The Shoulder
The Shoulder
70
Car accidentscandid-elk-957

At-fault for a crash I think was caused by a genuinely dangerous intersection — anyone dealt with this?

Still processing everything that happened a few weeks ago and honestly just need to talk through it with people who might get it.

I was pulling out of a side street onto a two-lane highway — standard yield situation. The sight line looked clear, I eased out, and a vehicle coming over a small hill hit me pretty hard on my driver's side. Airbags deployed, my car was totaled, and I walked away with a messed-up shoulder and some bruised ribs.

Insurance called me at-fault almost immediately. And on paper, I get why — I was the one entering the roadway. But here's the thing: that hill crests maybe 180 feet from where I was sitting. At the posted speed limit you'd have about 4 seconds from when a car becomes visible to when it's on top of you. Honestly less, because the posted limit drops right before that stretch and almost nobody actually slows down.

Here's what's eating at me: about three weeks before my crash, I had actually emailed the county transportation department about that exact spot. I'd almost been clipped there twice before and thought someone should know. I never got a real response — just an auto-reply.

After my crash I started poking around and found out there had been at least four other crashes at that same spot in the past couple of years. A neighbor told me she'd filed a complaint too, years ago.

So now I'm sitting here with medical bills, no car, and an at-fault label — wondering if there's any angle here around the road design itself being a contributing factor. Has anyone gone down this path? Is it even realistic to raise this, or am I just grasping at something because I don't want to accept blame?

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13 replies

  • 19
    humble-crane-131

    Not legal advice, but what you're describing touches on something called 'highway defect' or 'dangerous road design' liability — basically the idea that a government entity can share fault for maintaining a known hazardous condition. The fact that you have a timestamped complaint filed before the crash is actually significant. So is any record of prior crashes at that location. These cases are complicated and often involve strict notice requirements and short deadlines for claims against government bodies — the window can be much shorter than a normal injury claim. I'd talk to a PI attorney who has handled road defect cases specifically, sooner rather than later. Not legal advice.

  • 19
    daring-vole-515

    The fact that you emailed the county before this happened is actually kind of remarkable — most people just complain to their spouse and move on. You created a paper trail without even knowing you'd need it. That's not nothing. Whatever happens legally, you gave yourself a real card to play here.

  • 14
    brave-marmot-760

    Former adjuster here. Honestly, the at-fault determination from the insurance side is based almost entirely on the police report and basic traffic law — who had the right of way. They're not going to investigate road geometry or a crest height or prior complaint logs. That's just not in their scope. The road design angle is a completely separate legal theory that would need to be pursued separately, usually with an attorney and possibly an accident reconstruction expert. Insurance will not bring this up on your behalf.

    • 9
      curious-survivor184

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

  • 13
    tidy-swift-437

    A few practical things worth doing right now:

    1. Preserve that email. Screenshot it, forward it to a personal account, do whatever you need to make sure you have a copy with the timestamp intact. 2. Request the crash history for that intersection from your local transportation or public works department — this is often public record and you can submit a simple records request. 3. Check your state's tort claims notice deadline for suing a government agency. In many states it's 60–180 days from the incident and if you miss it, you may lose that avenue entirely.

    I'm not an attorney, just someone who's worked around this stuff — but those three things cost you nothing and could matter a lot.

    • 3
      steady-optimist701

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

  • 13
    silent-raven-450

    Just want to make sure you're taking care of yourself physically too. A messed-up shoulder from that kind of impact can involve things that don't show up immediately — rotator cuff damage, labral tears, nerve involvement. Please follow up with an orthopedic specialist, not just urgent care. And document every symptom, every appointment, every day you couldn't do something because of the pain. That record matters both for your health and for any claim.

  • 8
    sharp-wolf-032

    This hits really close to home. I was in a weirdly similar situation — pulled out at an intersection with a terrible sight line, got hit, got blamed. What changed things for me was that my attorney looked into the crash history at that spot. Turns out the county had internal notes acknowledging it was a problem but never acted. That documentation mattered a lot. Your email to the transportation department might be more valuable than you think — it shows you identified the hazard and put it on record before the crash.

    • 5
      cool-crane-966

      Please be careful about how much you share with your own insurance company right now. Adjusters are not your friends in this process — their job is to close the file, not to investigate whether the road design contributed. They'll take your at-fault label and run with it. Don't give recorded statements about what you saw or how long you had to react without understanding how that could be used.

  • 8
    silent-stoat-554

    I don't want to be harsh but I'm curious — was there any signage warning about the limited sight distance? And do you know how fast the other driver was actually going? I ask because 'the intersection is dangerous' and 'the road design caused my crash' are two different arguments, and the strength of the second one depends a lot on whether there's evidence the other driver was speeding or that the crest genuinely made the hazard impossible to see in time even at legal speed.

    • 7
      hopeful-commuter604

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

  • 7
    candid-owl-644

    Short version: don't settle anything, don't sign any releases, and call a personal injury attorney this week — specifically ask if they've handled cases with a government road defect component. A lot of PI attorneys do free consultations. You have a timestamped complaint, prior crash history potentially on record, and physical injuries. That's not a nothing case. But there are deadlines that can quietly expire while you're still processing what happened, so move on this.

    • 8
      gentle-dreamer819

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