The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
clear-finch-974

Got hit mid-turn and somehow I'M the one getting blamed??

Still kind of in shock over this whole situation so bear with me.

I was driving home on a two-lane road last week — a route I take literally every day. As I approached my driveway I signaled, checked my mirrors, and slowed down to make a left turn. Normal stuff I've done a thousand times.

Out of nowhere I get absolutely slammed on my driver's side. Turns out the pickup truck behind me decided that me slowing down was an invitation to gun it and pass me — right as I was mid-turn into my own driveway. His front end hit my door almost dead-on.

Here's where it gets maddening. The responding officer cited ME. Something about improper left turn or failing to yield — I honestly couldn't believe what I was hearing. Now his insurance is leaning on that report and pointing the finger at me.

My own insurance said they think the other driver shares fault because he was actively passing while I was clearly turning, but they also kind of shrugged and said they weren't sure they could win if it went further. That was... not confidence-inspiring.

I have a few questions for anyone who's been through something like this:

  • Does a police report automatically decide who's at fault in insurance world, or can that be challenged?
  • Can someone legally pass another vehicle when that vehicle is already in the process of turning?
  • Should I be talking to a personal injury attorney even if my injuries are relatively minor (sore neck, some shoulder pain)?

I just feel like the person who rear-ended me while I was turning got a free pass here and I'm left holding the bag. Any insight appreciated — I don't know how any of this works.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 12
    mellow-marmot-154

    Oh man, I went through almost the exact same frustration a couple years back. Different circumstances but I was also the one who got hit and also the one who got cited. It felt completely upside down. What I learned the hard way is that the police report is NOT the final word — it's just one piece of evidence. Investigators, dashcam footage, witness statements, even the damage patterns on the vehicles can all paint a different picture. Don't give up just because that report went against you.

    • 11
      genuine-fox-640

      Former adjuster here. Police reports carry a lot of weight internally because adjusters use them to close files fast — it's honestly a shortcut. But I've seen reports get successfully challenged plenty of times, especially when the physical evidence (like where the impact damage is on both vehicles) tells a clearer story than the narrative in the report. The damage being on your driver's door and his front end actually says a lot about what was happening at the moment of impact. That detail matters.

    • 11
      keen-fox-486

      Not legal advice, but: comparative fault situations like this — where both drivers potentially did something wrong — are exactly the kind of cases where having an attorney actually changes outcomes. Even if you were partially at fault, depending on your state's laws you may still be entitled to recover damages. The citation alone doesn't end the story. Most PI attorneys do free consultations, so there's no real reason not to at least have the conversation.

    • 5
      weathered-overpass174

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 12
    mellow-lynx-704

    The moment his insurance saw a citation on your record, they circled the wagons. That's how they operate — they're not looking for truth, they're looking for an exit. Your own insurer hedging like that worries me too. Get an attorney involved before you sign or agree to ANYTHING. Once you settle, that's it.

    • 0
      hopeful-rider768

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

  • 14
    mellow-grouse-289

    To answer your question about whether passing is legal mid-turn — in most states, a driver is not permitted to pass a vehicle that has an active turn signal and is in the process of executing that turn. The passing driver has a duty to recognize what the vehicle ahead is doing. That doesn't automatically make him 100% at fault, but it's definitely a factor that can shift comparative fault in your direction. A PI attorney can pull the actual traffic statutes for your state and build that argument.

    • 10
      calm-passenger850

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

  • 10
    gentle-kestrel-759

    Please don't brush off the neck and shoulder pain, even if it feels 'minor' right now. I've seen so many people downplay soft tissue injuries in the first week and then be genuinely miserable two months later. Get evaluated by a doctor soon, get everything documented, and follow whatever treatment plan they give you. Your medical records become really important if this goes anywhere legally.

  • 15
    careful-otter-792

    Three things: 1) Stop talking to the other driver's insurance without an attorney present. 2) Get a doctor's appointment this week. 3) Write down everything you remember about the accident right now while it's fresh — speed, signal timing, road conditions, exactly where you were when impact happened. Do all three before you do anything else.

  • 6
    swift-marmot-857

    I just want to say I'm sorry this is happening to you. Getting in an accident is already awful and then having to fight to prove you weren't at fault on top of recovering physically is so exhausting. You're asking all the right questions though. Rooting for you.

  • 11
    cool-grouse-265

    Genuinely curious — was it actually a marked passing zone at that stretch of road? Like were there dashed lines there or solid? That could matter quite a bit for whether the other driver was even legally allowed to pass at that spot. Also did anyone stop as a witness or was it just you and him and the officer after the fact?