted drivers, and aggressive driving create conditions for catastrophic multi-vehicle pileups, rollover accidents, and deadly collisions.
In Mission Hills, a neighborhood in the northern San Fernando Valley situated between the I-405 and I-5 freeways, home to Providence Holy Cross Medical Center, freeway accidents are a constant reality. With a population of approximately 20,000 and traffic on I-405, I-5, Sepulveda Boulevard, San Fernando Mission Boulevard, Brand Boulevard, conditions are ripe for serious accidents that can change lives forever.
At Car Accident Lawyers of California, Attorney Paula J. Khehra, Esq. has over 10 years of experience handling freeway accidents cases in Mission Hills and throughout Kern County. Our firm has recovered over $100 million for accident victims. With a perfect 10.0 Avvo rating and recognized as a Super Lawyers Rising Star for 10 consecutive years (2017–2026), your case is in the best hands.
Many freeway accidents involve collisions with car accidents, semi-truck accidents, and motorcycle accidents. We also handle tow truck accidents and pedestrian accidents cases in Mission Hills.
2. Why Choose a Local Attorney in Mission Hills?
Our attorneys know the roads, intersections, and traffic patterns in Mission Hills. We know which stretches of I-405, I-5, Sepulveda Boulevard, San Fernando Mission Boulevard, Brand Boulevard are most dangerous, we're familiar with the Providence Holy Cross Medical Center campus, the San Fernando Mission area, the Sepulveda Boulevard commercial corridor, and the I-405 interchange areas, and we understand the local factors that contribute to accidents. We also know the Los Angeles County Superior Court — San Fernando Courthouse and local legal procedures that give your case a strategic advantage that out-of-area firms cannot match.
3. Freeway Accidents in Mission Hills: High-Risk Areas
The I-405 freeway passes through Mission Hills, and the on-ramp and off-ramp areas create dangerous merge zones where high-speed freeway traffic meets local street traffic. The I-5 freeway is accessible via San Fernando Road to the east, and drivers traveling between the two freeways use Mission Hills' surface streets as connectors, bringing freeway-speed driving habits to local roads.
The most dangerous freeway stretches in and around Mission Hills include the I-405/I-5 interchange — one of the most congested and dangerous points in all of Southern California — where high-speed lane changes between trucks and passenger vehicles cause daily collisions, SR-118 (Ronald Reagan Freeway) between Mission Hills and Granada Hills with its grades and curves that surprise unfamiliar drivers, the connecting ramps between I-405 and SR-118 where outdated design doesn't allow safe merges at freeway speeds, and the I-5 northbound stretch near Mission Hills where traffic compresses before the pass through the Santa Clarita mountains.
4. California Laws That Apply to Your Case
Understanding the California laws that apply to your freeway accidents case is crucial to maximizing your compensation:
California Laws That Apply to Freeway Accident Cases
CVC §22348(b) — No person shall drive a vehicle on a California highway at a speed greater than 65 mph (or 70 mph where posted).
CVC §22350 — The Basic Speed Law prohibits driving faster than is safe for current conditions, including weather, visibility, and traffic.
CVC §21703 — Following too closely (tailgating) is illegal in California. The driver of a vehicle shall not follow another more closely than is reasonable and prudent.
CVC §21651(a) — Driving the wrong way on a divided highway is a misdemeanor that often results in devastating head-on collisions.
Government Code §835 — A public entity (Caltrans, city, county) may be liable for dangerous road conditions on freeways it maintains, including inadequate lighting, missing guardrails, or defective signage.
5. Common Injury Types in Freeway Accidents Cases
Victims of freeway accidents in Mission Hills frequently suffer serious injuries requiring extensive medical treatment. Common injuries include: Severe traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord injuries with paralysis, multiple fractures from high-speed impacts, internal bleeding, organ damage, severe burns from vehicle fires, crush injuries in multi-vehicle pileups, amputation injuries, facial disfigurement, and wrongful death.
6. What to Do After a Freeway Accident in Mission Hills
Seek medical attention immediately — visit Providence Holy Cross Medical Center right away, even if injuries seem minor. Delayed symptoms are common, especially traumatic brain injuries and soft tissue injuries that may not manifest until hours or days after the accident.
Document everything — photograph the scene, your injuries, road conditions, traffic signs, and any hazardous conditions. Get names and phone numbers from all witnesses.
Report the incident — call 911 to create an official record. A police report is crucial evidence for your claim.
Do not give recorded statements to insurance adjusters without first consulting an attorney. Insurance companies use your own words against you to minimize your compensation.
Contact Car Accident Lawyers of California at 661-383-9387 for a free consultation. We serve Mission Hills and all surrounding communities. Hablamos Español: 661-669-7362.
