The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
Legal questionsswift-otter-245

Did my PI attorney just blow my whole case by missing a key deadline?

I'm honestly sick to my stomach writing this and I don't really know where else to turn.

Back in the spring I was stopped at a red light — completely stationary, hands on the wheel, waiting for it to turn green. A delivery truck doing probably 40mph rear-ended me so hard my car spun partially into the adjacent lane. Zero question on fault; both insurers agreed I was 100% not responsible.

The injuries were brutal. Herniated disc in my lower back, a torn rotator cuff in my right shoulder, and a bad concussion that had me sensitive to light for weeks. I went to the ER same day, followed up with specialists, did months of PT. I have stacks of documentation.

Here's the problem. I hired a PI attorney pretty quickly after. For months I kept asking for updates and mostly got brushed off by paralegals saying things were "in process." Fine, I trusted them.

Then last week I find out — almost by accident during a routine call — that the attorney apparently missed filing something with my own health insurer related to a subrogation notice. Because of that, my health insurance is now threatening to pull back coverage on some of my treatment bills, which would get shifted back to me personally.

I'm not even sure I fully understand what happened legally. But my gut says this is my attorney's fault, and now I'm sitting here wondering:

  • Is this worth filing a bar complaint over?
  • Should I consult a different attorney about potential malpractice?
  • Do I even have options at this point or is the damage done?

I've never dealt with anything like this. I feel completely let down by someone I trusted to protect me. Has anyone been through something similar? What did you actually do about it?

16replies

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16 replies

  • 19
    clear-lynx-933

    Two things, do both immediately: 1) Send your current attorney a written email today asking for a full accounting of what happened with the subrogation notice and what steps they're taking to fix it. 2) Call a different PI attorney for a second opinion on your case overall. Most will do free consults. You're not obligated to stay with someone who isn't protecting you.

    • 1
      honest-traveler307

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

    • 8
      plainspoken-overpass167

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 18
    quiet-hare-006

    From my time on the inside, I can tell you that subrogation notices are taken very seriously and the timelines are firm. If your attorney missed the window, the health insurer has legitimate standing to act on it. I've seen cases where this got resolved through negotiation after the fact, but it takes someone actively fighting for that outcome. Right now your attorney may be more motivated to fix their mistake quietly than you realize — sometimes a direct, firm conversation about what happened and what they're going to do to remedy it can shake things loose.

    • 3
      weathered-co-pilot363

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

  • 17
    clever-crane-743

    Not legal advice, but what you're describing — an attorney missing a procedural obligation that results in financial harm to you — is exactly the kind of thing legal malpractice claims are built around. A bar complaint and a malpractice claim are two different things: the bar complaint addresses professional conduct, malpractice is how you seek compensation for actual damages caused by the error. You'd want to consult a separate attorney who handles legal malpractice specifically. Most will do a free consult. Don't wait — malpractice claims also have their own statutes of limitations.

    • 15
      steady-marten-629

      The subrogation piece is really important and honestly it's one of those things that falls through the cracks more than it should. Your health insurer has a right to be reimbursed from any settlement you receive, but there are strict notice requirements and timelines that your attorney is supposed to manage. If they dropped that ball it can create real financial liability for you. First step: get everything in writing from your current attorney — ask them to explain in writing exactly what happened and when. That creates a record.

    • 7
      gentle-wanderer483

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 16
    silent-crow-976

    I'm so sorry. You were already dealing with serious injuries and now this on top of it. The fact that you trusted them and they let you down is genuinely awful. Please don't blame yourself for not catching it sooner — that's literally what you were paying them to handle. You deserve way better than this.

    • 5
      curious-walker554

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

    • 0
      plainspoken-late-shift187

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

  • 14
    plain-raven-179

    I went through something scarily similar — my attorney missed a response window with the opposing insurer and I didn't find out until months later when a deadline had passed. What I did was immediately request my full case file in writing. You're entitled to it. Once I had it in hand I could actually see what had and hadn't been done. That paper trail ended up being really important when I consulted a second attorney about my options.

  • 11
    careful-crane-037

    I just want to make sure you're not letting the legal stress tank your recovery. A herniated disc and rotator cuff tear are serious long-term injuries and stress absolutely makes pain worse and healing slower. Please don't stop your PT or specialist appointments while you sort this out. Your health has to stay the priority even when everything else feels like it's on fire.

    • 4
      curious-optimist218

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

  • 6
    spry-wolf-316

    Also worth noting — don't be surprised if the health insurer's "threat" to pull coverage is partly a pressure tactic. They do this. That doesn't mean it isn't serious, but get the actual written notice from them before you panic too much about that specific piece. Your bigger concern right now is whether your attorney's mistake limits your overall recovery.

    • 0
      calm-dreamer737

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