The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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clever-beaver-313

Hit-and-run caught on camera, pre-existing damage, now her insurer is playing games — help?

So this whole thing has been a rollercoaster and I need to hear if anyone's been through something similar.

About three weeks ago someone sideswiped my parked car while I was inside a grocery store. Full-on hit and run — they clipped my front end pretty good and just drove off. Lucky for me, a neighbor's Ring camera across the street caught the whole thing, and my own dash cam recorded the impact and got a clear shot of the plate as they pulled away.

I filed a police report same day, tracked down the plate, and called the at-fault driver's insurance with everything: the ring cam clip, my dash cam footage, the police report number, photos of both cars. They seemed cooperative at first — told me to go ahead and get a rental and drop my car at a shop. Cool, great, done.

Here's where it gets messy. My car had some pre-existing damage on the opposite side of the car from a separate incident a few months back — a utility truck caught my door in a parking garage. That claim is still open and unresolved (you know how slow those things move). The damage is totally separate, different panel, different side of the vehicle.

I drop my car off and leave town for a long weekend. While I'm gone, the adjuster leaves me a voicemail saying they need to "reassess" my claim and are putting a hold on the rental reimbursement. No explanation beyond that.

I'm pretty sure they're trying to use the pre-existing damage as an excuse to lowball or delay. The footage is crystal clear — there's zero ambiguity about what happened or who did it.

Has anyone dealt with an insurer dragging their feet after you handed them everything on a silver platter? What did you do?

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14 replies

  • 18
    bright-sparrow-432

    Ugh, this is almost exactly what happened to me last year. I had video evidence too and the other driver's insurer still found a way to stall. In my experience, the moment they say 'reassess' it means someone higher up flagged it for a closer look — usually to find any excuse to reduce the payout. Don't let them conflate the two separate incidents. Keep pushing and make sure everything you send them is in writing from now on.

  • 17
    clear-otter-839

    A couple of practical things worth doing right now: First, send a follow-up email to the adjuster recapping that voicemail and asking for a written explanation of what specifically is being 'reassessed' and a timeline. Paper trails matter. Second, if you have the open claim with the utility truck, make sure those two files stay completely separate and that you're communicating with different adjusters if possible. Mixing them up, even accidentally, creates headaches. Not legal advice, just process stuff.

  • 16
    curious-heron-274

    Not legal advice, but if the other carrier is stonewalling despite clear liability evidence, you may have the option of going through your own collision coverage first and letting your insurer subrogate against theirs — meaning your insurer does the fighting for you. Also worth knowing: in many states, if the at-fault insurer drags their feet unreasonably, there are bad faith statutes that can apply. A quick free consult with a PI attorney might help you understand what leverage you actually have here.

    • 6
      gentle-neighbor827

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

  • 15
    curious-fox-737

    I used to work claims for a mid-size carrier and I can tell you exactly what's happening. When a file comes in with visible pre-existing damage anywhere on the vehicle, it gets kicked to a senior adjuster or even a special investigations unit for review. It's basically automatic. They're not necessarily accusing you of fraud — they're covering themselves. The good news: your footage is a huge asset. Most of the time when the liability is this clear-cut, the 'reassessment' ends up being a formality. But stay on top of them. Don't let the file go cold.

    • 7
      gentle-rider239

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 15
    spry-marten-137

    Were you in the car when it happened, or was it truly unoccupied? You mentioned you were inside the store, so hopefully you're physically okay. Just flagging it because sometimes people are so focused on the property damage side that they forget to check in on themselves. Even low-speed impacts can cause delayed soreness, especially if you came running out and the adrenaline was pumping. If anything feels off physically, get it documented sooner rather than later.

    • 7
      restless-co-pilot770

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 12
    bold-mole-337

    Quick question — did you disclose the pre-existing damage and the open claim to the body shop and to the other insurer upfront, before they authorized the repairs? I'm not doubting your story at all, the footage sounds conclusive. But sometimes the 'reassessment' happens because something in the shop's estimate flagged repairs that don't match the reported loss. Just want to make sure there aren't any crossed wires on the paperwork side that could be making this worse than it needs to be.

    • 5
      quiet-driver811

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 11
    swift-otter-283

    That 'reassess' call is a classic delay tactic. They're hoping you'll get frustrated with the rental situation and either accept a lower offer or drop the whole thing. Do NOT let the rental run without written confirmation they're covering it, or you could end up eating that cost. Document every single call — date, time, who you spoke to, what they said.

    • 7
      steady-dreamer652

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 7
    silent-crane-204

    Call them back, don't text or email for this one. Ask directly: 'Is my claim being denied or is it still open?' Get a yes or no. If it's still open, ask for the specific reason for the hold and a date by which you'll have an answer. If they can't give you a straight answer, escalate to a supervisor on that same call. You have the footage. You have the police report. You have documentation of the pre-existing damage being on a completely different part of the car. Don't let them muddy that.

    • 2
      tired-neighbor871

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?