The Shoulder
The Shoulder
63
tidy-wren-904

Other driver pulled out right in front of me — now her insurer is treating ME like the bad guy??

I'm still kind of in shock about how this whole thing is playing out and honestly just need to vent and get some outside perspective.

About three weeks ago I was driving through a commercial strip — you know the kind, lots of little shops and driveways everywhere — when a driver shot out of a gas station exit directly into my lane. We're talking maybe a car-length of warning, zero time to react. I hit the brakes but there was just no avoiding it. The impact crumpled my whole driver-side front end and her passenger rear got hit pretty bad too.

Here's what's wild: she immediately started telling the responding officer that I was speeding and that I had plenty of time to stop. I was on a road with a 30 mph limit and I was not speeding — there were literally other cars around me going the same pace. The officer was professional and took both our statements. I did get a copy of the report number before I left.

I ended up going to urgent care the next day because my neck started stiffening up and my shoulder was aching. Got diagnosed with a cervical strain and soft tissue stuff in my shoulder. Nothing broken, but I'm in PT twice a week now and it is not fun.

Her insurance accepted my claim initially and then — out of nowhere — sent me a letter saying they're only accepting partial liability and citing my "failure to maintain a proper lookout." I don't even know what that means when someone pulls directly into your path.

Has anyone dealt with a split-liability situation like this? Do I just accept it or push back? I feel like I'm being railroaded here.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 12
    tidy-otter-236

    That "failure to maintain a proper lookout" language is a classic adjuster move. They throw it at you hoping you'll just accept a reduced payout and go away. It's essentially a pressure tactic. Don't sign or agree to ANYTHING in writing until you've at least talked to someone who knows how these claims work. Once you accept a split, that's usually it.

    • 8
      calm-commuter540

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

  • 20
    swift-grouse-151

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest — when an insurer says partial liability with language like that, it almost always means they know their driver is mostly at fault but they're fishing to see if you'll bite. The "lookout" thing is a soft accusation that's really hard for them to actually prove, especially if the police report doesn't support it. Do you know what the report says about how the accident happened? That detail matters a lot here.

    • 16
      cool-hare-391

      Quick question — did the officer actually note anything in the report about who appeared to be at fault, or was it just a neutral documentation of the crash? And did any witnesses stick around? I ask because "her word vs. yours" situations can get murky fast, and I'm curious what actual evidence exists beyond the damage patterns.

  • 8
    gentle-newt-424

    Went through almost the exact same thing last year — driver pulled out of a parking lot, I had no time, and suddenly I was "partially responsible" according to her carrier. I pushed back hard, sent them a written rebuttal, and they eventually backed off the split. It's exhausting but don't just roll over. You know what happened.

    • 12
      quick-fox-460

      Please don't downplay the cervical strain and shoulder issue just because nothing was broken. Soft tissue injuries can linger way longer than fractures sometimes, and PT is important — stick with it even when it feels like nothing is changing. Make sure every single appointment is documented and keep your receipts. If this ends up going anywhere legally or in negotiation, that paper trail is your friend.

    • 9
      hopeful-neighbor843

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

  • 14
    quiet-seal-229

    A few things worth doing right now if you haven't already: (1) Write down every detail you remember about the accident while it's still fresh — time of day, weather, exactly where her car was, anything. (2) Get a copy of the full police report, not just the number. (3) If there are any businesses near that gas station exit, some of them might have exterior security cameras. Footage gets overwritten fast so it's worth asking around sooner rather than later. None of this is legal advice, just practical documentation stuff.

  • 20
    humble-dove-501

    Not legal advice, but in most states, a driver exiting a private driveway or lot onto a public road has the duty to yield to oncoming traffic — full stop. The "lookout" argument against you is a stretch in that scenario and would be a tough sell if this ever went further. Talking to a PI attorney for a free consult wouldn't hurt. Many won't charge unless they recover something for you.

  • 11
    steady-dove-731

    It's genuinely frustrating but the fact that you went to urgent care, you're in PT, and you have a report number all puts you in a better position than a lot of people who just try to tough it out. You're doing the right things. Don't let the partial liability letter make you feel like the case is closed — it's really just the opening move.

    • 0
      steady-driver180

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 14
    wise-badger-234

    Stop communicating with her insurance without some kind of guidance. Every conversation is a chance for them to get something they can use. You don't have to be hostile about it — just slow down, get your documentation together, and don't let them pressure you into a timeline that works for them and not for you.