The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsclear-crow-808

At-fault accident, other driver had surgery, now they want my policy max — am I about to lose everything?

I'm honestly spiraling right now and could use some outside perspective from people who've been through something similar.

About eight months ago I made a left turn at an intersection and clipped another car. I thought it was a minor thing — both cars were driveable, we exchanged info, everyone seemed okay. I was cited for failure to yield, so yeah, I'm the at-fault driver. I've accepted that.

Here's where it gets scary: I got a call from my insurance adjuster last week saying the other driver ended up needing spinal surgery a few months after the crash, and their attorney has formally demanded my full policy limits. My adjuster was pretty matter-of-fact about it — said soft-tissue injuries can escalate and that surgery cases regularly push past what my policy covers.

The part keeping me up at night is what happens if the damages go beyond my coverage. My spouse and I have a rental property we've been holding onto for years and some retirement investments. Could any of that be on the table if there's a judgment against me that exceeds my limits?

My adjuster said my insurance company will handle the defense, so I'm not sure if I even need my own attorney or if that's overkill. But honestly the adjuster is employed by the insurance company — are their interests really the same as mine?

Has anyone been in a situation like this? Did you hire your own personal attorney separate from whoever insurance assigned? What would you do?

18replies

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18 replies

  • 9
    curious-badger-110

    I was on the at-fault side of a bad accident a couple years back and this hit close to home. My insurance assigned me a defense attorney, but I also quietly consulted a personal attorney on my own just to understand where my exposure was. It cost me a couple hundred bucks for that consult and it was absolutely worth the peace of mind. The defense attorney insurance gives you is there to protect the insurer's money first — just keep that in mind.

    • 8
      steady-parent868

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

    • 4
      soft-spoken-overpass219

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 10
    silent-wolf-489

    Your adjuster being 'matter-of-fact' is a flag for me. They are not your friend — they work for the company, and the company's job is to pay out as little as possible while also managing their own risk. If a judgment comes in over your policy limits, the financial hit lands on you, not them. Get your own legal advice before you assume their defense strategy protects your assets.

    • 17
      kind-bison-834

      Not legal advice, but this is worth knowing: when a policy-limit demand is made, there are real legal implications for how an insurer must respond. If they mishandle it and a judgment comes in above your limits, there are situations where the insurer — not you — can be held responsible for the excess. That's a nuanced area and totally depends on your state. Either way, consulting your own attorney to understand your personal exposure is completely reasonable and doesn't mean you don't trust your insurance company. It just means you're being smart.

    • 3
      quiet-rider581

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

    • 5
      level-co-pilot163

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 12
    bright-owl-011

    I spent years on the inside of this process. The defense attorney your insurer assigns is technically your attorney, but their client relationship has some awkward dual loyalties baked in. In surgery cases with policy-limit demands, the stakes are real. The insurer will usually try to settle within limits to close it out — which is often good for you too — but if they can't, you need to know what your personal exposure looks like. A one-time consult with an independent attorney just to review your asset situation is money well spent.

    • 6
      grounded-road-soul940

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 16
    spry-kestrel-584

    One thing worth looking into: some states have what's called an 'excess judgment' or 'bad faith' framework that protects policyholders when insurers fail to settle within limits when they reasonably could have. It's complicated, but it means your insurer has incentive to settle too. That doesn't mean you should do nothing — document every conversation with your adjuster, dates, what was said, everything. Paper trail matters if things get messy later.

    • 4
      soft-spoken-late-shift969

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 13
    gentle-lynx-046

    From the medical side — spinal surgery is no joke in terms of recovery and long-term impact. I've seen patients whose lives genuinely changed after procedures like that. I'm not saying this to alarm you, but to explain why the damages in a case like this can legitimately be significant. Ongoing physical therapy, possible future surgeries, lost wages — it adds up fast. I hope both you and the other driver get through this okay.

  • 20
    quiet-elk-776

    Oh gosh, I can hear how stressed you are and honestly this would terrify me too. Please don't try to white-knuckle through this alone. Even just talking to someone — a lawyer, a financial advisor, whoever — will probably make you feel less like you're free-falling. You're asking the right questions.

    • 2
      tired-parent382

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 20
    mellow-wolf-230

    Short answer: yes, hire your own attorney for a consultation. Not to fight your insurance company, just to get a clear picture of where you stand with your assets. Rental property and investment accounts can sometimes be reachable in a civil judgment depending on your state and how things are titled. You need to know that before this settles, not after.

    • 8
      weary-passenger634

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 11
    wise-swan-703

    Few questions worth thinking through: Does your homeowner's or landlord policy have any umbrella coverage on top of your auto policy? A lot of people forget they have umbrella coverage sitting there unused. Also, how are your assets titled — joint, in a trust, individual? That stuff matters a lot for what's actually exposed. I'd make sure you have all your policy documents in front of you before you panic.

    • 10
      careful-optimist989

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.