The Shoulder
The Shoulder
50
clever-bison-566

At-fault driver's insurer fixed my car fast — now acting like liability is a mystery?

So I'm genuinely confused and a little frustrated and hoping someone here has been through something similar.

About eight months ago I was driving on the interstate, completely minding my business in the center lane, when a cargo van drifted into my lane and clipped the rear driver's side of my car. It happened so fast — I felt the impact, overcorrected slightly, but somehow kept it together and didn't spin out. The van just... merged back like nothing happened.

I pulled over, we exchanged info, cops came and took a report. I went to urgent care that night and then my regular doctor the next day because my neck and upper back were screaming at me.

Here's the thing: the other driver's insurance approved my vehicle repairs within like two weeks. Paid the body shop directly. No pushback. I figured that meant they accepted fault, right?

But now — eight months later, after two rounds of physical therapy, a cervical MRI showing some real issues, and a pain management referral — suddenly the adjuster is calling my attorney hinting that they want to "revisit the liability picture."

The police report basically has both of us saying different things (shocker), but the diagram clearly shows his vehicle crossing the lane line into mine.

I've missed a significant chunk of work. My doctor is now talking about long-term nerve involvement. I feel like the second the medical bills started stacking up, their whole attitude shifted.

Has anyone seen this happen? Does paying for your car repairs actually mean anything legally? Is this just a pressure tactic? I'm working with a PI attorney already but I'm stressed and want to hear from people who've lived this.

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9 replies

  • 21
    daring-marten-438

    Oh wow, this is almost exactly what happened to me two years ago. The other side's insurer replaced my bumper no questions asked, then completely changed their tune once my MRI results came back showing herniated discs. My attorney told me it's basically standard operating procedure — property damage is cheap, injury claims are where they dig in. Hang tight and let your lawyer handle the communication. Don't talk to their adjuster directly if you can avoid it.

  • 18
    curious-swan-376

    I spent years on the inside and I can tell you exactly what's happening here. Property damage and bodily injury are handled by completely different departments, sometimes different third-party vendors altogether. The person who approved your car repair had zero say over the injury claim. When the BI (bodily injury) team picked up your file and saw the medical expenses climbing, they flag it for a liability review — even if there was never really a dispute. It's a delay and pressure tactic, plain and simple. The diagram in that police report is your friend.

  • 7
    spry-beaver-500

    Do NOT let them schedule any kind of recorded statement with you. That "revisiting liability" language is a red flag. They're fishing for something they can use to reduce their exposure. The fact that they paid for your car is almost certainly an admission in some form — your attorney should be pushing that point hard.

  • 20
    spry-wolf-528

    Paying for property damage doesn't automatically lock in liability for the injury claim in every state, but it absolutely doesn't help their case either. Your attorney can use that payment as evidence of fault acknowledgment. Also — request the full claims file if your lawyer hasn't already. Sometimes there are internal notes or recorded calls that paint a clearer picture of when and why they shifted their position. That documentation matters.

  • 22
    calm-kestrel-103

    Not legal advice, and your own attorney knows your case way better than anyone here — but the pattern you're describing (fast property settlement, then liability questions emerging as medical costs rise) is genuinely common in higher-value injury claims. The police diagram you mentioned sounds significant. Keep all your medical records organized, document every missed workday, and let your attorney lead. Don't engage with their adjuster unilaterally.

  • 11
    clear-wren-156

    Just want to say — cervical nerve issues from this kind of rear-lateral impact are no joke and they don't always show up fully on imaging right away. If your pain management doctor is already talking about long-term involvement, make sure every single symptom is being documented at every appointment. Vague chart notes can seriously undercut an injury claim. Ask your doctor to be specific in their notes about how your condition connects to the accident mechanism.

  • 20
    kind-kestrel-789

    This sounds so stressful on top of already dealing with a real injury. I'm sorry you're going through this. The fact that you kept it together during the actual crash and then have had to fight this battle for eight months on top of healing... that's a lot. Rooting for you.

    • 3
      hopeful-survivor806

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 8
    mellow-beaver-334

    The diagram is your strongest card right now. A narrative dispute (he said / you said) is common — but a diagram drawn by an officer at the scene showing the lane crossing? That's physical documentation. Make sure your attorney references it explicitly in any demand letter or correspondence. And yes, this is a pressure tactic. Don't settle early just because they're suddenly making things complicated.