The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
cool-crane-857

At-fault driver lost her case against me — now she's coming back for round two??

I genuinely don't even know where to start with this because I'm still processing it.

About 18 months ago I got hit at an intersection — I had a green light and was moving through when another driver blew straight through the cross traffic signal and T-boned me. Cops came, report was filed, witnesses stuck around and gave statements. Pretty open and shut on who caused it.

I walked away without serious physical injuries (shaken up, some soreness, but nothing I went to the hospital for) so I honestly just felt grateful and didn't push to file any kind of claim against her. That was probably naive of me.

Fast forward a few months and she sues me. Claims all kinds of things that simply weren't true — I won't get into it but it was wild. After going through the whole process, she was found to be at fault and the suit was dismissed.

Now — and I mean like I got a letter this week — she is apparently trying to sue me again. Same accident. Same situation.

My attorney says I'm likely protected given the prior finding but here's what's eating at me: ever since this crash happened I genuinely struggle at intersections. Like I get a rush of panic every single time I'm the first car waiting to go through a light. That's new. That wasn't me before. And now that she's decided to drag me through this again, the anxiety has been way worse.

Can I countersue at this point for the psychological impact? And is that even worth pursuing given everything? I feel like I've been the reasonable one this entire time and I'm exhausted by it.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 7
    calm-swift-701

    The anxiety you're describing after an intersection crash is SO real and so common, and I hate that people don't talk about it more. I went through something similar — wasn't hurt badly physically but for months I'd white-knuckle it through any light where I was first in line. It absolutely counts as real harm. Document everything you can about it.

    • 12
      cool-kestrel-053

      Something smells off about a second filing after a clear liability ruling. Make sure your insurer is fully in the loop and has assigned defense counsel — don't assume they're watching this closely just because they handled round one. Insurers can get complacent on what they think is a repeat nuisance suit and then get caught flat-footed.

  • 17
    swift-otter-036

    Not legal advice, but the concept you're looking at is called a counterclaim, and yes, in many jurisdictions you can assert one — especially psychological/emotional distress if it's documented. The prior fault finding also raises potential res judicata or collateral estoppel arguments that your attorney should be raising to get this second suit tossed quickly. Definitely loop your lawyer in on the anxiety piece too — that matters.

  • 13
    silent-bison-582

    I worked claims for years and a second suit after a full liability determination is pretty unusual — honestly it might be a desperation move or she has a new attorney who thinks they found some angle. Either way, from the inside, what we always flagged in situations like this was whether the claimant had documented any new evidence since the first case closed. If she doesn't, this likely goes nowhere fast. But don't get comfortable — show up and respond to everything.

  • 18
    gentle-bison-478

    When the first case resulted in a fault finding against her, your attorney should be filing a motion early in this new case arguing it's already been decided — that's basically what collateral estoppel is for. It's designed to prevent someone from re-litigating issues a court already ruled on. This doesn't mean you ignore the suit, but it does mean there are tools to shut it down before it drags on forever. Also yes — start a journal about your intersection anxiety now if you haven't. Dates, situations, how it affects you. That documentation matters if you do pursue anything.

  • 18
    quick-crane-608

    Please don't brush off the anxiety as just stress. What you're describing — the panic response specifically tied to a place or situation that was traumatic — that can be a form of PTSD or acute stress response. It's worth talking to your doctor or even a therapist about it, both for your own wellbeing AND because having a clinical record of it strengthens any claim for psychological damages.

    • 15
      gentle-bison-665

      I'm so sorry you're going through this again. You did everything right, you were the victim, and now you're being dragged back into it for the second time. That's genuinely exhausting and unfair. Please make sure you have people around you supporting you through this — it's a lot to carry.

  • 6
    spry-elk-218

    Two things: 1) Stop being the 'reasonable one who lets things go' — you got hit, you have real ongoing effects, and you're entitled to pursue that. 2) Get everything in writing with your attorney about the counterclaim option before this new case gets too far along. Don't wait.

  • 17
    swift-raven-639

    Quick question — did you actually go see a doctor or therapist at any point after the accident for the anxiety, or is this the first time you're putting it into words? I'm not doubting you at all, but the strength of any psychological damages claim is going to depend heavily on whether there's any medical trail. If there isn't one yet, that's where I'd start before anything else.

    • 5
      careful-wanderer808

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.