The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
swift-hare-930

The guy who HIT me is now suing ME?? How is this even legal

I'm genuinely losing sleep over this and need to know if anyone else has been through something like this.

Long story short: I got rear-ended at a red light back in the spring. Total stop, clear day, no way this was on me. The other driver's own insurance acknowledged he was at fault — I have that in writing. My car was totaled, I had to take out a loan just to get something to drive to work, and I've been dealing with the physical and financial fallout ever since.

Now, out of nowhere, I get served. He is suing me. The guy who plowed into me while I was sitting still is claiming I caused his injuries.

My liability coverage has a cap, and from what I'm reading online, if a judgment comes in above that cap, I could personally be on the hook for the difference? I don't even own property, I rent. I have basically nothing. But the idea of a judgment hanging over my head is terrifying.

His first lawyer apparently withdrew from the case a few months ago, and now a second firm has picked it up. My insurance assigned me a defense attorney but I've only spoken to her once and she wasn't super reassuring.

To top it all off — this guy lives maybe 10 minutes from me. I see him at the gas station, the grocery store. It's so uncomfortable.

Has anyone dealt with a situation where the at-fault driver turned around and sued YOU? What actually happens with these cases? Should I be trying to get my own separate attorney even though my insurance assigned one?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 20
    kind-otter-464

    Not legal advice, but a couple things worth knowing: an admission of liability by the other driver's insurance is significant and your defense attorney should be leaning on that hard. Also, the fact that his first attorney withdrew can sometimes signal the case has weaknesses — lawyers don't usually drop clients they think have strong claims. That said, you have every right to consult a separate personal attorney about your own exposure. Your insurance-assigned defense counsel represents their interests first. Worth a free consult somewhere.

    • 5
      bright-vole-986

      The thing people don't realize is that your insurance-assigned attorney's primary job is to protect the insurance company from paying out over your policy limit — not necessarily to protect YOU from a judgment above that limit. Those are two very different things. Please talk to someone independently about your personal exposure.

    • 20
      swift-bison-552

      A few practical things: First, keep a folder (physical or digital) with every document — the demand letter, proof of service, the liability admission, your own medical records from the accident, repair/total-loss paperwork, all of it. Second, the policy limit question is real but complicated — some states have protections for people with limited assets. Third, if you haven't already, send your insurance company written notice that you expect them to defend you fully and notify them you're concerned about excess exposure. Paper trail matters.

  • 18
    tidy-tern-698

    Quick question — when you say his insurance 'admitted 100% liability,' do you mean they accepted liability for the property damage claim, or is there actual written documentation admitting fault for the full accident? Those can sometimes be treated differently. Not saying your situation isn't exactly as you describe, just want to make sure you actually have what you think you have before you rely on it.

  • 17
    patient-seal-022

    I used to work on the claims side. Cases like this — where the at-fault party flips it around — are more common than you'd think, and they're usually nuisance suits hoping for a quick settlement. The written liability admission is a huge deal. Make absolutely sure your defense attorney has a copy of every piece of communication where that admission appears. Don't assume they already have everything.

    • 9
      tired-dreamer313

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

  • 13
    patient-swan-721

    Get your own consultation with a PI attorney, separate from whoever your insurance assigned. Most do free consultations. You need someone whose ONLY job is looking out for you — not the insurance company's bottom line. Do it this week, not next month.

  • 8
    swift-kestrel-765

    I just want to say this situation sounds incredibly stressful and unfair and I'm sorry you're going through it. The fact that you keep running into this person around town makes it so much worse. You didn't do anything wrong here. I hope you're leaning on people around you because carrying this alone is too much.

    • 2
      kind-rider534

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

  • 5
    hearty-hare-222

    Oh my gosh, yes — almost identical thing happened to me. The person who side-swiped me tried to claim I 'contributed' to the accident and filed a claim against my liability. My insurance defended me, but the anxiety was absolutely crushing for months. Hang in there — these kinds of counter-suits often fall apart, especially when there's already an admission of fault on record.

    • 8
      soft-spoken-late-shift648

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