The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Legal questionshearty-elk-011

Got served with a lawsuit over a parking lot fender-bender that left zero dents — what do I do??

I am honestly shaking right now and needed to come somewhere to process this.

A few months back I was pulling into a spot at a grocery store and I barely tapped the car next to me. We're talking maybe 2 mph, if that. I got out immediately, the other driver got out, we looked at the contact point together. There was a light scuff — like the kind you'd expect from a shopping cart. No dent, no broken plastic, no airbags, nothing.

The other driver seemed annoyed but fine. We exchanged info. I noticed their insurance card looked off — like it might've been out of date — but I took it anyway and gave them mine. I actually offered to just pay out of pocket for a buff-out since it was so minor.

Fast forward to last week: I get served papers at my front door. I am being sued for a significant amount of money. The complaint mentions emotional distress, ongoing physical symptoms, and describes the impact as though I rammed them at highway speed. It literally uses the word "forceful." Over a scuff that I have photos of.

My own insurance has been notified and they assigned me a claims rep, but I don't totally trust that the adjuster is working for me, you know? I'm also worried because the dollar amount they're asking for is way beyond my property damage coverage.

Has anyone been through something like this? Is it normal for people to sue over something this minor? Should I get my own lawyer separate from whatever my insurance provides? I have the photos, a witness who was walking by, and a dashcam that caught part of it. I just don't know what to do next and I can't sleep.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 9
    tidy-grouse-965

    Oh my gosh, I went through almost this exact situation two years ago. Minor tap in a parking lot, the other person claimed all kinds of injuries afterward. I was a wreck the whole time it dragged on. The most important thing I can tell you: do not talk to the other driver or their attorney directly, ever. Everything goes through your insurance or your own lawyer. That boundary saved me so much trouble.

    • 10
      steady-dreamer271

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

    • 5
      mellow-co-pilot409

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 7
    silent-beaver-742

    The adjuster assigned by your insurance is technically there to protect the insurance company's interests, not yours personally. They'll work to settle cheaply, sure, but if the claim exceeds your policy limits, you could be on the hook for the rest. Given that the amount they're suing for sounds like it might push close to or past your coverage ceiling, I'd seriously consider consulting a defense attorney independently — just to understand your exposure. Don't just assume your insurer has your back completely.

    • 21
      calm-seal-414

      Not legal advice, but I'll say this much: dashcam footage and timestamped photos of the damage are genuinely valuable in situations like yours. Courts and juries understand physics — a minor scuff and claimed severe injuries often don't line up, and a good defense can make that clear. Your insurance company is obligated to defend you under your policy, but if you're worried about the gap between your coverage limits and what's being demanded, a one-hour consult with a personal injury defense attorney is worth every penny just to understand where you stand.

  • 10
    humble-kestrel-217

    I used to work on the claims side and I've seen this playbook before. Someone gets tapped, realizes there might be money in it, and suddenly the story escalates — 'forceful impact,' therapy bills, you name it. The good news for you: adjusters on the defense side are also trained to spot inflated claims, and your photos plus dashcam footage are exactly the kind of objective evidence that deflates these things fast. Make sure your claims rep has all of it uploaded as soon as possible. Don't wait for them to ask.

    • 14
      wise-grouse-833

      A few practical things worth knowing: First, the fact that you were served doesn't mean this will go to trial — the vast majority of civil suits like this settle or get dismissed before that. Second, check your auto policy for something called 'supplemental liability' or an umbrella policy if you have one — those can matter if the claim amount is high. Third, keep a written log of every single interaction related to this: dates, who said what, everything. If this drags on, that timeline becomes really useful.

    • 14
      mellow-elk-689

      I'll just say from a medical standpoint — the symptoms being claimed after an impact that slow would be highly unusual. Soft tissue injuries from low-speed collisions can happen, but the severity described would typically correlate with forces that leave visible structural damage on the vehicle. Your photos showing minimal damage are actually relevant medical context, not just a property dispute. Any competent defense will bring in an expert on that.

    • 8
      genuine-tern-507

      Quick question — did you actually file a claim with your insurance at the time of the incident, or only after you got served? And did you get the other driver's info in writing, or just verbal? I'm not doubting you, but those details matter a lot for how your insurer is going to handle this.

  • 9
    kind-lynx-089

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this. The not-sleeping part really got me — you did nothing wrong and now you're the one lying awake. Please try to remember that having documentation (photos, dashcam, a witness!) puts you in a genuinely strong position. You're not helpless here even though it feels that way right now. 💙

  • 22
    swift-badger-013

    Three things: 1) Get your dashcam footage backed up to a cloud drive today before anything happens to it. 2) Write down everything you remember about that day while it's still fresh. 3) Call your insurance company back and specifically ask them whether the claimed amount exceeds your policy limits and what happens if it does. Get that answer in writing if you can. The squeaky wheel gets the grease with these claims reps.