The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentshumble-vole-335

Got hit with a massive judgment years after an accident I thought was over — what now?

I don't even know where to start with this because I'm honestly in shock right now.

About seven years ago I was involved in a collision. It wasn't a dramatic crash — everyone seemed fine at the scene, no ambulances, nobody complaining about anything. I did have a gap in my coverage at the time (I know, I know), and I ended up just paying the citation rather than fighting it because I figured the whole thing was done and buried.

Fast forward to last week. I get paperwork saying a judgment has been entered against me for a number that made my stomach drop. Apparently the other driver went and got a bunch of medical treatment in the months after the accident, the insurance company involved paid out a significant sum, and now they've come after me for it through subrogation — because I was uninsured.

I tried to handle the court stuff myself because every attorney I talked to either wanted a huge retainer upfront or basically told me my odds weren't great since I'd already admitted fault by paying that ticket. So I went in alone and... lost.

Now I'm staring at a judgment that's going to grow with interest every single year. I'm the primary earner in my household supporting two kids. I'm not some guy hiding assets — I'm just a regular person living paycheck to paycheck.

A few things I'm trying to figure out:

  • Does a head of household exemption actually protect my wages from garnishment?
  • Is there any way to negotiate a judgment like this down or set up payments?
  • Should I be talking to a bankruptcy attorney at this point?

I feel completely trapped. Any advice from people who've dealt with something like this would mean a lot right now. 😔

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10 replies

  • 22
    calm-crow-631

    I went through something eerily similar a few years back — uninsured at the time of a minor fender bender, thought it was over, then got blindsided by a subrogation claim way later. The head of household exemption thing is real and it actually helped me slow down the garnishment process, but it varies a lot depending on your state's specific rules. Definitely look that up for your state ASAP or get someone to look it up for you.

    • 8
      bold-beaver-093

      Did you ever receive proper service when this case was originally filed? Because if you weren't formally served and just kind of got blindsided by this, there may be grounds to revisit the judgment depending on your state. I'm not saying that's likely, just — how did this whole court process even start? Did you know about the lawsuit before you represented yourself at the hearing?

    • 6
      quiet-survivor504

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

  • 18
    quiet-marten-976

    A few things to look into right away:

    1. Head of household exemption — file it proactively with your county court if you haven't already. Don't wait for them to initiate garnishment. 2. Judgment liens — if you own property, they may try to attach a lien. Check your county records. 3. Post-judgment motions — depending on how long ago the judgment was entered and your state's rules, there may be a narrow window to challenge parts of it.

    Also, bankruptcy isn't a dirty word here. A Chapter 13 in particular can let you repay debt on a structured schedule and stop interest from compounding. Talk to a bankruptcy attorney — many do free initial calls.

    • 7
      kind-marten-885

      I'm not here to pile on but I want to gently say — the stress of something like this is genuinely harmful to your health. Please make sure you're sleeping and not catastrophizing alone at 2am every night. Financial and legal crises feel unsurvivable but they rarely are. Get the professional help you need AND take care of yourself physically through this.

  • 13
    genuine-newt-962

    I know this feels like a wall you can't get over, but people come back from judgments like this all the time. Bankruptcy exists for exactly this kind of situation. You're not a criminal, you made some choices that compounded badly, and there are legal tools built for that. You've got kids depending on you which means you've got real motivation — use it to push through this and get the help you need.

  • 12
    humble-lynx-817

    I'd really want to know whether anyone ever verified that all that medical treatment was actually legitimate and accident-related. Seven-plus years is a long time and sometimes these claims get padded. I know the judgment is already signed, but depending on your state there may be post-judgment options if something sketchy happened in the billing. Probably a long shot, but worth at least asking an attorney about.

  • 10
    gentle-stoat-842

    Not legal advice, but a couple things worth knowing: subrogation judgments are very real and they do accrue interest, which makes them snowball fast. The head of household exemption can shield a portion of wages from garnishment if you qualify — typically you need to provide more than half the financial support for dependents. That said, 'exempt' doesn't mean the judgment disappears, it just limits what they can grab immediately. A consultation with a consumer or bankruptcy attorney (many do free or low-cost consults) might be worth it at this stage because Chapter 7 or 13 could potentially discharge or restructure this kind of debt. Again — not legal advice, just pointing you toward questions worth asking.

    • 15
      swift-crow-154

      Former adjuster here. The insurance company that paid out to that other driver has every incentive to collect on you — it's basically found money for them. They'll often assign these judgments to collection firms who are very aggressive. Don't ignore any letters that come. If you go quiet, they'll move to garnish wages or put a lien on property without much warning. The squeaky wheel sometimes gets a payment plan — I've seen people negotiate these down significantly just by being proactive and showing financial hardship documentation.

    • 8
      swift-vole-221

      Stop trying to handle this yourself — that ship has sailed and it cost you. Right now you need two phone calls: one to a bankruptcy attorney and one to a consumer debt attorney who handles judgments. Both will usually do a free consult. The interest clock is running so every week you wait makes this more expensive. Go make those calls this week, not next month.