The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
Car accidentscareful-wolf-034

Delivery van blew a stop sign and t-boned me — company vehicle. Will they actually fight this?

Still kind of in shock writing this out, but here goes.

About two weeks ago I was driving through a neighborhood intersection — I had the right of way, no stop sign on my side — and a delivery van for some kind of local supply company just blew straight through without even slowing down and hit me on the driver's side. Hard.

The driver got out and literally said 'I didn't even see the sign' in front of me, two bystanders, and one of the responding officers. The officer cited him on the spot. One of the bystanders stuck around and gave a written statement. I also noticed a camera on a nearby business that might have caught the whole thing.

My car is totaled. I've got a cervical strain, some bruised ribs, and I'm still getting imaging done because my back has been acting up since.

Here's where I'm confused: the van had the company's logo all over it, so I'm assuming this goes through their commercial insurance, not just the driver's personal policy. Does that change anything? Like, does a company insurer fight harder than a regular auto insurer even when fault is basically undeniable?

I talked to the adjuster once and they were super friendly, which honestly kind of weirded me out. Is that normal or should I be reading into it?

Has anyone here dealt with a commercial policy situation — especially where fault was so obvious — and how did it actually play out for you? I don't want to get pushed into a lowball settlement before I even know the full extent of my injuries.

8replies

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8 replies

  • 12
    daring-stoat-608

    I went through something almost identical — work truck, clear fault, police report and everything. That friendly adjuster thing is ABSOLUTELY something to pay attention to. Mine was super nice right up until they sent me a written offer that didn't even cover my medical bills so far, let alone future treatment. Don't let the niceness lull you into thinking they're on your side.

    • 6
      cool-swan-869

      Honestly the fact that you have this much going for you — a citation, a witness statement, a potential camera, AND a verbal admission — puts you in a much stronger position than a lot of people who post here. That doesn't mean it'll be easy, but you're not starting from nothing. Take care of yourself first and let the documentation do its job.

  • 7
    careful-crane-114

    Former adjuster here. That friendliness is a known tactic — it's called rapport-building and it's literally part of the training. The goal is to get you comfortable enough to give a recorded statement or accept an early offer before you know your full damages. On clear-liability commercial claims, the company isn't necessarily going to fight fault, but they will absolutely try to minimize the injury payout. Those are two very different battles.

    • 22
      patient-owl-948

      A few things worth doing right now if you haven't already: get the business camera footage before it gets overwritten (a written request or a lawyer letter can help preserve it), keep every single medical record and receipt, and document your symptoms in a daily journal — pain levels, sleep issues, things you can't do that you normally could. Commercial insurers have experienced claims teams and this documentation becomes really important later. Also, the fact that he was cited and made an admission in front of witnesses is genuinely significant — that paper trail matters.

    • 10
      curious-kestrel-434

      Please don't skip any of your follow-up imaging. Cervical and back injuries after a side-impact hit can take weeks to fully show up on scans, and soft tissue stuff can linger or get worse if it's not properly treated. I've seen people feel 'okay enough' and then have real problems six months later. Your health timeline also directly affects any claim you make, so gaps in treatment can hurt you on both fronts.

  • 13
    bright-mole-533

    Do NOT give them a recorded statement. I cannot stress this enough. They will use your own words to argue your injuries are less serious than they are. Politely decline until you've at least talked to someone who knows what they're doing.

    • 12
      bright-raven-161

      Not legal advice, but I'll say this: commercial policy claims are genuinely different from dealing with an individual's insurer. The company likely has legal counsel involved early, even if it doesn't feel that way. When liability is clear, the fight moves entirely to damages — and that's where having someone in your corner matters most. Worth at least a free consult before you respond further to the adjuster.

  • 5
    candid-raven-167

    Quick question — did you get checked out at the ER the same day, or did you wait? And have you already said anything to the adjuster about your injuries specifically? Just asking because both of those things can affect how this plays out and it would help to know where you're at.