The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancesharp-finch-003

Adjuster keeps showing up at my house over a crash from like 18 months ago — what's going on?

So this whole situation has me really confused and honestly a little freaked out.

About a year and a half ago I borrowed my brother's truck to help him move some stuff. On the way back I got into a fender-bender — totally my fault, I'll own that. We pulled over, exchanged info, took photos, filed a police report on the spot. The other driver seemed fine, their car had minor damage, and we both went on our way.

Here's the weird part: my brother (whose truck it was) says he never heard a single thing from his insurance company after that. No letters, no calls, no claim update — nothing. We just kind of assumed it got sorted or the other driver didn't pursue it.

Now, out of nowhere, there's a field adjuster from some third-party claims company who has come to my personal address three times in the past month. They say they're handling a claim filed against my brother related to that incident. But here's what's confusing me — the other driver was insured through a completely different company than my brother. So why is this random third-party outfit coming after me, at my house, over a claim that supposedly involves my brother's policy?

I haven't said a word to this person. Something feels off. I don't understand why: 1. It took this long for anyone to show up 2. They're at my door and not my brother's 3. A third-party adjuster is involved at all

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Should I just keep ignoring them or do I need to actually do something here? I don't want this to blow up into something bigger because I stayed quiet.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 15
    curious-elk-034

    Do not open that door and do not say a single word to that person. Field adjusters showing up unannounced at someone's home — especially someone who wasn't even the policyholder — is a pressure tactic. They're hoping you'll say something off the cuff that they can use. The fact that they've come back three times tells me they're not getting what they want elsewhere.

    • 7
      weary-driver662

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 17
    sharp-beaver-930

    I used to work in claims and I can shed a little light on this. Third-party adjusting firms get hired by insurance companies to investigate claims when the original insurer wants to subrogation — meaning they paid out something and now want to recover money from whoever was at fault. The gap in time actually makes sense in that context because subrogation cases can move slowly. That said, them showing up at your address instead of the actual policyholder's is unusual. Could be a skip-trace mix-up, or they genuinely believe you're the responsible party. Either way, your instinct to stay quiet is correct — anything you say will be documented.

    • 10
      mellow-tern-915

      A couple of things worth knowing: you are generally not obligated to speak with an adjuster representing a third party. They have no legal authority to compel you to talk. What does matter is whether a lawsuit gets filed — if that happens, ignoring it would be a serious problem. I'd suggest your brother loop in his insurance company ASAP if he hasn't already, because his policy likely requires him to cooperate with the defense of any claim arising from his vehicle. The insurer having your address instead of his is worth asking questions about too.

    • 3
      calm-parent277

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 9
    plain-sparrow-626

    Not legal advice, but the subrogation angle the former adjuster mentioned is very plausible here. If the other driver's insurer paid out a claim on their end, they may now be trying to recover that money from your brother's policy — and potentially from you personally since you were driving. The statute of limitations on these things varies by state, so 18 months is not necessarily too late. I'd strongly encourage your brother to notify his insurer in writing immediately and you should consider at least a free consult with a PI attorney to understand your exposure before you accidentally say the wrong thing.

  • 13
    careful-badger-764

    I had something weirdly similar happen where I borrowed a family member's car, got into an accident, and then heard absolutely nothing for months. Then boom — letters and calls out of nowhere. It turned out the other party had filed a delayed injury claim. The silence early on doesn't mean it went away. Definitely get your brother involved if he isn't already because it's his policy that's technically on the hook.

    • 0
      quiet-survivor930

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 7
    bright-lynx-053

    Three things: (1) Tell your brother today, not tomorrow. (2) Your brother needs to call his insurance company and report this contact — most policies require prompt notification of claims or they can deny coverage. (3) You personally should stop answering the door for this person until you at least know what the claim actually says. You can't un-say something.

    • 4
      kind-wanderer334

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 11
    curious-otter-536

    This would genuinely stress me out too, especially them showing up at your home multiple times. That feels really invasive. Please just make sure your brother knows what's going on — this is really his responsibility to deal with through his insurance, and you shouldn't be carrying this alone.

    • 0
      gentle-driver146

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 6
    careful-grouse-271

    A few things I'm not clear on — did you ever get added to your brother's policy after the accident, even informally? And did either of you ever receive any written notice of a claim, even something that looked like junk mail? Sometimes people toss those without realizing what they are. Also, how did this adjuster get your address specifically? That detail seems important.