The Shoulder
The Shoulder
68
plain-lynx-507

Mechanic shop botched my brake job and my wheel almost came off at highway speed — what do I do?

I'm still kind of shaking writing this so bear with me.

I've been taking my car to the same independent shop for probably six years. Never had a problem. But they were slammed last month and told me it'd be a two-week wait for a brake job. My partner found this newer place closer to our apartment that had good Google reviews, so I figured I'd give them a shot. One time thing.

They did the full brake and rotor replacement. When I picked it up, the guy at the counter was distracted, kind of rushed me through the paperwork, and I noticed my steering wheel felt slightly off-center but he said alignment "settles after a few miles." I didn't push back. I wish I had.

Three days later I'm merging onto the interstate and I hear this horrifying grinding, then a clunk — and my car starts pulling HARD to the left. I managed to get to the shoulder without hitting anyone. Somehow. When the tow truck driver looked at it he got real quiet and said "you're lucky you're alive" because one of the lug nuts on my front wheel was finger-tight — like, barely on. The wheel was millimeters from coming off at 65mph.

I've already filed a complaint with the shop and they immediately went into denial mode. Said I must have hit something. Classic.

I have the tow receipt, photos of the lug nut situation before anything was touched, and a written statement from the tow driver. My question is — is this a personal injury situation even though I technically didn't crash? I had a panic attack on the shoulder and I'm genuinely scared to drive now. Does the "near miss" part matter legally or only if there's an actual collision?

Any experience with this would be really appreciated. I don't know where to start.

15replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

15 replies

  • 20
    quiet-badger-322

    I just want to say — reading this made my stomach drop. You held it together in a terrifying moment and you're handling this so methodically when most people would be a complete mess. Be kind to yourself. The "what could have happened" spiral is real and it's okay to let yourself process how scary that was, not just focus on the logistics.

  • 20
    clever-seal-843

    The fact that you have all of this documented, including a third-party witness, puts you in a genuinely stronger position than most people in a similar situation. Shops count on people not having proof. You have proof. That changes everything.

  • 14
    cool-elk-996

    Stop waiting to see how this plays out and call a personal injury lawyer today. Most do free consults. You have documentation, a witness, and a clear chain of custody from their work to the dangerous condition. That's more than a lot of people have. The longer you wait the more the shop has time to get their story straight.

    • 3
      quiet-passenger215

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 13
    bold-marmot-431

    I used to work on the claims side and I can tell you exactly what the shop's insurer is already doing: pulling the work order, talking to their techs, and looking for anything to pin on you. That "you must have hit something" response from the shop? That's not random — that's coached. The tow driver's written statement is genuinely valuable. Get it notarized if you can and keep the original somewhere safe. Photos are good but a third-party witness statement is better.

    • 22
      brave-swan-905

      A few practical things worth doing right now if you haven't already:

      1. Write a detailed personal account of everything — pickup time, what the guy said about alignment, when you first noticed the sound, exactly what happened on the interstate. Date it and email it to yourself so there's a timestamp. 2. Don't repair the car yet if at all possible. The physical condition of those lug nuts and the wheel hub is evidence. 3. Request a copy of the shop's work order and inspection checklist in writing. They're required to provide it and it'll show whether they documented a torque check.

      The near-miss framing is tricky legally but your paper trail is what makes or breaks these cases.

    • 5
      weathered-offramp436

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 12
    mellow-hare-345

    Whatever you do, do NOT give a recorded statement to the shop's insurance carrier before you talk to someone who's on your side. They're going to frame every question to make it sound like driver error. "Did you notice anything unusual when you picked it up?" sounds innocent but they're building toward blaming you for not catching their mistake. Just... don't.

    • 2
      kind-rider363

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

    • 3
      plainspoken-offramp378

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 10
    patient-raven-704

    Oh my god, I had almost the exact same thing happen after a tire rotation at a quick-lube place. Different situation but same gut-drop feeling when something goes wrong at highway speed. I ended up contacting a PI attorney and honestly was surprised to learn that you don't have to have an actual crash for there to be a valid negligence claim. The shop creating the dangerous condition is the thing that matters. Please don't let them gaslight you into thinking you caused this.

  • 7
    sharp-dove-163

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this much: negligence claims against service shops don't require a physical collision or bodily injury — the creation of an unreasonably dangerous condition through substandard work can be enough to support a claim, especially if you experienced psychological harm (which a panic attack documented by a doctor would support). The evidence you have sounds solid. A free consult with a PI attorney costs you nothing and would answer your specific questions way better than any forum can.

    • 19
      daring-finch-618

      Please take the panic attack seriously and get it documented by a doctor, even if it feels "minor" compared to what could have happened. Acute stress response after a traumatic near-miss is real and it can develop into something longer-lasting if you don't address it. That documentation also matters if you pursue any kind of claim — it shows real impact on your health and daily life, not just property damage.

  • 6
    hearty-wolf-047

    I'm not doubting you, but a few things would help me understand the situation better — did you drive the car at all between pickup and the highway incident? Any stops, parking, anything? And did anyone else touch the car in that window? I ask because the shop is absolutely going to raise those questions and you should have clean answers ready.

    • 0
      hopeful-optimist682

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.