Murphy sits in a busy north Texas corridor, and many rideshare trips start or end around the same real-world stress points: evening traffic, rushed lane changes, late pickups near busy roads, and stop-and-go congestion.
Common Murphy-area scenarios we see include:
- Rear-end collisions during braking in traffic (often leading to disputes about speed and suddenness)
- Intersection and turning crashes near higher-volume corridors, where each driver blames the other for entering too soon
- Near-pickup / near-drop-off injuries—when a passenger steps out, walks to a curb, or is struck while waiting for the car
- Construction or lane shifts that complicate visibility and timing (and create arguments over whether a driver “could have avoided it”)
Those situations matter because Texas claims often turn on what the evidence shows about timing, signals, lane position, and the reasonableness of each person’s actions.


