The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentscandid-dove-224

Was driving for my employer when the accident happened — can I still get personally sued?

This whole situation has me losing sleep and I need some outside perspective.

About two years ago I was driving a company vehicle making deliveries when I clipped another car merging onto the highway. Wasn't a major crash — both cars were driveable, nobody went to the hospital that day. I gave the other driver my employer's insurance card and my supervisor's number right there on the spot, filed an incident report with my company the same afternoon, did everything by the book.

I eventually moved on to a different job and honestly kind of forgot about it. Then last week a neighbor mentioned someone had been knocking on my door asking questions. And yesterday I got a voicemail from a number I don't recognize — sounded like it could be a process server or an investigator asking me to call back.

I'm freaking out a little. Like, I was on the clock, driving a company vehicle, following their dispatch. The company is still operating. Shouldn't their insurance be the one dealing with this?

A few things I'm wondering:

  • Can I personally be named in a lawsuit even if I was acting as an employee at the time?
  • Does it matter that I left that company?
  • If I do get served, what am I actually supposed to do with the papers?
  • Should I reach out to my old employer's HR or legal department, or does that make things weird?

I'm not in a financial position to hire my own attorney right now if I don't have to. Feeling pretty anxious about the whole thing. Has anyone been through something like this?

10replies

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10 replies

  • 22
    bright-otter-684

    I went through something similar — was a delivery driver and got named personally in a suit even though I was 100% on company time. It was terrifying at first. What ended up happening is the company's insurer assigned a defense attorney who represented me as well, since I was acting within the scope of my employment. Definitely don't ignore those voicemails though. The longer you wait the more stressful it gets.

    • 6
      kind-wanderer956

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

  • 14
    genuine-heron-819

    So here's the thing — yes, you can technically be named as an individual defendant even when you were working for someone else. It's actually pretty common in accident cases involving commercial vehicles. The legal concept is called 'respondeat superior,' which basically means employers are responsible for employees acting within their job duties. That usually protects you financially, but it doesn't always stop someone from naming you in the lawsuit itself.

    If you do get served, do NOT ignore the papers. You typically have a short window (often 20-30 days depending on your state) to respond. The first call you should make is to your former employer's insurance or HR department — they may be obligated to defend you. Keep copies of everything.

    • 11
      spry-finch-996

      Watch out — if the company's insurance adjuster or their attorney contacts you directly, be careful what you say. Even if you think you're 'on the same team,' their job is to protect the company and the policy, not necessarily you personally. Get clarity in writing about whether you're being represented before you start answering detailed questions.

  • 16
    daring-heron-135

    Not legal advice, but: being named personally in a work-related accident lawsuit is not automatically the disaster it sounds like. Courts generally recognize the employer's liability when an employee is acting within their scope of employment. The key question is whether the company's insurer will step up to cover and defend you — and that often depends on the specific policy language. I'd strongly encourage you to at least do a free consultation with a personal injury attorney who handles defense-side questions. Many will talk to you for free just to help you understand your exposure.

  • 13
    careful-vole-657

    From the inside: what sometimes happens is the claimant's attorney names every possible defendant to maximize pressure during settlement negotiations. That includes individual drivers. It doesn't always mean they think you have deep pockets — it's leverage. The company's carrier will usually want to resolve this in a way that releases all named parties including you. But yeah, don't ghost the process server situation. Get served, acknowledge it, and then let the employer's insurance know immediately. Paper trail is everything.

  • 17
    steady-otter-974

    Ugh, this sounds so stressful. Two years later and now this?? I really hope your old company does the right thing and makes sure you're covered in this. You followed all the rules at the time. Hang in there.

    • 0
      mellow-offramp947

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 11
    clear-stoat-513

    Call your old employer's HR or risk management department TODAY. Tell them someone may be trying to serve you papers related to that incident. Don't wait. They need to loop in their insurer and potentially assign you legal representation. The worst thing you can do right now is nothing.

  • 19
    patient-bison-205

    A couple of things I'd want to know more about: Did your employer's insurance actually open a claim and handle it at the time, or did it kind of just... get dropped? And did you ever sign anything after the accident — any statements or acknowledgments? The reason I ask is that sometimes 'everything by the book' looks different depending on whether the insurer actually engaged with the claimant or not. If they dragged their feet or denied coverage, that could explain why this is surfacing now.