The Shoulder
The Shoulder
70
calm-raven-724

Got hit in my own condo parking garage and the other driver is being SO sketchy — help?

I genuinely don't know what to do and I feel like I'm spinning out.

So this happened two days ago. I was pulling into my assigned spot in my building's parking garage — basically home free — when another car came flying around the corner and clipped my driver-side rear pretty hard. Like, hard enough that my car got pushed sideways and I bumped the concrete pillar next to my spot.

The other driver gets out and immediately starts saying I came out of nowhere and it was my fault. Meanwhile I was barely moving, pulling into my own spot. She seemed really flustered and kept fumbling with her phone. When I asked for her insurance card she told me she'd have to "look it up later" and actually asked if we could just handle it privately without involving insurance at all.

I said no and she got visibly annoyed. I managed to get her plates at least.

I did call the non-emergency police line and an officer eventually came out, but since it's private property they only took down a basic incident report — no fault determination.

Now I'm worried because:

  • My car has visible damage and I haven't been able to drive it comfortably since
  • My neck has been stiff and I've had a low-grade headache since the impact
  • I don't fully trust that she's going to report this honestly to her insurance
  • I have no idea if my own insurance will fight me on this

Has anyone dealt with a private-property accident where the other person tries to flip the story? How did you handle getting the claim started? Do I need a lawyer for something like this or is it too small for that?

Any advice is genuinely appreciated. I feel completely lost right now.

15replies

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15 replies

  • 8
    gentle-hare-738

    Ugh, I went through almost exactly this in a mall parking lot last year. The other driver tried the 'let's keep insurance out of it' thing too and I almost fell for it. Don't. File with your own insurance first, tell them everything, and let them go after her carrier. That's literally what you pay premiums for. It felt scary to 'start a claim' but honestly it was the right move.

    • 0
      careful-walker229

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

  • 22
    humble-finch-072

    Whatever you do, be really careful about what you say when you first call either insurance company. Adjusters are trained to get you to casually say things that minimize your claim — stuff like 'I'm doing okay' or 'it wasn't that bad.' Just stick to the facts. And that neck stiffness? Get it checked out by a doctor NOW, not next week. Gaps in medical treatment are one of the first things adjusters use to lowball you.

    • 6
      patient-rider437

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 15
    careful-bison-551

    Please take the neck stiffness and headache seriously. Soft tissue injuries and even mild concussions don't always show up dramatically right after impact — sometimes symptoms peak 48-72 hours later. Go to urgent care or your primary care doc and get it documented. Tell them it started after a car accident. That paper trail matters a lot, both for your health and if this turns into a claim.

    • 2
      calm-commuter275

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 12
    cool-vole-253

    Former auto claims adjuster here. Private property accidents are genuinely trickier because there's usually no police fault determination, so it becomes a 'he said/she said' situation. Here's what actually helps: photos of the damage and the scene (tire marks, the pillar, positioning), any security camera footage from the garage (request it from your building management ASAP before it gets overwritten), and witness statements if anyone saw it. That stuff can flip a disputed claim pretty quickly.

    • 15
      cool-vole-706

      Three things: Get to a doctor today. Get that garage footage before it disappears. And stop trying to figure out fault yourself — let the insurance companies do that. Your job right now is to document everything and take care of your body. The rest works itself out when you have evidence.

    • 1
      gentle-rider765

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 14
    steady-lynx-160

    A couple of practical steps: First, send yourself a detailed email right now describing exactly what happened while it's fresh — time, direction you were traveling, speed, what you saw. That creates a timestamped record. Second, ask your building manager or HOA about garage security footage today, because a lot of systems only keep footage for 3-7 days. Third, hang onto every receipt or document related to this — towing, rental car, medical visits, everything.

  • 9
    quick-lynx-627

    Not legal advice, but for what it's worth — the fact that she asked to handle it privately and was evasive about her insurance are both things worth mentioning if you ever do consult an attorney. Most PI lawyers do free consultations for accident cases, so even if you're not sure you 'need' one, a 20-minute call can help you understand what you're actually dealing with. The neck and headache symptoms make this more than just a fender bender, in my view.

    • 4
      patient-wanderer919

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 5
    patient-vole-481

    I'm so sorry this happened to you, especially basically at your own front door. That feeling of being lost is so real. Just know that the sketchy behavior you're describing from the other driver is actually pretty common — it doesn't mean you're stuck. You clearly handled it better than a lot of people would have by calling the police and getting her plates. You've got this.

  • 6
    mellow-crow-185

    The good news is you did the most important things right: you stayed at the scene, you called it in, you got her plate. A lot of people panic and don't do those things. You've got a starting point. It's messy right now but it's not hopeless — especially since you're dealing with it quickly instead of waiting.

    • 5
      weary-optimist614

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