Fresno, CA Rideshare Delivery Accident

Rideshare Delivery Accident in Fresno

Dual-app insurance gaps · Ins. Code § 11580.9 · Fresno County Superior Court

Written by Jayson Elliott, J.D.  ·  California-Licensed Attorney & Legal Writer Updated April 2026
Legal Information Notice

This page provides general legal information about rideshare delivery accident cases in Fresno, California. It is not legal advice. Consult a licensed California attorney for guidance specific to your case.

Rideshare Delivery Accident in Fresno

Dual-app gig driving occurs in Fresno as drivers operate both rideshare and food delivery apps simultaneously. When a driver operating both a rideshare app (Uber, Lyft) and a delivery app (DoorDash, Uber Eats) simultaneously causes an accident in Fresno, competing coverage claims between the two platforms create insurance conflicts that are governed by California Insurance Code section 11580.9. Determining which policy pays — and how much — requires understanding the priority rules California law establishes for overlapping gig economy coverage.

The Dual-App Coverage Conflict in Fresno

A driver simultaneously logged into Uber (or Lyft) and DoorDash (or Uber Eats) may trigger coverage obligations from two separate platforms at the moment of an accident. Both platforms’ policies may purport to apply — or each may claim the other’s policy is primary. California Insurance Code § 11580.9 establishes the priority framework for resolving these conflicts.

California Insurance Code § 11580.9 Priority Rules

Under Insurance Code § 11580.9, when a driver is covered by more than one policy, priority is determined by the driver’s activity status at the time of the accident:

  • The policy covering the driver’s active phase (order accepted, en route) is primary.
  • If both apps show the driver in an active phase simultaneously, the policies share coverage proportionally.
  • If neither platform’s coverage is clearly primary, the dispute escalates to interpleader or declaratory relief proceedings in Fresno County Superior Court.

UM/UIM as a Backstop

In dual-app scenarios where platform coverage is disputed or both platforms deny primary coverage, UM/UIM coverage on the claimant’s own policy (required under Insurance Code § 11580.2) may serve as a backstop while the coverage dispute between platforms is resolved.

California Insurance Code § 11580.9  ·  TNC/Gig Coverage Priority

Insurance Code § 11580.9 governs the priority of insurance coverage when a driver operating a transportation network company (TNC) or delivery platform vehicle is involved in an accident. The statute establishes that the policy covering the driver’s most recent active transaction is primary, with lower-priority policies providing excess coverage. This framework applies to all dual-app gig driver accidents in California, including those in Fresno.

California Law That Applies

Statute of limitations: Two years from the date of injury under CCP § 335.1. Claims against the City of Fresno or Fresno County require a government claim within six months of the accident under the California Government Claims Act.

Proposition 22: Both rideshare and delivery app drivers are classified as independent contractors in California under Prop 22. Third-party injury claims are unaffected by this classification.

Pure comparative fault: Under Civil Code § 1431.2, damages are recoverable even with shared fault, reduced proportionally.

Courts and Filing in Fresno

Rideshare-delivery accident lawsuits in Fresno County are filed at the B.F. Sisk Courthouse — Fresno County Superior Court, 1130 O Street, Fresno, CA 93721. Coverage priority disputes under Insurance Code § 11580.9 may be litigated through declaratory relief actions in the same court before or alongside the underlying personal injury claim. Cases typically take 18 to 24 months to reach trial.

What to Do After a Dual-App Delivery Accident in Fresno

  1. Call 911 and request the Fresno Police Department.
  2. Ask the driver which apps they had open at the time of the accident and whether they had an active order or ride.
  3. Photograph the driver’s phone screen if it is visible and shows active app status.
  4. Collect the driver’s full insurance information and request the names of all platforms they were operating.
  5. Seek medical evaluation promptly.
  6. Report the accident to both platforms if the driver was operating dual apps.
  7. Report to your own auto insurer and confirm UM/UIM coverage is on your policy.
Fresno — Rideshare Delivery Accident

Frequently Asked Questions

General answers about rideshare delivery accident claims in Fresno. These are educational — your specific situation requires a licensed California attorney.

Find a Rideshare Delivery Accident Attorney in Fresno

This page is educational. To find a licensed California attorney who handles rideshare delivery accident cases in Fresno, use these verified directories.