The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
bold-marmot-437

Car door swung open into me while I was pulling into a spot — am I liable for this??

So this happened this morning and I'm still annoyed about it.

I was pulling into a parking space at a grocery store — took it slow because the lot was packed and people were walking around everywhere. I was probably going like 3 mph max, mostly in the spot already, when the driver in the car next to me just flung their door open without looking. Caught the front quarter panel on my passenger side. Not a little tap either — there's a decent crease and some paint transfer.

The other driver got out looking sheepish and immediately said "sorry, I didn't see you coming." I appreciated the honesty but now I'm worried about what happens next with insurance.

Here's what's stressing me out: my friend is saying I might be partially at fault because I was the moving vehicle. But like… I was already 2/3 of the way into the space when their door opened. They had a clear view of the spot being empty and then me pulling in. I wasn't speeding, I wasn't being reckless.

I did take photos of both cars and the position of everything before anyone moved. I got their info. There are a few storefronts nearby that might have cameras covering that section of the lot.

But now the other driver texted me saying their insurance wants to do a recorded statement with me and I don't know if I should do that.

Has anyone dealt with a door-opening situation like this? Who usually ends up being at fault? And should I be talking to their insurance company at all right now?

8replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

8 replies

  • 7
    spry-tern-993

    Ugh, I had almost the exact same thing happen to me in a mall parking lot a while back. Person threw their door open while I was literally nose-in to a spot. My experience was that the door-opener got tagged as at fault because they're supposed to check before opening. Good call getting photos right away — that saved me when mine went to insurance.

  • 17
    tidy-fox-034

    Do NOT do that recorded statement without thinking it through first. Their insurance company is not your friend — they're going to use anything you say to reduce what they have to pay out. The fact that they're already calling you and asking for a recorded statement this fast is a red flag. That's a pretty standard tactic to get you to say something that muddies fault before you've had time to think clearly.

    • 10
      kind-swift-701

      Former adjuster here. In a situation like this, the person opening the door almost always carries the majority of fault — there's a general duty to check that it's safe before opening. The fact that you were already mostly in the space actually helps you, not hurts you. Your friend's logic about "moving vehicle = at fault" isn't how it actually works in practice. That said, every claim is different and I've seen adjusters try to split fault in weird ways, so don't assume anything is settled.

    • 12
      curious-kestrel-831

      Three things: 1) Don't give the recorded statement yet. 2) File with your own insurance so they can advocate for you. 3) Reach out to those nearby businesses about camera footage TODAY — most places only keep it for a few days before it overwrites. That footage could end this whole debate instantly.

  • 21
    wise-marmot-331

    On the recorded statement question — you're generally not required to give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance company. Your own policy may have a cooperation clause that applies to your insurer, but that's different. It might be worth at least talking to someone with legal background before you agree to anything recorded. A lot of PI attorneys do free consultations and can tell you in 15 minutes whether you even need help or can handle it yourself.

  • 19
    candid-dove-444

    Did you feel any jolt or whiplash when the impact happened, even at low speed? Sometimes people feel fine in the moment and then wake up stiff and sore the next couple of days. Just mentioning it because if anything feels off later, you'll want to have it documented sooner rather than later.

  • 15
    clear-lynx-752

    Quick question — did the other driver admit fault in writing anywhere, or just verbally? A text message where they apologize could actually matter here. Also, were there any witnesses around who saw it happen?

  • 9
    hearty-beaver-839

    Honestly the fact that they admitted fault at the scene and you have photos puts you in a much better position than a lot of people end up in after parking lot incidents. A lot of these turn into pure he-said-she-said. You've already done the most important things right.