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Legal questionskeen-wren-437

Husband might leave his job mid-lawsuit — does he lose the company's lawyer if he does?

Okay so this is a weird one and I can't find a straight answer anywhere.

My husband got into an accident about 18 months ago while driving a company vehicle on the clock. Someone is now suing him personally along with his employer. Because it happened in a company truck during work hours, the company's legal team stepped in and has basically been handling everything. From what we understand the case could drag on for another year or two at minimum — the other side keeps slow-walking things.

Here's the problem: his workplace is genuinely toxic. We're talking micromanaging, favoritism, constant threats about his job being on the line. He's been putting up with it because he's worried about what happens to this lawsuit if he leaves or gets let go. That's the only thing keeping him there at this point.

So my actual question is — if he quits or gets fired, does he lose the company-provided attorney? Like does that lawyer represent him or does the lawyer really just represent the company's interests and he's just along for the ride?

And if the company's lawyer isn't actually in his corner, should he be talking to his own attorney anyway?

I feel like he's being held hostage by this situation and I don't know what to tell him. Has anyone dealt with anything like this? The whole thing is so stressful and we just want him out of that job.

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9 replies

  • 19
    sharp-beaver-646

    Short answer: he probably shouldn't be relying on that company lawyer as his lawyer. Get his own consult, like yesterday. Most personal injury attorneys do free case reviews. He can find out exactly where he stands without spending a dime, and then he can make an informed decision about the job without guessing.

  • 17
    silent-fox-690

    Not legal advice, but this is actually a really important distinction that a lot of people miss. When a company provides a lawyer after a work-related accident, that attorney's primary duty is typically to the employer — not the employee. There can be what's called a 'conflict of interest' if your husband's interests ever diverge from the company's. He should seriously consider consulting a personal injury or employment attorney on his own, separately, just to understand where he actually stands. Many do free consultations.

    • 9
      patient-wolf-631

      I was in almost the exact same boat a few years back — company truck, lawsuit, company lawyer. What nobody told me upfront was that the lawyer was really there to protect the company from liability, not me specifically. The moment my interests and the company's interests started pointing in different directions, things got uncomfortable fast. I'd strongly encourage your husband to at least get a private consultation with someone who only represents him so he knows what he's walking into.

    • 14
      candid-newt-460

      Something worth knowing: the legal representation in these situations usually flows from the company's commercial auto or general liability insurance policy. That policy covers the employee while acting in the scope of employment — but that coverage relationship is between the insurer and the employer first. If your husband leaves the company, there's a real question of whether the insurer still has any obligation to defend him personally. It honestly depends on the specific policy language and your state's laws. That's not something to just assume will work out fine.

  • 14
    genuine-swift-805

    Has he actually asked the company's lawyer directly whose interests they represent? Like point blank? Sometimes the answer is more nuanced than people expect — some policies genuinely do extend full defense to the employee. I'd want to know that before assuming the worst. Either way, getting his own separate consult is smart, but the current lawyer might give him a straight answer if he just asks.

  • 12
    bold-beaver-696

    The company's insurance carrier is ultimately calling the shots here, not the lawyer. And the carrier's goal is to close the claim as cheaply as possible. Your husband's personal financial exposure is almost secondary to them. Please don't let him assume that lawyer has his back just because they're in the same courtroom.

    • 1
      weathered-overpass450

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 11
    careful-marten-826

    This sounds incredibly stressful — feeling trapped at a job you hate because of a legal situation that wasn't even really his fault to begin with. I really hope he can get some clarity soon. Nobody should have to stay somewhere toxic just because of something like this hanging over them.

  • 7
    daring-heron-179

    Worked claims for years. When an employee gets sued alongside their employer, we'd assign one defense firm to handle both — but internally we'd always be watching for any sign that the employee's story or liability was going to cost us more than the employer's. If a split ever became advantageous, it happened. Your husband being employed or not could affect how cooperative the company is in his defense, especially if they want to distance themselves from him after a termination. It's worth taking seriously.