The Shoulder
The Shoulder
71
hearty-owl-298

Guy I tapped weeks ago just showed up at my job demanding I file a claim — no pics, no proof

So this has been stressing me out all week and I need to hear from people who've dealt with something similar.

About six weeks ago I lightly bumped someone's SUV in a parking garage exit lane — we're talking a slow-roll tap, maybe 5 mph. I got out, we both looked everything over, and honestly there was nothing to see. A tiny smudge on their rear bumper that could've already been there. The other driver was totally relaxed about it, waved off my insurance info twice, and said 'don't worry about it.' I even held out my phone to exchange numbers and they said no. We shook hands and went our separate ways. I felt relieved but also a little uneasy because I had nothing in writing.

Fast forward to yesterday — this person walks into my workplace and asks for me by name. Apparently they remembered the name of the company from my work shirt that day. They're now saying there's a cracked taillight housing and some trim piece that's pulled away from the body, and they claim they only noticed it days later. They also mentioned they'd been dealing with a personal health situation that's why it took so long to come back.

I genuinely feel bad if they're going through something rough, but six weeks later? No photos from either of us, no police report, no written anything. I don't even know for certain that damage is from me.

My questions:

  • Am I obligated to file with my insurance at this point?
  • Can they actually do anything if I say I'm not comfortable filing?
  • Should I have just taken their info down and ended the conversation?

I'm not trying to dodge responsibility if it's real damage, I just have zero documentation and this feels off.

9replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

9 replies

  • 14
    bold-dove-820

    Ugh, almost the exact same thing happened to me a couple years back. Someone I had a fender-bender with came back three weeks later with a laundry list of damage. The problem is once you're that far out, it becomes basically impossible to prove what was yours and what wasn't. I ended up calling my insurance just to ask hypothetically, without filing, and that helped me think it through without committing to anything.

  • 6
    careful-crane-090

    Do NOT just reflexively call your insurer and report this without thinking it through first. The second you report it, that claim can sit on your record even if nothing comes of it. Talk to someone — a lawyer, a friend who knows insurance — before you pick up that phone. Adjusters are not your friends here, even your own.

    • 16
      clever-swift-702

      A few practical things worth knowing: in most states you're required to report accidents that exceed a certain damage threshold, but a lot of minor parking-lot taps don't hit that bar. The fact that no police report was filed and both parties verbally agreed there was no damage is relevant context. That's not a legal opinion, just process info — but it might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney to understand your actual exposure before you do anything.

  • 18
    careful-fox-040

    Worked claims for years. Six-week gap with no documentation is a massive red flag on our end too — we'd be asking the same questions you are. If they eventually file through their own insurance and it comes back to you, the adjuster will look hard at that timeline. 'I was in the hospital' is something they'd need documentation to support. I'm not saying the person is lying, but the delay absolutely matters in how a claim gets evaluated.

  • 17
    silent-wolf-101

    Here's what I'd do: write down everything you remember right now while it's fresh — date, time, location, what was said, who was around, what the cars looked like. Even a notes-app entry with a timestamp gives you something. Then decide your next move with actual documentation of your own account, not just theirs.

  • 16
    steady-vole-619

    I'm not saying this person is running a scam, but showing up at someone's job six weeks later is a pretty aggressive move. Did anyone at your workplace witness the conversation? And do you have any way — like a parking garage camera or your phone's location history — that could at least confirm the original incident details?

  • 6
    gentle-mole-007

    That sounds so uncomfortable, having someone just appear at your work like that. I'd feel totally blindsided. Even if you do end up needing to deal with it, please don't let this person pressure you into something on the spot. You have every right to say 'I need some time to look into this' and end the conversation.

  • 17
    brave-kestrel-904

    Not legal advice, but the gap in time and lack of any contemporaneous documentation cuts both ways — it makes it harder for them to prove causation, but it also means you have nothing showing the vehicle was undamaged when you parted ways. A 30-minute free consult with a PI attorney would help you understand whether you have real liability exposure here or whether this is more noise than threat.

    • 0
      hopeful-driver614

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