The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Legal questionssilent-stoat-308

Just got served with a lawsuit from the other driver — I'm completely panicking

I don't even know where to start. About eight months ago I was making a right turn out of a parking garage and a motorcycle came through faster than I expected and we collided. I pulled over, called 911, exchanged info, did everything I was supposed to do. My insurance accepted liability and I thought the whole thing was basically wrapped up.

Then last week a process server showed up at my door and handed me a stack of papers. The other driver is suing me personally for a number that I genuinely cannot look at without feeling sick. We're talking multiple millions of dollars. I own a house, I have a retirement account, I have a family. All I could think was — is everything I've worked for just gone?

I called my insurance company the same day and they said something about "assigning a defense," but I don't fully understand what that means. Does that mean THEY pay for a lawyer for me? Do I need to go out and hire my own attorney on top of that? What happens if the lawsuit amount is more than my policy limits — am I personally on the hook for the difference?

I haven't been sleeping. I keep replaying that intersection in my head wondering if I could have done anything differently. My spouse is scared, I'm scared. I know accidents happen but this feels like my whole life is unraveling over one bad moment.

Has anyone been through something like this? What actually happens next? Any insight would mean a lot right now.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 18
    wise-crane-506

    I went through almost exactly this two years ago — someone rear-ended me and then I ended up being the one with a suit filed against me because of some technicality about lane position. I was absolutely terrified. Here's what actually happened: my insurance company did assign a defense attorney and they handled basically everything. I never paid a dime out of pocket for legal fees. The key thing is to let your insurer take the lead and don't ignore any paperwork or deadlines they send you. It's not over, I promise.

    • 9
      quiet-dreamer396

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

  • 10
    gentle-hare-991

    Make sure you get EVERYTHING in writing from your insurance company about what they're doing on your behalf. "Assigning a defense" sounds reassuring but insurers have their own interests, not just yours. If the claim starts getting close to your policy limits, their incentives and your incentives can diverge fast. Don't just trust a phone call — follow up by email so you have a paper trail.

    • 8
      patient-traveler774

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

  • 12
    clear-crow-092

    Not legal advice, but to answer your basic question: yes, your liability insurance is generally obligated to provide you a defense attorney AND cover judgments up to your policy limits. The scary part you're right to think about is the "excess" — anything above your limits could theoretically be your personal exposure. That's why it's worth having a separate conversation with an independent attorney (not just the one your insurer appoints) to make sure your interests are protected. Many PI defense attorneys offer free consults.

  • 11
    bold-bison-941

    Worked in claims for years. A demand number in a lawsuit is almost never what actually gets paid — those opening figures are often inflated strategically. Your insurer's defense team will push back hard during discovery and negotiation. That said, I'd strongly suggest you pull out your declarations page tonight and find your bodily injury liability limits. You need to know exactly what your coverage ceiling is before any conversation with anyone.

    • 5
      steady-rider381

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 6
    cool-newt-219

    I'm so sorry you're going through this. The anxiety of something like this landing on your doorstep out of nowhere sounds absolutely overwhelming. Please try to take care of yourself physically — the stress alone can wreck you. You reached out here which is good. You're not alone in this.

    • 8
      kind-commuter718

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

  • 11
    clear-crow-994

    A few practical things to know: there are deadlines attached to that lawsuit paperwork, so make sure your insurer is aware you were served and get confirmation they're filing a response on time. Also, do not talk to the other driver, their attorney, or anyone representing them without your assigned defense counsel present. Anything you say can be used. Keep a folder with every document — the complaint, every letter from your insurer, everything.

    • 15
      mellow-crane-224

      Stop catastrophizing for a second and focus on what you can actually control right now: (1) Call your insurer again Monday and ask them to confirm in writing that they are providing your defense. (2) Find your policy and read the liability limits section. (3) Consult an independent attorney just to understand your exposure. That's your whole to-do list. One thing at a time.

    • 0
      honest-survivor587

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

    • 1
      thankful-mile-marker250

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 14
    genuine-marmot-228

    Quick question — did your insurer already formally accept liability or did they just pay a property damage claim? Those are two different things and it matters a lot here. Also, were there any injuries documented at the scene, and did you get any follow-up from the other driver's insurance after the accident? Trying to understand the full picture because the timeline here is a little unusual if this is coming eight months later.