The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
cool-newt-404

Driver pulled into a space and hit my open door — now I'm being blamed??

I'm honestly so frustrated I don't even know where to start.

I was parked in a downtown surface lot, a regular pull-in spot. I had my door open maybe halfway because I was literally in the middle of grabbing my bag off the passenger seat before stepping out. Another car came swinging into the empty space next to me without slowing down AT ALL and straight-up smashed into my door.

The damage is pretty telling if you ask me — my door is bent outward, the hinges are warped, and the other car has a dent on its front quarter panel that matches up exactly where my door was sitting. Like, physics don't lie here.

But my insurance adjuster called yesterday and basically told me I'm being held responsible because I "had a door in an active traffic lane." I was in a parked space. My door wasn't in a traffic lane — it was open into an adjacent parking spot that was empty when I pulled in.

I haven't signed or agreed to anything yet. I told them I needed time to think.

A few things I'm wondering:

  • Does the damage pattern actually matter when they're deciding fault?
  • Can their driver really claim zero responsibility for not watching where they were pulling in?
  • Is it worth talking to a personal injury attorney, or is this more of a property damage situation where that doesn't apply?

I do have some photos and a rough diagram I drew of the lot layout. No witnesses that I know of, but there might be a camera on the building nearby — I haven't checked yet.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? I feel like I'm being railroaded.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 19
    quick-swift-856

    Are you physically okay? Sometimes the adrenaline of dealing with the insurance stuff masks soreness that shows up a day or two later — neck, shoulder, even wrist if you braced yourself. If anything starts bothering you, see someone and get it documented. Don't just tough it out and assume it'll pass. I see that a lot and it complicates things down the road.

    • 5
      careful-neighbor901

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 19
    calm-kestrel-351

    I'm sorry you're dealing with this, it sounds incredibly stressful on top of already having your car damaged through no real fault of your own. Please don't feel like you have to accept what they're telling you right away — it sounds like you're already being smart about not signing anything. Trust your gut on this one.

  • 13
    clear-marten-336

    Go get that camera footage today, not tomorrow. Everything else — the arguing with adjusters, the fault percentages, whatever — that can wait a few days. Camera footage cannot. That one thing could flip this entire situation in your favor or at least give you real leverage. Everything else is secondary until you know if that footage exists.

    • 0
      tired-parent814

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 12
    quick-marten-045

    Few questions before I weigh in: Was your door fully open or just cracked? How fast was the other car going when they came into the space? And did you get the other driver's statement in writing anywhere, or just verbal at the scene? The details matter a lot here — a halfway-open door in a tight lot reads differently than a wide-open door. Not saying you're wrong, just that the full picture changes the calculus.

    • 7
      curious-parent476

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

    • 6
      soft-spoken-overpass767

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 10
    careful-marten-598

    I used to work on the claims side and I'll be real with you: adjusters are working a caseload of like 80+ files and they often apply a default rule without really digging into the specifics. The "open door" rule gets applied reflexively even in situations where it genuinely doesn't fit. The damage pattern you're describing — door bent outward, impact on the other car's front quarter — that's actually meaningful evidence. Make sure you submit those photos formally into your claim file, not just texted to your adjuster. Get everything in writing.

  • 9
    careful-crane-453

    Oh man, this happened to something similar to me about two years ago. Different setup but same vibe — I was clearly not at fault and my insurance acted like I was the one who committed a crime. What really helped me was getting a second opinion from an independent adjuster and honestly just being loud about the fact that I wasn't accepting their initial determination. Don't just roll over. They count on you doing that.

    • 15
      careful-elk-238

      The moment your adjuster said "we're finding you at fault" that was the opening move in a negotiation, not a final ruling. They do this all the time — throw out a fault determination early, see if you accept it, and move on. You said you haven't signed anything, which is the most important thing right now. Keep it that way until you've gotten some outside input.

    • 21
      quick-marten-923

      A couple of practical things worth doing right now:

      1. Request the lot's security footage ASAP. Most systems overwrite after 2-3 weeks, sometimes sooner. You might need to send a written preservation request to the lot owner. 2. Get the police report if one was filed — even a basic one can help establish the scene. 3. Document your door position in relation to the space lines using the photos you have.

      Fault in parking lot situations is genuinely complicated and often involves shared liability. That doesn't automatically mean you're 100% responsible. If there's any bodily injury involved (even minor soreness), a PI attorney consultation is usually free and worth it.

    • 21
      bold-lynx-902

      Not legal advice, but — parking lot fault disputes are very fact-specific and the initial determination from your insurer is not the final word. The "dooring" rules that insurers cite are typically written with moving traffic in mind, not a parked vehicle situation where another driver is actively maneuvering into a space. Whether you have a viable claim worth pursuing depends on the damages and whether there were any injuries. Most PI attorneys offer free consultations and can at least tell you if it's worth fighting. Couldn't hurt to make a call.

    • 6
      patient-passenger997

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.