The Shoulder
The Shoulder
60
sharp-lynx-532

Got a ticket for following too close after hitting a stalled car on the freeway — am I really at fault?

This whole situation has been eating at me for weeks and I just need to talk it through with people who get it.

So I'm driving on the highway, moving with traffic at highway speed, when a car in front of me suddenly darts into the HOV lane — no signal, no warning. Right behind where that car had been sitting was another vehicle completely stopped dead in the travel lane. Hazards were on but I had maybe a second, maybe two, before I was on top of it. I braked hard and tried to cut right but there was nowhere to go. I made contact and both cars ended up undriveable.

When the officer showed up, he cited me for following too close. He actually pulled me aside and said the stopped vehicle shouldn't have been sitting there and that I should contest it — but he still wrote me up. His reasoning was basically that a stopped car in a live lane is dangerous and the other driver had options they didn't use.

My insurer is telling me I'm at fault because I struck a "stationary object," almost like I ran into a fence post. That framing honestly feels insulting given the circumstances.

I have a court date coming up in about six weeks. I genuinely don't know what to expect. I don't feel like I did anything reckless — I was moving with normal traffic flow, I reacted, I tried to avoid it. Is there any realistic chance the citation gets reduced or dismissed? And does fighting the ticket actually change anything with my insurance, or is that a separate battle entirely?

Any experience with this kind of thing would really help right now. I'm stressed, my car is gone, and I feel like the system is set up to just pin everything on whoever was moving.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 19
    cool-swift-064

    How are you doing physically? Sometimes after a high-speed impact people walk away feeling okay and then the neck and back stuff creeps in over days or weeks. Please don't ignore any soreness you're brushing off as stress. Get checked out if you haven't already and keep any records — even if you feel fine right now.

  • 18
    clear-owl-304

    Not legal advice, but this fact pattern — an unexpected lane change exposing a hazard you couldn't have anticipated — is exactly the kind of thing that can shift or share fault. The officer telling you to fight it is meaningful; they see a lot of accidents and when they say that, it usually means they see weakness in the citation. I'd at minimum consult with a traffic attorney before your court date. Many do free consultations and a moving violation like this can have real insurance consequences beyond just this claim.

    • 1
      steady-passenger351

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 16
    calm-seal-859

    That 'stationary object' framing is a classic adjuster move to close the file fast. They're treating your claim like you drifted off the road and hit a mailbox. Don't let them frame the narrative. Push back, get the police report in your hands, and read every single word the officer wrote — adjusters sometimes conveniently ignore notes that complicate the easy answer.

    • 17
      wise-tern-605

      A few things worth knowing: the traffic citation and your insurance claim are two separate tracks — winning in court doesn't automatically flip your insurance determination, and vice versa. That said, a dismissal or reduction on the ticket can absolutely be useful documentation if you later dispute fault with your carrier or if the other driver files anything against you. Get a certified copy of the final court disposition whatever happens. Also, if there's any dashcam footage from you, nearby vehicles, or highway cameras, try to preserve or request it now — that stuff disappears fast.

  • 15
    careful-grouse-208

    Show up to court. Bring the police report. If the officer noted the stopped vehicle was a hazard, that's your whole argument. Dress professionally, be calm, and let the facts speak. Judges hear these all day — a clear, honest account of what happened without drama goes a long way. Don't no-show and just pay the ticket; that's an admission.

  • 12
    kind-fox-525

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this on top of losing your car and everything else. The fact that even the cop told you to fight it says a lot. You're clearly not some reckless driver — you were in a really impossible situation. I hope the court date goes well for you. Rooting for you.

    • 5
      curious-parent130

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 10
    silent-mole-198

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me a couple years back — somebody cut across two lanes and exposed a stopped vehicle I had zero chance of seeing in time. I also got cited. I went to court, brought a diagram I drew myself showing the lane changes, and the judge reduced it significantly. The officer's own notes actually helped me because he'd written down that the stopped vehicle was a hazard. Definitely show up and tell your story clearly.

    • 9
      warm-marmot-846

      Quick question — how much following distance did you actually have before that car cut over? I'm not saying you're wrong about how it went down, but 'I had no time to react' is something everyone says. If the car that cut across had been in your lane even a second or two before you reached the stopped vehicle, a prosecutor might argue you should have adjusted. Not trying to pile on, just thinking about what questions you might face in court so you're prepared.

  • 7
    silent-marmot-926

    I used to handle exactly these kinds of claims. Honestly, the stationary object rule is real — it's in most policy language — but it doesn't mean comparative fault is off the table depending on your state. The stopped driver may carry some responsibility too, especially if they failed to move to the shoulder when they had the opportunity. Whether your insurer revisits that depends on whether someone pushes them to. They won't do it on their own.

    • 3
      careful-commuter681

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