The Shoulder
The Shoulder
63
gentle-beaver-977

Dealership gave my car back 'fixed' and I nearly got killed on the highway — anyone dealt with this?

I'm still kind of shaking writing this out so bear with me.

About two months ago I brought my car in to a dealership service department for a warranty repair — something mechanical, nothing I caused. They kept it forever, like six-plus weeks, because of parts delays. Fine, whatever, I get it. I finally get it back and drive it home. Next morning I notice a faint grinding noise but honestly I'd been without the car so long I just chalked it up to "oh it's warming up" or something dumb like that.

Few days later I'm on the highway late at night heading home from work. The grinding turns into a full-on vibration. Then the steering goes heavy and unresponsive — like trying to turn a locked wheel. I manage to coast to the shoulder but I'm barely off the road. Like, my passenger-side tires are still in the travel lane.

I call a family member to come help me and I'm on the phone with a tow company when a car comes flying down the highway and clips the back corner of mine. Hard. The whole car lurched. I wasn't hurt badly — some neck stiffness and a pretty gnarly bruise on my shoulder from tensing up against the door — but I genuinely think a few more inches and that would've been a very different story.

The mechanic who looked at it afterward said the repair from the dealership was improperly completed. Like something wasn't torqued down right.

I have a consult with a lawyer lined up but I'm spiraling a little. Is this even a real case? Am I overthinking how serious it was? Has anyone gone through something like this where the negligence came from a shop rather than another driver?

15replies

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15 replies

  • 11
    clever-marten-371

    Oh my gosh, I went through something similar — not a dealership, but a shop that did a brake job on my car incorrectly and I ended up in an intersection with almost no stopping power. The mechanic negligence angle is absolutely a real thing. You are NOT overthinking it. Keep every single repair order, every text or email from the dealership, everything. I wish I had been more organized from the start.

    • 3
      patient-walker596

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 9
    careful-mole-054

    Please be really careful about talking to ANY insurance adjuster — yours, theirs, whoever — before you've actually spoken to that lawyer. They will call you sounding super friendly and sympathetic, and everything you say can absolutely be used to lowball you or shift blame onto you for "continuing to drive with a known noise." Don't let them record a statement yet.

    • 8
      patient-traveler192

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 21
    clear-raven-286

    Former adjuster here. The moment you mentioned you noticed a noise and kept driving, I can almost guarantee that's the first thing a defense team will try to lean on — that you assumed the risk by not pulling over sooner. It's not fair and it's not necessarily how it would play out in court, but be ready for that argument. Your lawyer needs to know about the noise upfront, don't let them be surprised by it.

  • 9
    humble-otter-671

    Not legal advice, but this scenario potentially involves two separate liability threads — the dealership's faulty repair work AND the driver who hit your stopped vehicle. Both matter. Some states have specific statutes around shop liability for improper warranty work. The fact that a mechanic has already opined that the repair was done incorrectly is genuinely significant. Document that opinion in writing if you can. Go to that consult and be honest about the timeline, including the noise. Good luck.

    • 5
      patient-parent166

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 7
    genuine-tern-104

    Please don't brush off that neck stiffness. Adrenaline after a scary event like that can mask a lot, and soft tissue injuries especially in the cervical spine can take days or even a week to fully declare themselves. Go get checked out if you haven't already — not just for your health, but because having a medical record documenting your symptoms close to the event matters a lot if you end up pursuing a claim.

    • 6
      honest-rider471

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

    • 2
      grounded-late-shift446

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 5
    silent-crane-869

    You are NOT a screw-up. You got your car back from people who are supposed to be professionals and trusted that they did their job. That's completely reasonable. I'm just glad you're okay and able to type this out. Please take care of yourself this week, the legal stuff will move at its own pace but YOU need to not be running on empty while you navigate it.

  • 14
    keen-wren-463

    Three things: 1) Get a second independent mechanic to document in writing exactly what was wrong with the repair. 2) Do not post about this on any social media. 3) Write down a detailed timeline right now, tonight, while it's fresh — every date, every interaction with the dealership, what you noticed and when. Your memory will get fuzzier and that document will be valuable.

    • 5
      calm-survivor932

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 6
    daring-newt-072

    I'm not doubting you but I do want to ask — did you get anything in writing from the mechanic who said the repair was improperly done? Like an actual written estimate or inspection report that uses that language? Because "the mechanic told me" is very different from having it documented. That's going to be the foundation of the whole dealership negligence piece so you want that nailed down solid.

    • 4
      patient-wanderer699

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.