The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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clear-grouse-921

Hit-and-run driver caught but my insurer is using UM coverage — will my minor role in this hurt me?

So this happened about three weeks ago and I'm still trying to wrap my head around how everything works.

Short version: I was heading through an intersection on a fresh green light when a pickup barreled through from the cross street, clearly ran a red, clipped my front end pretty hard, and then just… took off. Didn't even slow down. Two people on the sidewalk saw the whole thing and one of them actually followed the truck for a block or two and got a partial plate, which is how police were able to track down the driver.

My own insurer stepped in with my uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage while everything gets sorted out. Here's my anxiety though — I'll be honest, I might have been rolling through that intersection a little faster than I should've been. Nothing crazy, but not perfectly by the book either. Nobody's brought it up yet and I don't know if it's even captured anywhere.

My questions are basically:

1. Does the other driver fleeing the scene affect how fault gets divided? Like does it work against them in any meaningful way, or is it just a separate legal issue? 2. If my insurer pays me out and later recovers from the at-fault driver's insurance through subrogation, does my possible small percentage of fault reduce what I get back? I'm mostly worried about my deductible. 3. How much should I be talking to the at-fault driver's insurance directly? They've already called me twice and I haven't called back.

I have a soft tissue neck thing going on too that I've seen a doctor for. Just trying to figure out how all these pieces interact before I do anything that accidentally hurts my own claim. Any experience with this kind of situation appreciated.

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9 replies

  • 18
    sharp-heron-249

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me — guy ran a stop sign, hit me, drove off. My UM coverage kicked in and honestly my own insurer was WAY more reasonable to deal with than I expected. The hit-and-run part seemed to work heavily in my favor because the other driver basically handed the narrative to me by leaving. Hang in there, it usually works out when witnesses are on your side.

    • 15
      patient-mole-000

      Do NOT call the other driver's insurance back without thinking this through carefully. Their adjuster is not your friend. Every single thing you say gets noted and can be used to chip away at your payout. They're calling you twice because they're hoping you'll volunteer something useful to them — like oh I don't know, maybe that you were going a bit fast. Stay cool, don't engage until you know your footing.

    • 13
      bright-owl-534

      Worked claims for years. Leaving the scene is a big deal on the fault side — it doesn't automatically mean 100% fault in every state, but it absolutely factors into how seriously adjusters and arbitrators take their version of events. If they have no dashcam, no witnesses of their own, and they fled, their insurer is going to have a very hard time pushing meaningful comparative fault onto you. The slight speed issue you're worried about? Without hard evidence (radar, video, something concrete), it's basically speculation.

    • 16
      spry-sparrow-570

      On the subrogation/deductible question — when your insurer pays you and then goes after the at-fault driver's insurer to recover that money, most states have rules about how your deductible gets handled in that process. In a lot of cases if your insurer fully recovers, you get your deductible back. If comparative fault reduces the recovery, it can reduce what flows back to you. The exact math depends on your state's rules and your specific policy language. Worth actually reading that section of your policy or asking your insurer directly how they handle it — they're required to tell you.

    • 0
      hopeful-parent738

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

  • 8
    clear-mole-869

    Not legal advice, but the two things you're dealing with — the property claim and the injury claim — can have different dynamics. The neck injury especially is something you don't want to handle casually. Soft tissue injuries can linger and get worse, and early recorded statements have a way of coming back to bite people. Given that the other driver fled and you have witnesses, you're likely in a solid position, but it's worth at least a free consultation with a PI attorney before you talk to anyone on the other side.

  • 8
    patient-otter-124

    Please take the neck thing seriously. I know it feels minor right now but soft tissue injuries from impacts like this can take weeks to fully declare themselves. Make sure you're documenting every symptom, every visit, every time it affects your sleep or daily activity. That record matters way more than people realize when it comes time to talk about what your injury is actually worth.

    • 13
      careful-beaver-996

      Three things: don't call the other insurer back alone, keep seeing your doctor and document everything, and ask your own insurer point-blank how the deductible recovery works in a subrogation situation. You're overthinking the speed thing — without proof it's basically nothing. Focus on what you CAN control.

  • 8
    tidy-hare-485

    This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The fact that people actually stopped and witnessed what happened is such a lucky break. Try not to spiral on the what-ifs — you were going through a green light and some guy ran a red and then ran away. That's not on you.