The Shoulder
The Shoulder
68
plain-stoat-068

Other driver passed illegally on a curve, I swerved and crashed — am I actually at fault here?

So this happened a few weeks ago and I'm still kind of processing it. I was heading down a two-lane highway — one I know really well — and had just gotten up to speed after merging on. Guy behind me was riding my bumper hard, so I gave it a little more gas trying to give him space. Didn't matter. He swings into the oncoming lane to pass me right at the start of a blind curve. It's clearly marked no-passing through there, has been forever.

He gets alongside me and then seems to realize there's no room to finish the pass, so he cuts back in front of me hard. I jerked the wheel to avoid getting clipped and lost control on the shoulder gravel. Ended up in a shallow drainage ditch. Airbags didn't even deploy but my car is totaled — frame damage, the whole deal.

Here's the thing: the other driver just kept going. Gone. A woman who was behind both of us actually stopped and told me she saw the whole thing. She gave me her number and said she'd be willing to tell the police what she saw.

I called the cops, they came out, but when I got the accident report it only lists me as the involved vehicle. No mention of the other car, no mention of the witness. I asked about it and basically got a shrug.

My insurance is treating it like a single-car accident. My rates are probably going to get hit and I don't even know if I have any recourse here.

Has anyone dealt with something like this — where the report just... erased what actually happened? Does the witness statement even matter at this point? Feeling pretty lost.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 14
    mellow-finch-596

    This is almost exactly what happened to my brother-in-law two years ago. Hit-and-run, he was the only car on the report, and his insurance initially treated him like he just drove off the road for no reason. The witness statement ended up being everything — like it completely changed the direction of the claim. Don't let that woman's contact info get buried in your phone. Get a written statement from her ASAP while it's still fresh in her mind.

    • 14
      clever-hare-102

      I worked claims for several years and I'll be straight with you — single-car accidents where the driver says 'someone ran me off the road' are treated with a LOT of skepticism internally. It's not that adjusters think you're lying, it's just that they can't verify it so they default to what the report says. A signed witness statement or even a recorded phone call with the witness changes the whole calculus. Also, check whether there are any traffic or business cameras along that stretch of road. We used to pull those all the time and people never thought to ask.

  • 17
    sharp-wren-241

    Your insurer has zero financial incentive to find a phantom driver. If it stays a single-car accident, they pay out (or don't) and move on. If there's an at-fault third party, suddenly things get more complicated for them. I'd be very careful about how much you volunteer to your own adjuster right now — every detail you give them can be used to limit your payout. Get that witness locked down before you say much more.

  • 13
    silent-dove-626

    A few practical things worth knowing: first, you can formally request that the accident report be amended if there's witness evidence supporting a different account — it's not easy but it's possible. Second, if your state has an uninsured/hit-and-run motorist provision (most do), that's the coverage path here even without identifying the other driver. Third, the witness statement matters a lot more than people think, but it needs to be documented properly — ideally in writing with a date and signature. You don't need a lawyer to take those first steps, but it helps to know what you're building toward.

  • 14
    careful-marten-663

    Not legal advice, but this scenario — hit-and-run with a witness — is actually a recognized claim path in most states through uninsured motorist coverage. The witness corroboration piece is often required for those claims to move forward, so the fact that you have someone willing to talk is genuinely significant. The police report being incomplete doesn't automatically close the door. Would be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your options before you accept anything from your insurer.

  • 5
    bright-grouse-403

    Please also don't ignore your body in the middle of all this. Adrenaline after an accident can mask pain for days — I've seen patients come in a week later with soft tissue injuries they swore they didn't have right after the crash. If anything feels off, even vaguely, go get checked out and make sure it's documented. That paper trail matters if anything develops later.

    • 6
      hopeful-neighbor354

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

  • 19
    kind-heron-619

    Three things. One: call that witness today, not tomorrow. Two: drive that road and look for any cameras — gas stations, farm equipment dealers, anything. Three: do not sign or agree to anything with your insurance company until you know whether you have a hit-and-run UM claim. You could be leaving real money on the table by letting this get closed as a simple single-car accident.

    • 3
      gentle-wanderer240

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

  • 7
    clear-seal-097

    I'm not doubting you, but I want to ask — did anyone else see the other vehicle besides the woman who stopped? And do you have any idea of the make, color, anything? Because UM claims with zero description of the other vehicle can be really hard to move forward even with a witness. The witness saw the pass happen but can she describe the car at all? That detail might matter more than people are letting on.

  • 15
    genuine-owl-840

    I'm so sorry this happened to you. It's genuinely infuriating that someone put you in danger, drove away, and now the paperwork acts like they never existed. You did nothing wrong here. Please reach out to that witness before too much more time passes — people's memories and willingness to help fade fast, and from everything you've described she's basically your lifeline right now. Rooting for you.

    • 4
      weary-survivor847

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.