The Shoulder
The Shoulder
69
candid-mole-213

Arbitration just ruled me 100% at fault after their driver hit ME — what now??

I'm honestly stunned and need to vent but also genuinely need some guidance here.

Earlier this year a landscaping crew's flatbed truck clipped my car while I was pulling over to let a school bus pass. I was basically stopped, partially off the road, when this truck tried to squeeze past me and the metal rack bolted to its side scraped down my entire passenger door. Their truck had zero visible damage. My door was caved in, my side mirror was dangling, and there were deep gouges in the paint all the way to the rear quarter panel.

At first their insurance actually wrote to us acknowledging their driver was majority at fault — I think it was something like 60/40 — and offered to cover that portion of my repairs. My insurance said hold on, we think we can do better, and pushed it to arbitration.

That was two months ago. I just got a letter saying the arbitrator ruled entirely against me. Like, 0% their fault, 100% mine. The reasoning listed was that I "failed to signal my intention to stop" and "created an unexpected hazard." I was pulling over for a school bus. I still cannot wrap my head around this.

Now my insurance rep is telling me my deductible is gone, no recovery, case closed. I feel like I got completely thrown under the bus (pun intended, I guess).

Does arbitration ever get appealed? Can I hire my own attorney at this stage or is that door closed? I don't even know where to start. Any experience with this would mean a lot right now.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 17
    cool-grouse-267

    Oh man, I went through something almost identical — my insurer took an arbitration to "help" me and came back with a worse result than the original offer. I was absolutely livid. What I learned the hard way is that arbitration decisions are really hard to undo, but "hard" doesn't always mean "impossible." I ended up talking to a PI attorney just to understand my options, and honestly even that conversation helped me feel less powerless. At least you'd know where you actually stand.

    • 8
      brave-badger-921

      I hate to say this but your own insurance company's interests and YOUR interests are not the same thing in arbitration. They're fighting about who reimburses who between companies — your deductible and your frustration are kind of a side effect to them. Don't assume they were fully in your corner through this process.

    • 14
      spry-newt-795

      The 60/40 offer their carrier made early on is actually a really important detail. That's an admission of some liability on their insured's part. The fact that arbitration completely reversed that is unusual and honestly worth questioning. When you got the arbitration decision document, did it explain the evidence they considered? Witness statements, photos, any traffic cam footage? If the arbitrator was working with incomplete evidence — like if your insurer didn't submit the right documentation — that could potentially be grounds to challenge it. I'd request the full arbitration file from your insurer.

    • 10
      steady-neighbor516

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 7
    cool-elk-764

    Not legal advice, but a few things worth knowing: inter-company arbitration (which is what this sounds like — your insurer vs. theirs) is primarily about which insurance company pays, not about your personal rights against the at-fault driver. You may still have a separate avenue to pursue the other driver or their employer directly, depending on your state's laws and statute of limitations. The arbitration outcome doesn't necessarily bar you from that. Seriously worth a free consult with a PI attorney before you assume all doors are closed.

  • 8
    mellow-badger-383

    A couple of things to look into: first, check whether your policy has any language about arbitration appeals or review processes — some do, most don't, but it's worth reading. Second, the inter-company arbitration process your insurer used is separate from any claim YOU could make. You could potentially still file a claim directly against the other driver or their employer's commercial insurance. That clock is ticking though — statutes of limitations vary by state so don't sit on this too long.

    • 6
      steady-stoat-522

      I'm so sorry, this sounds beyond frustrating. You did everything right — you were pulling over for a school bus — and somehow you're the one eating the loss? The system really feels broken sometimes. I hope you find a path forward. Rooting for you.

    • 5
      weary-survivor956

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 13
    clever-stoat-244

    Two things you should do this week: (1) get every single document from your insurer related to this arbitration — what evidence they submitted, the full decision, everything. (2) Call a personal injury attorney for a free consult. Not next month. This week. You can figure out if there's anything to do, but you can't get that time back if there's a filing deadline you miss.

  • 18
    tidy-wren-217

    Quick question — did you actually have a witness or dashcam footage showing the school bus? I'm not doubting you, genuinely asking because that kind of evidence would be huge here. If you had proof and your insurer just... didn't use it in arbitration, that's a really different situation than if it was just your word vs. the truck driver's.