The Shoulder
The Shoulder
60
spry-lynx-528

Got cited after the other driver fled — now I can't contest it online??

Still kind of in disbelief this is happening. Back in the fall I got rear-ended at a stoplight by a pickup. The damage looked minor on both sides so we both agreed to just swap info and skip calling the cops — seemed reasonable at the time, right?

Well apparently the other driver had second thoughts, because a few weeks later I got a traffic citation in the mail naming ME as the at-fault party. I genuinely don't know what story he told, but it's the opposite of what actually happened.

Here's where it gets infuriating: I go to the court's website to enter a not-guilty plea and the citation number just throws an error every single time. I called the clerk's office twice and got put on hold indefinitely both times. The deadline to respond is coming up fast and I'm scared that if I miss it, it defaults to guilty and then his insurance company uses that against me in the injury claim he apparently filed.

I have photos from the scene showing the damage pattern, texts between me and him from right after where he literally says 'we're good, no need for cops,' and a witness who stopped and gave me her number.

Does missing that plea deadline actually affect a civil insurance claim? Has anyone dealt with a court system that basically makes it impossible to respond? I feel like I'm being set up to fail here and I don't even know where to start.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 11
    plain-badger-750

    Ugh, I went through almost this exact situation last year. The other driver gave a completely different version of events to his insurer and suddenly I was the bad guy. One thing I learned the hard way: show up IN PERSON to the clerk's office. Don't rely on the website or the phone. Bring everything — your photos, your texts, all of it — and ask them to manually enter your not-guilty plea and stamp something showing you did it before the deadline. It's tedious but it worked for me.

  • 20
    cool-hare-975

    That traffic citation is going to be the first thing the other driver's insurance latches onto if it goes unanswered. Adjusters are trained to look for any official document that implies fault, even a default judgment on a traffic ticket. Don't let that deadline slip no matter what. The system 'not working' is not an excuse they'll accept when they're trying to deny your claim.

  • 19
    brave-finch-841

    So the online portal errors are more common than you'd think — courts run on ancient software. Here's the practical move: go to the courthouse in person before your deadline and ask specifically for the traffic division clerk. Bring a written statement of your not-guilty plea just in case they need something on paper. Get a receipt or a file-stamped copy of anything you hand them. Also, to your question about the civil claim — a traffic citation outcome and an insurance liability determination are technically separate processes, but insurers absolutely factor them in. Having a not-guilty plea on record at minimum shows you're contesting it.

  • 14
    curious-newt-285

    Not legal advice, but your instinct to protect yourself here is correct. A default on a traffic citation can create a paper trail that complicates an injury claim, even if the two proceedings are legally distinct. The texts you described — where he acknowledges the situation and agrees no police are needed — could be genuinely useful. I'd suggest at least a free consultation with a PI attorney before responding to any insurance correspondence. Many will look at the full picture, not just the injury piece.

    • 14
      cool-mole-833

      Stop trying to fix this online. Walk into that courthouse, find a human being, and do not leave until your plea is entered and you have something in writing proving it. That's step one. Everything else — the insurance fight, the witness — comes after you clear that deadline.

  • 14
    quick-stoat-217

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest with you: if a traffic citation comes back as a default guilty finding, a lot of adjusters will treat that as a closed question on liability and move on. It doesn't legally bind them, but in practice it does a lot of heavy lifting for them internally when they're writing their notes. The texts you have are actually really valuable because they show a mutual understanding at the scene. Hold onto those and don't share them with the other driver's insurer without thinking it through first.

    • 3
      tired-passenger937

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 9
    wise-bison-321

    Just want to flag — if you have any soreness, stiffness, or headaches from the impact that you've been brushing off, please get checked out now. Rear-end collisions can cause soft tissue stuff that doesn't fully announce itself for days or weeks. You don't want to be dealing with symptoms months later and have no medical record connecting it to the accident.

  • 18
    quick-crow-432

    This sounds incredibly stressful and I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The fact that you have texts from him basically agreeing to handle it privately feels like it should matter a lot. Please don't let that deadline pass — even if you have to take a half day off work to go stand in line at the courthouse, it's worth it.

    • 8
      mellow-road-soul750

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.