The Shoulder
The Shoulder
72
silent-wren-853

My car got destroyed while parked and now I'm stuck holding the bag — what can I even do?

This whole situation has been a nightmare and I honestly don't know where to turn anymore.

About eight months ago, somebody crashed into my car while it was sitting in my driveway — completely minding its own business at like 2am. The crash was tied to some kind of altercation happening down the street and the person who hit my car just... fled. Police came, wrote up a report, but told me the case was still open and basically refused to give me any details about the other driver.

Here's where it gets really frustrating: the at-fault driver apparently had some connection to a minor, and everything about their identity got locked down because of that. My own insurance paid out, but only based on some baseline valuation that was noticeably lower than what I actually needed to replace my car with something comparable. I pushed back, showed them actual listings for similar cars in my area — same year, similar mileage, same trim — and they basically shrugged and closed the claim anyway.

When I added up my deductible plus the gap between what they paid and what I actually had to spend to get back on the road, I'm looking at a pretty painful shortfall. Not life-ruining, but enough that it genuinely stings and feels deeply unfair.

I have the police report. I have the incident number. I have documentation of what comparable vehicles were selling for. I just don't have a name to sue.

Has anyone been in a situation where the at-fault party's info was sealed or withheld? Is small claims even possible without a full name and address? And what about victims' compensation programs — does property damage ever qualify for anything like that? Any direction at all would help. I feel completely stuck.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 7
    calm-wolf-384

    Ugh, I feel this so much. My car got sideswiped in a hit-and-run and the 'market value' my insurance offered was laughable compared to what I actually paid to replace it. I ended up writing a formal dispute letter and attaching like 15 dealer listings. They came up a little but not enough. It's such a rigged game.

    • 7
      grounded-backseat403

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 11
    wise-sparrow-733

    Your insurer closed the claim fast because that's what they do — close it before you can push back effectively. That 'baseline valuation' they used? It's almost always lower than real-world market prices, and they know most people won't fight it. You have real documentation showing the gap. Don't let them act like the case is settled just because they sent a check.

  • 11
    patient-sparrow-980

    Former adjuster here. A few things: First, valuations are pulled from databases that can lag behind actual market conditions, especially when used car prices are volatile. If you have comparables from around the time of loss — not current listings, but listings from that window — that's your best ammunition for a re-evaluation request. Second, most policies have an appraisal clause that lets you formally dispute the value with a neutral appraiser. Most people don't know that exists. Check your policy documents under 'loss settlement' or 'appraisal.' It's worth finding.

  • 9
    bold-kestrel-278

    On the small claims question — you generally do need a name and address to serve someone, so filing without that info is tough. But here's something worth looking into: some states have a crime victims' compensation fund that occasionally covers property damage in situations where the loss was connected to a criminal act. It's not guaranteed and varies a lot by state, but it might be worth a quick call to your state's attorney general office or a victim services organization to ask. Also, once that investigation closes, you may be able to request the full report. Worth setting a reminder to follow up on that.

  • 21
    warm-crow-164

    Not legal advice, but a couple of thoughts: the sealed-information issue involving a minor is a real wall, but it doesn't necessarily stay sealed forever — once the juvenile case resolves, records sometimes become more accessible depending on how it was adjudicated. Additionally, some states allow you to name a 'John Doe' defendant in certain civil filings as a placeholder while you work to identify the actual person. An attorney who handles property damage or small claims matters could tell you pretty quickly if that's an option where you are. Many offer free consultations.

    • 9
      bold-sparrow-616

      This is so unfair, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. You did everything right — you parked legally, you filed the report, you documented everything — and you're still the one who got hurt financially. I really hope you find a path to get at least some of that money back.

  • 15
    curious-fox-100

    I know this is mostly a property issue, but please don't underestimate the stress this kind of thing puts on you. Eight months of fighting an insurance company and feeling like the system failed you is genuinely exhausting. Take care of yourself while you navigate this — it's okay to be frustrated.

  • 10
    wise-swift-805

    Two things you should do right now: 1) Write a formal written dispute to your insurance company referencing your comparables — email so there's a paper trail. 2) Call your state's department of insurance and ask if there's a complaint process for inadequate valuations. Insurers tend to move when a regulator gets involved. Don't just stew on this — make them respond in writing.

    • 7
      grounded-mile-marker157

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 9
    humble-wolf-707

    One question — did you have uninsured/underinsured motorist property damage coverage on your policy? If so, that might actually be the right avenue here since you effectively can't collect from the at-fault driver. A lot of people don't realize that coverage can apply even in hit-and-run situations. What does your policy say about that?