Hudson, Wisconsin sits at one of the most commercially active border crossings between Wisconsin and Minnesota, where I-94 crosses the St. Croix River and where the commercial truck traffic serving the Twin Cities metro from Wisconsin’s manufacturing and distribution sector meets the reverse flow of Minnesota-based carriers delivering to western Wisconsin. When a serious truck crash occurs in this environment, the legal questions that arise go beyond the standard commercial vehicle liability analysis to include which state’s law governs the claim, whether the carrier is subject to federal or state-level commercial vehicle regulation, and how to pursue discovery against defendants who may be located in multiple states. These threshold questions must be answered before the liability analysis can be built correctly, and getting them wrong costs clients money in ways that are difficult to recover from later in the litigation.
Determining Which State’s Law Governs
The choice of law determination in a Hudson-area truck crash turns primarily on where the crash occurred relative to the St. Croix River. Crashes on the Wisconsin side of the river are governed by Wisconsin law, including Wisconsin’s 51 percent modified comparative fault bar. Crashes on the Minnesota side are governed by Minnesota law, including Minnesota’s pure comparative fault standard. For a seriously injured claimant where the insurer may be able to attribute meaningful fault, the difference between Wisconsin’s 51 percent bar and Minnesota’s pure comparative fault standard can be the difference between zero recovery and substantial recovery. Confirming the precise crash location through GPS data, police report coordinates, and physical evidence is the threshold step that determines which legal framework applies.
The I-94 Corridor’s Specific Crash Dynamics
I-94 through the Hudson area carries a high concentration of commercial truck traffic serving both the Twin Cities’ eastern suburbs and the industrial and distribution operations of western Wisconsin. The specific crash scenarios that this corridor generates most frequently include rear-end crashes in the congested sections near the I-94/I-694 interchange where traffic backs up, merge crashes at the interchange where vehicles transition between Wisconsin and Minnesota highways, and runaway truck incidents on the grades approaching the river crossings where loaded trucks’ braking systems are tested by the descending approach. Each crash type has its own EDR data profile and its own liability analysis, and the investigation that captures the correct data for the specific crash type is most effectively conducted by counsel familiar with this corridor’s specific dynamics.
Federal vs. Wisconsin State Regulation for Hudson-Area Carriers
Commercial trucks crossing the St. Croix River between Wisconsin and Minnesota are operating in interstate commerce and are subject to the full FMCSA regulatory framework. Wisconsin-based carriers operating exclusively within Wisconsin on the approaches to Hudson are potentially subject to Wisconsin’s intrastate commercial vehicle regulations rather than FMCSA standards in some circumstances, though any load with an interstate origin or destination triggers federal jurisdiction. The FMCSA’s carrier safety database provides the regulatory compliance history for every registered interstate carrier. A Hudson truck accident lawyer from Nicolet Law who resolves the choice-of-law question, serves the litigation hold within 72 hours, and determines the applicable regulatory framework gives seriously injured claimants the correct legal foundation from the first day of representation.













