The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancespry-seal-240

At-fault driver wasn't on the company policy — now I'm stuck using MY own insurance??

Still trying to wrap my head around this so bear with me.

A few months back I got rear-ended pretty hard by a guy driving a landscaping company's truck. Turns out the driver had no business being behind the wheel — suspended license, not listed on the company's commercial policy, and from what I understand he wasn't even supposed to be using the vehicle that day. He was cited at the scene and the whole thing is documented.

I got a lawyer pretty quickly because my neck and back were messed up and I missed a solid chunk of work. Fast forward to last week — my attorney calls me and basically says the landscaping company's insurer is denying the claim entirely because the driver wasn't an authorized operator under the policy. So now my lawyer is telling me we need to lean on my own uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage to actually get me compensated.

Here's the part I don't get: my attorney also told me that once my insurance pays out, they can go after the driver and the company to recover that money through something called subrogation. So if my insurance company is allowed to pursue these people legally... why can't my own attorney do the same thing on my behalf and skip my insurance altogether?

Is there some legal wall that stops that? Or is this just how the process works and I need to trust it? I'm not mad at my lawyer, I just feel like I'm being shuffled around and I want to actually understand what's happening. Has anyone else gone through something like this?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 8
    sharp-otter-167

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me with a delivery driver a couple years ago. The company's insurer stonewalled everything because the guy had taken the van 'off the clock.' My attorney ended up going through my own UM coverage too and it felt so backwards — like I was the one being penalized for someone else's mess. It does eventually work out but the waiting is brutal. Hang in there.

    • 11
      quick-owl-852

      So the subrogation thing is real and honestly it's kind of a quirk of how insurance law works. When your insurer pays your claim, they essentially step into your shoes legally — they acquire the right to sue the at-fault parties to get their money back. Your attorney could potentially try to sue the driver and the company directly, but if the company's insurer has already denied coverage, collecting on any judgment becomes a whole separate nightmare. UM coverage exists precisely for situations like this — so you actually get paid in a reasonable timeframe rather than chasing an uncollectable judgment. Your attorney isn't dropping the ball; they're routing around a wall.

  • 16
    quick-tern-986

    I'd push your attorney on whether the commercial policy has ANY pathway to coverage — some policies have provisions for 'permissive use' or the company could potentially be liable under a negligent entrustment theory regardless of what the policy says about listed drivers. Insurers love to issue a flat denial fast and hope nobody looks deeper. Not saying your lawyer is wrong, just saying make sure someone actually pressure-tested that denial before you accept it as final.

    • 5
      tired-traveler634

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

  • 7
    swift-sparrow-143

    Not legal advice, but what you're describing is pretty standard in cases where a commercial insurer denies coverage on an exclusion. Your attorney can absolutely still sue the driver and the business — the question is whether those defendants can actually pay a judgment. UM coverage gives you a solvent source of compensation now. The subrogation claim your insurer pursues afterward is sort of a side track that doesn't really affect your recovery. The two paths aren't mutually exclusive, they just serve different purposes.

    • 2
      restless-late-shift597

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 16
    genuine-newt-399

    Speaking from time spent on the other side of the desk — a denial based on 'driver not listed on policy' is one of the most common moves commercial carriers make, and honestly a lot of claimants just accept it and go away. The denial letter sounds airtight but it's not always the final word, especially if there's any argument that the company knowingly let unlicensed people operate vehicles. That's where a good attorney can sometimes crack things back open. Whether that's worth pursuing alongside the UM route is a strategy call your lawyer needs to make.

    • 20
      daring-mole-714

      A few things I'd want to know more about: Did your attorney actually review the full commercial policy or just take the insurer's denial letter at face value? And is the landscaping company a sole proprietor or an actual LLC/corporation? That matters a lot for what assets are actually reachable. Also — do you have solid documentation of your lost wages? That tends to get undercounted and it's worth making sure it's all in there.

  • 6
    kind-lynx-979

    Just want to check in on the actual human part of this — how are you doing physically? Rear-end impacts with neck and back involvement can have a long tail even when they seem manageable at first. Please make sure you're not downplaying symptoms to your doctors, because all of that goes into your claim too. Don't let the legal confusion distract you from actually following through on treatment.

    • 6
      tired-neighbor962

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

  • 14
    bright-swan-810

    Here's the blunt version: use your UM coverage, get your money, let your insurer deal with the subrogation headache. You did not cause this accident and you should not have to wait potentially years chasing people who may have zero collectible assets. Your UM coverage is literally what you've been paying premiums for. This is the scenario it exists for.