The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
Insurancesteady-dove-967

Driver who hit us had no insurance — now they're suing US?? Is this real life?

I'm still wrapping my head around this so bear with me.

About three weeks ago a car blew through a stop sign and T-boned my wife on her way to work. Police came, report was filed, the other driver handed over what looked like a valid insurance card. We didn't think much of it — annoying situation, but seemed straightforward.

Fast forward to this week. Our own insurance company calls and casually mentions that when they went to contact the other driver's insurer, the policy had been cancelled months ago. So the card he handed over? Worthless.

Okay, frustrating but we figured we'd just go through our uninsured motorist coverage and move on.

Then TODAY I get a letter forwarded through our insurance saying the other driver — the one who ran the stop sign, the one with no valid insurance — has retained a personal injury attorney and is making a claim. Against us.

I genuinely had to read it twice. He caused the accident, he wasn't insured, and now he's coming after us?

My wife has a soft tissue injury in her neck and has been going to PT twice a week. We're the ones dealing with medical bills and a rental car and missed work. I don't understand how someone in his position even has standing to do this.

Has anyone else dealt with something like this? Is it common for an at-fault, uninsured driver to lawyer up and go after the other party? Should I be scared or is this mostly a scare tactic? Our insurance said they'll handle it but honestly I don't fully trust that they're looking out for us here.

9replies

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9 replies

  • 12
    gentle-wolf-939

    Oh wow, this is almost exactly what happened to my brother-in-law two years ago. Uninsured driver rear-ended him at a light, and within a month they had an attorney sending letters claiming my brother-in-law was partially at fault. It felt insane. His own insurance did step in, but he still ended up hiring his own attorney just to make sure someone was actually in his corner. Highly recommend you consider doing the same — don't just assume your insurer is fighting for you.

    • 8
      mellow-marten-208

      Your insurance company saying 'we'll handle it' is NOT the same as them protecting your interests. Their job is to protect themselves from paying out. If this goes sideways and there's any argument about comparative fault — even a small one — they might settle in a way that hurts your wife's claim or your rates. Please get your own representation before anything else happens.

  • 24
    wise-stoat-806

    Unfortunately this is more common than people think. Some attorneys will take cases like this on contingency hoping the other party's insurance (meaning YOUR UM/UIM coverage or liability coverage) will just settle to make it go away rather than fight. It's a calculated bet. The lack of insurance on the other driver's part doesn't automatically bar them from making a claim — it's frustrating, I know. What matters most now is making sure your wife's injuries and treatment are thoroughly documented, because if this does go anywhere, that paper trail is everything.

    • 7
      silent-bison-970

      Not legal advice, but just so you understand the landscape: in most states, being uninsured doesn't strip someone of the right to file a personal injury claim. It may limit what they can recover depending on your state's laws (some have uninsured motorist penalty provisions), but it doesn't make the claim automatically invalid. The stop sign violation and the police report are going to be very important here. Seriously consider consulting with your own PI attorney — many do free case reviews. Don't navigate this alone.

    • 8
      calm-wanderer928

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

  • 22
    cool-crane-298

    Please make sure your wife doesn't let any of this stress derail her treatment. Soft tissue neck injuries are sneaky — they can feel manageable and then flare up badly if PT gets interrupted. Keep every appointment, keep every receipt, and if her doctor refers her to a specialist, go. Her recovery and her documented medical history are going to matter a lot regardless of how this legal situation shakes out.

  • 14
    clever-mole-659

    This sounds absolutely exhausting on top of everything you're already dealing with. I'm so sorry. The fact that you're even having to think about being sued after your wife was the one who got hurt is just infuriating. Sending you both a lot of strength right now.

  • 13
    mellow-hare-072

    Here's what you do: pull the full police report, get a copy of everything your insurance has on file, and call a personal injury attorney this week. Not next week. This week. Most will talk to you for free. The other driver lawyering up means the clock is already moving on their side — you need someone moving on yours.

  • 5
    hearty-owl-523

    A few things I'd want to know before freaking out too much: did the letter come from an actual attorney on official letterhead, or was it more of a vague notification? Sometimes these early letters are fishing expeditions to see if you panic and respond without counsel. Also — was there a passenger in the other car too, or just the driver making the claim? That changes the picture a bit.