The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
Property damagewise-crane-142

A drunk driver jumped the curb and totaled my car AND put a hole in my fence/shed — now what?

Still kind of in shock writing this. Yesterday afternoon I was inside my house when I heard this massive crash outside. A driver apparently ran a red light at high speed, clipped another car, and the impact sent that second car spinning off the road and straight through my fence and into my detached storage shed. My daily driver was parked right there and got crushed too.

Cops showed up fast, which was good. The at-fault driver got a DUI citation and was taken away in cuffs. I have the incident number but the officer told me the full written report could take up to a week.

Here's where my head is spinning:

  • Which insurance do I even go after? The driver who caused it, or the car that physically hit my stuff, or both? I went ahead and opened a claim with my own insurer but I have no idea if that was the right move.
  • I don't have rental coverage on my policy. Am I totally stuck without a car while this gets sorted, or can I push someone else's insurance to cover a rental?
  • The shed and fence. I do have homeowners insurance but I'm worried they're going to drag their feet or lowball me on the structure damage. Is that covered under my homeowners or should I be going after the at-fault driver's liability?
  • The at-fault driver apparently wasn't the registered owner of the vehicle. Does that change anything? Like does the owner's insurance still have to cover this?

I've never dealt with anything like this. Any experience here would be really helpful. I feel like I'm getting the runaround already and it's barely been 24 hours.

16replies

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16 replies

  • 20
    gentle-wren-815

    Went through something weirdly similar — a driver lost control and took out part of my carport and my parked truck. Short answer: file against EVERYONE. The at-fault driver's liability coverage, the car that physically hit your property, AND keep your own claim open. You can sort out who pays what later. Don't close any doors early.

    • 5
      patient-rider837

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

  • 17
    gentle-grouse-927

    Whatever you do, be really careful about giving recorded statements to any insurance company that isn't yours — especially the at-fault driver's insurer. They will call you sounding super friendly and helpful, and the whole point is to get you to say something they can use to minimize your payout. You're not required to give them a recorded statement. Politely decline until you know more about where things stand.

    • 10
      patient-commuter516

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

    • 8
      mellow-late-shift747

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

  • 19
    clear-crane-075

    Former adjuster here. On the registered owner question — yes, in most states the owner's liability policy is on the hook even if someone else was driving, as long as the owner gave permission (express or implied). If it was a family member driving the owner's car, that's usually covered. The insurer will investigate the permission angle, but don't let them use that as an excuse to stall you indefinitely.

    Also — your own insurer opening a claim is fine. If they pay out, they'll subrogate (go after the at-fault party's insurance to get reimbursed). You may owe your deductible upfront but could get it back later.

  • 19
    silent-marten-120

    On the rental car question — even without rental coverage on your own policy, the at-fault driver's liability coverage should include loss of use. That means they can owe you a rental (or the equivalent dollar value) while your car is being evaluated or replaced. Get that request in writing to their insurer ASAP and keep every receipt if you end up paying out of pocket in the meantime.

    • 0
      mellow-backseat231

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

  • 17
    genuine-swan-672

    I know this is mostly a property question but — did you get checked out medically? Sometimes the shock of an event like this masks adrenaline-covered soreness. Even if you feel fine, a quick urgent care visit creates a record just in case you wake up in two days with whiplash or back pain. Easier to document now than to try to connect it later.

  • 19
    steady-lynx-105

    Not legal advice, but this fact pattern — DUI driver, borrowed vehicle, property damage to a third party who was just minding their own business at home — is exactly the kind of situation a personal injury attorney would want to hear about. Many will do a free consult. The drunk driving element can be significant. Worth a conversation before you settle anything. Don't sign any releases from any insurer until you fully understand what you're giving up.

    • 2
      careful-neighbor132

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

    • 5
      grounded-overpass656

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 5
    gentle-swan-643

    Document everything right now while it's fresh. Hundreds of photos of every angle of the car, the shed, the fence, any debris. Screenshot the weather, time-stamp everything. Write down exactly what the officers said to you. This stuff fades fast and you'll want receipts when someone tries to argue about the extent of the damage.

    • 5
      careful-commuter955

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

  • 18
    careful-grouse-660

    It's a lot to deal with all at once, I won't sugarcoat that. But the DUI citation actually puts you in a stronger position than most property damage claims — liability is pretty hard to dispute when the guy got arrested at the scene. Hang in there, this is solvable.

  • 5
    keen-seal-856

    What's the at-fault driver's insurance situation — do you actually know yet if the vehicle owner had active coverage? And did your own insurer tell you whether they're treating this as a collision claim or a comprehensive claim? That distinction matters for your deductible. Also curious how old the shed is — insurers sometimes try to depreciate older structures down to almost nothing.