7. Compensation Available to Mission Hills Victims
Freeway accidents in Mission Hills present unique compensation opportunities because they frequently involve government liability in addition to other drivers' negligence. Higher freeway speeds produce more severe injuries, and the causes of the accident may include road design and maintenance defects that are the responsibility of government entities.
Claims against Caltrans and government entities — under Government Code §835, Caltrans and local transportation agencies can be held liable for dangerous highway conditions, including: inadequate or missing signage, defective or absent guardrails and barriers, dangerous on-ramp and off-ramp design, lack of adequate lighting, uncleared debris accumulation, poor drainage causing water pooling, and unrepaired pavement defects and potholes. Critical deadline: claims against government entities require filing an administrative claim within 6 months of the accident (Government Code §911.2), a much shorter window than the standard two-year statute of limitations. Missing this deadline can eliminate your right to compensation from the government entity entirely.
Medical expenses for high-speed injuries — freeway accidents occur at significantly higher speeds than on local streets, resulting in more catastrophic injuries: severe traumatic brain injury, spinal cord damage, multiple fractures, crush injuries, and burns in vehicular fire cases. Medical compensation reflects this amplified severity.
Lost wages and extended rehabilitation — high-speed injuries typically require longer recovery periods, multiple surgeries, and intensive rehabilitation, resulting in greater lost income and potential permanent work disability.
Multi-vehicle pileups and multiple at-fault parties — multi-vehicle freeway accidents frequently involve several negligent drivers. Under California's pure comparative negligence system, liability is distributed proportionally among all at-fault parties, and you can recover compensation from each according to their percentage of fault.
Pain and suffering — chronic physical pain, emotional distress, PTSD (particularly common in high-speed freeway crash survivors), driving anxiety (vehophobia), and permanent reduction in quality of life.
Construction zones — if your accident occurred in a construction zone, the contracting companies and their subcontractors may also be liable if temporary signage was inadequate, lanes were poorly delineated, or work zone conditions created an unreasonable hazard.
8. Case Example
9. Frequently Asked Questions: Freeway Accidents in Mission Hills
Who is liable for poor highway design or maintenance?
If a dangerous highway condition — such as defective design, missing guardrails, confusing signage, inadequate lighting, or deteriorating pavement — contributed to your accident, the responsible government entity can be sued. In California, this may be Caltrans (for state highways), the county, or the city. Under the Government Claims Act (Gov. Code §835), you must show a dangerous condition existed and the entity knew or should have known about it. The deadline to file an administrative claim is only six months.
What should I do if I was in a chain-reaction pileup on the freeway?
Chain-reaction freeway pileups involve multiple vehicles and are especially complex legally because they require determining which driver initiated the collision and how each subsequent impact contributed to your injuries. In California, each negligent driver is proportionally liable. Vehicle black box data, traffic cameras, and CHP reports are critical evidence. Our attorneys work with accident reconstruction experts to establish the exact sequence of events and each party's responsibility.
Can I sue Caltrans if a construction or work zone caused my freeway accident?
Yes. Freeway construction zones must comply with strict MUTCD safety standards. If signage was inadequate, barriers improperly placed, or lane transitions confusing, both Caltrans and the construction contractor may be liable. Work zone accidents frequently result in serious injuries.
Do I need a lawyer if Caltrans claims the freeway was safe?
Yes. Caltrans frequently denies liability by arguing the freeway met design standards. An experienced attorney can hire independent traffic engineers to prove the condition was dangerous, that Caltrans received prior complaints, or that previous accidents at the same location created a known pattern of danger. Do not take the government agency's word without legal representation.
What should I do immediately after a freeway accident?
First, if safe to do so, move your vehicle to the right shoulder to avoid secondary collisions. Turn on hazard lights. Call 911 immediately. Do not stand in traffic lanes. Take photos of the scene, vehicles, and your injuries. Get witness contact information. Do not admit fault or speak with other drivers' insurance companies. Seek medical attention even if your injuries seem minor — many serious injuries don't show immediate symptoms.
What should I do if my car breaks down on the freeway?
Move your vehicle to the shoulder if possible, turn on hazard lights, and stay inside your vehicle with your seatbelt on if traffic is heavy. Call 911 or CHP for assistance. If you are struck by another vehicle while stopped on the shoulder, the other driver is almost certainly at fault. Under CVC §21718, stopping on the freeway is prohibited except in emergencies, but the law protects those who must stop due to vehicle malfunction.
Can fog or weather conditions affect my freeway accident case?
Weather conditions like fog, rain, or strong winds do not eliminate other drivers' liability. In California, drivers have a legal duty to adjust their speed and driving to current conditions. If a driver was going too fast for visibility conditions, that constitutes negligence. Additionally, if Caltrans failed to provide adequate fog warning signage in areas known for low visibility, the agency may also be liable.