The Shoulder
The Shoulder
54
tidy-badger-427

Confused about fault — did I cause this or did they?

Still trying to wrap my head around what happened and whether I'm the one who's going to get blamed here.

Basically I was in the center lane approaching an intersection and realized I needed to make a left turn. I wasn't going fast or anything, I checked my mirrors, signaled, and started moving over — but there was a car in the left lane that apparently decided at the last second to cut across into my lane to grab a parking spot on the side of the road. We clipped each other pretty good. My front quarter panel, their rear bumper.

The other driver got out and immediately started saying it was my fault for changing lanes. But the way I see it, they cut across traffic without signaling to park — isn't that also a lane change? And they were the ones moving into an active travel lane, not into a designated turn lane or anything.

Police came and the report doesn't assign blame directly, just documents what happened. Both of us gave our statements. No injuries that I can tell yet (though my neck has been a little stiff since and I'm going to get checked out).

Insurance has been notified on both sides. Now I'm just sitting here wondering how fault actually gets determined in a situation like this where both of us were technically changing lanes at the same time.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Shared fault? One person fully at fault? I honestly don't know what to expect from here.

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10 replies

  • 17
    kind-seal-802

    I had something weirdly similar happen — two cars moving laterally at the same time and nobody could agree on whose fault it was. Mine ended up being split fault, like 50/50. It kind of stinks because your own insurance has to cover some of it, but at least I wasn't stuck with 100% of the bill. Definitely get that neck checked out ASAP though, don't wait on that part.

    • 11
      mellow-lynx-018

      Fault in these lane-change-overlap situations usually comes down to which vehicle had the right of way and whether both drivers exercised reasonable care. Most states have a 'comparative negligence' framework, meaning both drivers can share a percentage of fault. The fact that the other driver crossed into an active travel lane to park — not a marked turn or parking lane — could actually work in your favor depending on how the road is set up. Get photos of the intersection if you haven't already, including any lane markings.

  • 22
    daring-badger-290

    Watch yourself when the adjuster calls. They are going to ask you leading questions designed to get you to say something that sounds like you're admitting more fault than you actually had. Stick to the basic facts, don't speculate, and don't apologize or say things like 'I should have' — that stuff gets used against you. If you're not sure whether to answer something, just say you'd like to think about it and call back.

    • 2
      hopeful-wanderer534

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 18
    cool-otter-414

    Not legal advice, but the simultaneous lane change scenario is genuinely one of the murkier fault questions out there. What often matters is whether either driver had a clearer right of way, what the lane markings showed, and whether there's any camera footage nearby. If your neck stiffness turns into anything real, that changes the calculus on whether it's worth talking to someone. A lot of PI attorneys do free consults and they're pretty good at spotting these overlap-fault situations quickly.

  • 19
    steady-mole-216

    Please don't brush off the neck stiffness. I know it feels minor right now but adrenaline masks a lot, and whiplash-type injuries sometimes don't really announce themselves until 24-48 hours later. Go get evaluated, tell them exactly what happened, and make sure everything is documented in your medical records. Even if it turns out to be nothing, you want a paper trail.

    • 10
      tired-traveler683

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

  • 8
    quick-grouse-683

    From the inside, a case like this almost always ends up with some shared fault assigned — partly because it's genuinely complicated, but honestly also because splitting it is the path of least resistance for adjusters. The more evidence you have showing the other driver crossed into a live traffic lane to park (rather than using a designated space or proper turn), the harder it is for them to pin the majority on you. Dashcam footage, traffic cameras, even a witness statement can shift things meaningfully.

  • 13
    sharp-vole-580

    Document everything right now while it's fresh. Write down exactly what you remember, take pictures of your car and the scene if you can still get back there, and screenshot any messages with the other driver. You may think you'll remember details later but you won't. This stuff matters.

  • 14
    quick-sparrow-117

    A few things I'd want to know more about: Was the other driver pulling into a legal parking spot or were they just kind of stopping randomly? Were you fully in your lane before you started moving over, or were you still transitioning? Not trying to pile on, just asking because the answers would really change how I'd think about this.