The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
Ridesharekeen-elk-143

Gig driver hit by another car — now the other driver is claiming Uber was 'involved'??

Okay so this is happening to my cousin and I'm trying to help her figure out what's going on because the whole thing feels like it's spinning out of control.

She does delivery driving on the side — like one of those food courier apps — but she was completely off the clock when this happened. No active order, app was closed, she was literally just driving home from the grocery store. Some guy ran a red light and clipped her front end pretty hard. She had to get checked out at urgent care, her car has significant damage, and she missed almost a week of work.

Here's where it gets weird. When the police showed up, nothing was said about her being a delivery driver. She wasn't in any kind of branded gear or anything. But now — weeks later — the guy who hit her is suddenly telling his insurance company that he noticed a delivery bag in her back seat and that he 'assumed' she was working at the time.

Her own insurance is handling it, and she hired an attorney, but she hasn't gotten an update in several days and she's starting to panic. On top of that, the courier platform's safety team called her out of nowhere and she didn't know what to say.

Is this other driver just trying to muddy the water? Like why would it even matter if she had a bag in her car if the app was off? And should she be saying anything to the platform reps when they call?

She is clearly the victim here — she had the green light and witnesses confirmed it. The whole thing just feels like the other guy is trying to shift blame or find a deeper pocket to go after. Anyone dealt with anything like this?

13replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

13 replies

  • 16
    genuine-wren-585

    I was also a rideshare driver when I got rear-ended and the other party tried to drag the platform into it. The key thing everyone kept coming back to was whether the app was actively running — like, actually in a trip or waiting for a ping. Being 'off the clock' is a totally different legal situation than being between orders or mid-ride. If she can show the app was fully closed, that matters a lot.

    • 6
      honest-survivor555

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

  • 5
    keen-grouse-649

    The other driver's insurance is fishing. Plain and simple. If they can get the platform's commercial coverage involved, suddenly there's a much bigger pot of money in play and their own liability gets complicated. Don't let your cousin talk to anyone from either insurance company without her attorney present. Seriously. Even a casual 'oh yeah I do deliveries sometimes' comment can get twisted.

  • 7
    gentle-swift-952

    Used to work claims and I've seen this play out before. What the other side is doing is called a coverage dispute trigger — they're trying to establish that the app was active so they can argue the platform's commercial policy should be primary instead of her personal auto. The platform calling her is probably their risk team doing their own investigation. She should absolutely loop in her attorney before saying a single word to them. Those calls are not casual wellness checks.

  • 14
    cool-swift-014

    Her attorney can request the app's activity logs — most platforms will produce them with a proper legal request, and they're timestamped pretty precisely. If the app shows it was closed before the accident and didn't open until after, that's going to be a really strong piece of evidence. The 'I saw a bag' claim from the other driver is pretty thin on its own without corroborating data. Not legal advice, just process stuff I've seen.

    • 0
      careful-commuter468

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 16
    steady-vole-118

    Tell her to stop taking calls she isn't prepared for. If the platform's safety team calls again, it's completely fine to say 'I have an attorney handling everything related to this incident, please contact them.' That's not rude, that's just smart. She should also write down everything she remembers about that call she already had with them — what was asked, what she said — and send it to her lawyer today.

  • 18
    swift-tern-119

    This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry she's dealing with this on top of being actually injured. The fact that she had the green light AND there are witnesses should count for a lot, right? It just seems so unfair that the person who caused the accident gets to just... throw out accusations and complicate everything.

    • 3
      calm-traveler173

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

  • 14
    quick-marmot-288

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking — in most states, whether a gig platform's insurance applies depends heavily on the driver's status at the time of the accident. 'App off' is typically the clearest zone where the platform has no involvement. The other party claiming they noticed a bag doesn't establish app activity. Her attorney should be pushing for a records subpoena to the platform and documenting the timeline carefully. The silence from her lawyer is worth a follow-up call — she has every right to ask for a status update.

    • 2
      plainspoken-offramp303

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 13
    warm-raven-838

    Does she have anything that shows the app was closed — like a screenshot of her phone activity from that day, or even just the app's own ride history showing no active session? I believe her, just wondering what kind of proof exists beyond her word against his. Because 'he saw a bag' is a weak claim but it's easier to knock down if there's actual data on her side.

    • 10
      quiet-traveler431

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.