The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
clever-heron-721

Friend got hit at an intersection and we can't agree on who's at fault — help us settle this

So my buddy was in a crash last week and our whole group chat has basically turned into a courtroom debate. I wasn't there but I've heard the story like six times now so I feel like I was.

Here's what happened: He was driving straight through a green light on a main road. A car coming from the opposite direction was making a left turn across his lane. The turning driver apparently went for it and misjudged the gap, cutting the turn really tight instead of waiting. My friend had basically zero time to react and the front corner of the turning car clipped the driver's side of his car pretty hard.

Now here's where the debate started — one of our friends is saying my buddy might share some blame because he "could have slowed down" when he saw the car starting to turn. The rest of us think that's ridiculous, like why would you brake for someone who has a red light and should be yielding to you?

The turning driver's insurance is already trying to say it was "shared fault" which honestly feels like a move to pay less.

My friend has a messed up shoulder and some neck stiffness and his car has pretty significant damage on the driver's side door and panel area.

I know this community has seen all kinds of crashes — does this scenario sound like one person is clearly more at fault, or is shared fault actually a real argument here? Just want to help my friend go into this knowing what he might be dealing with.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 18
    spry-raven-699

    Was there a police report filed? And did the officer assign fault or cite either driver? That detail matters a lot here. Also curious — did anyone see the light or is it just both drivers' word against each other? Not doubting your friend, just trying to understand what evidence actually exists.

    • 7
      weathered-backseat321

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 17
    daring-swan-867

    Ugh this is so stressful, especially when your friend is already dealing with being hurt on top of it. I really hope he has someone in his corner helping him navigate all of this. The fact that the other side is already pushing back feels like a bad sign for trying to handle it alone.

    • 9
      tired-traveler207

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 14
    gentle-marmot-741

    Not legal advice, but left-turn crashes are generally considered the fault of the turning driver in most states because they have a duty to yield to oncoming traffic before completing the turn. 'He could have slowed down' isn't typically enough to establish contributory fault unless there's evidence he was speeding or ran a red. Your friend should at least get a free consultation — these cases are pretty well-established in terms of liability.

  • 11
    spry-owl-693

    This happened to almost exactly me two years ago. Left-turning driver cut across my lane and then suddenly I'm the one being told I share responsibility. Spoiler: I didn't. The driver making the left turn almost always has to yield to oncoming traffic — that's just how traffic law works basically everywhere. Your friend going straight on a green had the right of way, full stop.

    • 10
      sharp-wren-856

      "Shared fault" is one of the oldest adjuster moves in the book. The moment the other side's insurance floats that idea, your friend needs to stop talking to them without some kind of guidance. They're trying to reduce their payout. Every percentage of fault they pin on your friend is money they don't have to pay. Don't let him just accept that framing.

    • 12
      silent-badger-598

      The shoulder and neck symptoms your friend has shouldn't be brushed off even if they feel manageable right now. Those kinds of soft tissue injuries from side-impact crashes can actually get worse over the first week or two. Please make sure he's seen a doctor and that everything is documented, because if he waits and it escalates, it becomes harder to connect it to the accident.

    • 6
      steady-parent105

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

  • 10
    calm-grouse-502

    I used to work on the other side of these claims. When we floated a shared-fault theory, it was almost always a negotiating tactic, not a genuine legal argument. It rattles people into settling faster and for less. Your friend should document everything — photos, the police report, any witnesses — before responding to anything the other insurance company offers.

    • 9
      careful-survivor693

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 6
    steady-crow-712

    Tell your friend to stop engaging with the other driver's insurance on his own. Get the police report, take photos of everything if he hasn't already, and talk to someone who knows PI law before he signs or agrees to anything. The 'shared fault' thing might be nothing, but it also might cost him real money if he's not careful.

    • 10
      careful-rider448

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.