The Shoulder
The Shoulder
66
steady-fox-417

My insurer gave up on subrogation — can I still chase the other party for my deductible?

This whole situation has left me genuinely baffled and I'm hoping someone here has been through something similar.

A while back I was driving on the interstate when a piece of debris — looked like it flew off a flatbed ahead of me — smashed into my hood and windshield. No warning, no time to react, nowhere to go. My insurer eventually ruled I wasn't at fault, which was a relief, but I still had to pay my deductible out of pocket to get my car fixed.

My insurer told me they'd pursue subrogation against the company responsible for the load. Cool, I figured I'd eventually get my deductible back. Fast forward many months and I get a letter basically saying the responsible party denied liability, they couldn't confirm active insurance coverage on that vehicle, and they're closing the file. Done. Goodbye.

The letter did mention — almost as a footnote — that I personally still have the right to pursue reimbursement before some statutory deadline a couple years out.

So now I'm sitting here with questions I can't find straight answers to:

  • Is it normal for insurers to just walk away from subrogation like this on freight/commercial claims?
  • When they say the other party is "unable to confirm coverage" does that actually mean uninsured, or does it mean something more complicated like the specific policy doesn't cover that type of loss?
  • Is it even realistic to take a commercial trucking company to small claims over a deductible? Like what actually happens if they just ignore a judgment?
  • Should I be talking to a lawyer before that deadline, even just for a free consult?

I'm not trying to get rich here, I just want my deductible back and I feel like I've been left holding the bag for something that was completely out of my hands. Any guidance appreciated.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 13
    sharp-otter-959

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me with road debris from a commercial truck. My insurer also went quiet after months of 'we're working on it' and eventually closed the file. I ended up doing a free consult with a PI attorney and honestly it was worth the hour just to understand my options. Didn't cost me anything to ask.

  • 21
    wise-marten-366

    That 'unable to confirm coverage' language is deliberately vague — don't let it confuse you. It could mean truly uninsured, it could mean the policy had a coverage exclusion, or it could mean the adjuster just stopped pushing. Insurers have limited incentive to keep fighting a subrogation case once their own costs start eating into what they'd recover. You are the one who actually lost money here, so your incentive is completely different from theirs.

  • 9
    clear-elk-025

    Speaking from the inside: subrogation departments close files all the time when the recovery math doesn't pencil out for them. A deductible reimbursement is almost always low on their priority list. That doesn't mean your claim is worthless — it just means their resources moved on. The statute of limitations mention in the letter is their way of technically covering themselves. If you want that money back, you're going to have to be the one who pushes.

    • 18
      swift-beaver-017

      Here's the blunt take: if you go to small claims and win a judgment, and they ignore it, you then have to enforce that judgment — which can mean wage garnishment, bank levies, liens. Against a commercial entity with any sophistication, that gets complicated. It's not impossible, but factor in the time and stress cost against what you'd recover. If there's any chance a PI attorney would take it on contingency because there's more liability value here than just your deductible, that's a better route.

  • 11
    mellow-grouse-868

    A couple things worth knowing: small claims court limits vary a lot by state, so check yours — your deductible amount might fit easily. Also, getting a judgment against a company and actually collecting on it are two very different things. If the company has no traceable assets or is essentially defunct, a judgment might not get you far. That said, sometimes just filing motivates a response you weren't getting before. I'd also look into whether the cargo shipper or the broker who hired the carrier could share liability — those commercial chains can get complicated fast.

  • 20
    quick-grouse-593

    Not legal advice, but freight and cargo claims do have some quirks that make them harder than standard two-car accidents. Commercial carriers sometimes operate under layers of entities — the registered owner, the lessee, the broker — and figuring out who's actually on the hook takes some digging. A free consult with a PI attorney who handles trucking cases specifically would tell you quickly whether there's a viable path here. The statute of limitations clock is real, so don't sleep on that even if you're not sure you want to pursue it yet.

  • 5
    bold-grouse-805

    Just checking — were you injured at all, even something minor that you maybe didn't get checked out? I ask because sometimes people focus on the car damage and overlook soft tissue stuff that shows up later. If there's any physical impact, that changes the picture a lot and is worth mentioning if you do talk to an attorney.

    • 10
      tired-wanderer461

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 19
    warm-marmot-806

    This sounds so frustrating. You did everything right and still ended up out of pocket. Please don't just let the deadline pass without at least making a call to someone who can look at the specifics. Even if it goes nowhere, you'll feel better knowing you actually looked into it.

    • 2
      weary-survivor130

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

    • 5
      restless-co-pilot870

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 7
    hearty-swift-710

    Do you know for sure the debris actually came from that specific truck, and do you have any documentation tying it to them — photos, witnesses, police report that named the vehicle? That's going to be the core issue in any legal action. If it's just your word that the debris came from that flatbed, a company's attorneys will attack that first.

    • 3
      grounded-road-soul691

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