The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentswise-otter-457

Damaged my company truck in a solo accident — now I'm stuck in the middle of a nightmare

So I need help understanding how this whole thing works because I feel like I'm drowning here.

I've been at my current job about two years and part of the deal when I started was a company vehicle. When I was onboarded I signed some paperwork — the usual stuff about conduct, hours, and buried in there was something about being personally liable for any at-fault damage to the vehicle. I honestly didn't think much of it at the time.

Last week I was driving back from a job site on an unfamiliar back road, hit a patch of loose gravel, and overcorrected. The truck slid off the road and into a guardrail. No other vehicles involved, just me being an idiot. Passenger side is pretty wrecked — door panel, mirror, front quarter panel, and what I'm told might be some structural stuff underneath. No airbag deployment at least.

I called my personal auto insurance first thing and they basically laughed me off the phone. Said since I don't own the vehicle, I have no coverage for the physical damage. I get it, but still — brutal.

My employer's commercial insurance apparently covers it but with a deductible I'm now being told I owe. My boss hasn't fired me yet but the vibe is not good, and I know he wants answers fast.

I looked at the paperwork I signed and yeah, it does say I'm responsible for at-fault damage. But there's no cap mentioned anywhere — and the repair estimate is way more than I can pull together.

  • Do I actually owe this full amount legally?
  • Can my boss garnish my wages or sue me if I can't pay?
  • Should I be talking to a lawyer even though no one else was hurt?

I feel dumb for not reading the fine print closer but here I am. Any experience with this kind of situation?

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11 replies

  • 22
    bright-bison-954

    I went through something really similar about three years ago — company van, my fault, signed almost identical paperwork. What I found out is that a lot of those agreements are enforceable but courts sometimes look at whether the amount is 'reasonable' and proportionate to your wages. I'd strongly suggest getting an employment or contract attorney to just look over what you signed before you agree to pay anything. The consult was way cheaper than I expected and it changed how I handled the whole conversation with my boss.

    • 12
      curious-wren-501

      That liability clause in your onboarding paperwork is the key document here. Whether it's fully enforceable depends on how it's worded, your state's employment laws, and whether your employer took any steps to mitigate costs (like whether they had adequate commercial coverage). Also worth checking — some states have wage deduction laws that limit how much an employer can take from your paycheck even if you owe them money. Not saying you're off the hook, just saying the full picture is more complicated than 'you signed it, you owe it.'

    • 15
      swift-beaver-540

      From the commercial insurance side — what usually happens is the company's policy pays the repair, then the insurer looks at whether they can recover any of that from the at-fault party (that's called subrogation). Depending on your policy situation, you could end up hearing from the insurance company directly even after your employer seems to let it go. Just a heads up so you're not blindsided months from now.

    • 4
      grounded-overpass747

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 17
    candid-raven-358

    Be really careful about what you say to your employer's commercial insurance carrier if they reach out to you directly. Adjusters working on the company's policy technically work for them, not you. Anything you say can shape how liability is framed and could actually be used to push more of the cost onto you. Don't give a recorded statement without understanding your rights first.

    • 5
      warm-hare-347

      A few things I'd want to know more about: Did you ever receive a copy of that signed agreement, or just sign at onboarding and never see it again? And did the company ever offer you any kind of supplemental coverage option for the vehicle that you declined? Both of those details could matter a lot in terms of where you actually stand here.

    • 0
      weathered-road-soul506

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

    • 5
      kind-parent580

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 19
    tidy-raven-180

    Okay real talk: don't quit. That's the worst thing you can do right now. If you quit, you lose your income AND you're still on the hook for the damage. At least if you stay employed you have leverage in the conversation and your boss has a reason to work out a payment plan or something. Quitting solves nothing.

    • 18
      warm-raven-160

      Not legal advice, but I'd encourage you to have an attorney review that onboarding agreement before you admit to anything in writing or agree to any repayment terms. Liability clauses in employment contracts can have limits depending on jurisdiction — especially when no third party was harmed. The fact that there's no cap in the language you described is exactly the kind of thing worth getting eyes on. Many attorneys do free 30-minute consults for exactly this type of question.

  • 12
    quiet-wolf-715

    This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. Accidents happen and it doesn't make you a bad person or a bad employee. I really hope you can find a way through this that doesn't destroy your finances. Please don't just agree to pay something you literally cannot afford — talk to someone who knows this stuff first.