The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
clear-raven-045

Mom got into a minor fender-bender and now someone's suing her for way more than her policy covers — terrified

I'm honestly losing sleep over this and I don't know where else to turn.

A few months back my mom was driving through our neighborhood and clipped a guy on one of those electric bikes who came out of nowhere between two parked delivery trucks. It was genuinely low speed — neither of them even needed an ambulance at the scene. The guy said he was fine, they exchanged info, and that was that.

Fast forward and now we're getting legal paperwork saying he has all these injuries and is claiming damages that are way above what my mom's liability coverage actually pays out. Like, her policy has a cap, and this guy's lawyer is already signaling they want multiples of that cap. The insurance company assigned her a defense attorney (I think that's standard?) but I'm terrified about what happens if a judgment comes down that's bigger than the policy limit.

My mom is retired and lives mostly on her fixed income. She doesn't have savings to speak of. We're not a wealthy family at all. The thought of a lien on her house or garnished income is making everyone in my family physically sick with stress.

Questions I can't find straight answers to:

  • Does the insurance company's lawyer actually represent her interests or the insurer's?
  • If the judgment exceeds the policy, is she personally on the hook for the difference?
  • Is there anything she can do proactively to protect herself?
  • Can she even afford a separate personal attorney and should she?

Any insight — even just "here's what I went through" — would mean so much right now. My mom is a good person and this whole thing feels so unfair.

9replies

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

9 replies

  • 21
    daring-crow-078

    I worked claims for years and this situation — where the demand exceeds the policy limit — is called an 'excess exposure' case internally. Here's the inside view: the insurer's lawyer is obligated to defend her up to the limit, but their loyalty can get complicated when settlement talks happen. If a reasonable settlement within policy limits is on the table and the insurer drags their feet, there are actually legal doctrines (bad faith) that can shift liability back to the insurer for any excess judgment. That's worth knowing. Not saying it'll happen, just — it's not always as bleak as it looks from the outside.

    • 7
      hearty-vole-373

      From a medical angle — 'injuries that appeared later' after a low-speed collision is actually really common and not automatically fraudulent, so I wouldn't go in assuming the worst about the other person. That said, medical records and objective imaging tell the real story. If the claimed injuries don't match the mechanism of the accident, a good defense attorney will find that. Try not to catastrophize before the facts are actually on the table.

    • 18
      plain-mole-725

      I just want to say — your mom is lucky to have someone fighting for her like this. The stress you're carrying for your family is real and valid. Please make sure YOU are taking care of yourself too while you navigate this. It's a marathon, not a sprint.

  • 15
    quick-beaver-178

    Not legal advice, but a few things worth knowing: the demand number at the start of a lawsuit is almost never the number a case resolves at. Also, in many states, collecting a judgment against someone with limited assets is genuinely difficult — there are exemptions for primary residences, retirement income, and so on. Your mom should absolutely consult with her own attorney independent of the one insurance assigned, even just for a second opinion on her personal exposure. Many PI defense attorneys do free or low-cost initial consults.

  • 14
    genuine-marten-445

    We went through almost the exact same panic a couple years ago after my dad got sued over a parking lot incident. The insurance-assigned attorney is there partly for the insurer's benefit, yes, but in most states they still have legal duties to your mom as the named defendant. The thing that helped us most was having my dad consult separately with a personal injury defense attorney — just a one-time consult — to understand where his exposure actually was. Sometimes the scary number the other side throws out never actually becomes a real judgment. Hang in there.

  • 9
    gentle-wren-422

    Practical checklist: (1) Get your mom to write down everything she remembers about the incident NOW while it's still fresh. (2) Make sure she's not posting anything on social media — seriously, nothing. (3) Have her pull together her full insurance policy docs so you know exactly what the limits and conditions are. (4) Schedule a free consult with a separate attorney. Stop waiting to see how this plays out — be proactive.

  • 7
    clear-swift-961

    One thing to watch: insurance companies sometimes have an incentive to settle at the policy limit even if fighting harder might bring the number down, because once they pay out the cap their obligation is technically done. Your mom could potentially be left holding the bag for anything above that. She should absolutely ask the assigned attorney directly — in writing — what their strategy is and whether they're considering her personal assets in that strategy.

  • 6
    sharp-grouse-782

    A few things I'd want to know more about: Was there a police report filed at the scene? Any witnesses? Dashcam footage? The facts of how it happened matter a lot for how exposed your mom actually is. 'He came out of nowhere' is something everyone says — what does the physical evidence actually show?

    • 7
      steady-passenger802

      How long did it end up taking in your case?