The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
keen-beaver-831

Paid the other driver cash on the spot without getting anything in writing — did I just get played?

So I rear-ended someone at a stoplight about two weeks ago. It wasn't a bad collision — my bumper kissed her trunk — but she had a newer car and there was a visible crack in her rear fascia. We both pulled into a parking lot nearby.

She was super calm and friendly about it and said she really didn't want to deal with insurance because her rates had already gone up this year. That actually made sense to me so I agreed to handle it privately. She called a body shop contact of hers right there on the phone and came back to me saying repairs would run around what felt like a reasonable number for that kind of damage.

I was flustered, honestly. First accident I've ever been in, my hands were literally shaking. I just wanted it resolved. She seemed trustworthy. So I sent her the money through a payment app right there in the parking lot.

Here's where I'm kicking myself: I never got a written estimate. No receipt. No signed release. Nothing saying this was full and final settlement. Just a text thread where she told me the amount.

Now she's gone weirdly quiet. When I asked her to send me the repair estimate or even just confirm in writing that we're square, she got defensive and said I was being paranoid and insulting her honesty.

My biggest fear is she turns around and files an insurance claim anyway, or comes back wanting more money later. Can she do that? Do I have any protection from that text conversation? I still have her plate number and the texts where she named the amount.

I know I should've handled this differently. I'm not here for the lecture, just genuinely need to know where I stand. 😬

12replies

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12 replies

  • 20
    patient-crow-889

    She can technically still file a claim depending on your state — paying someone out of pocket doesn't automatically prevent them from going to insurance later. That's the part nobody tells you. Your texts showing she accepted that amount might be your only leverage, so guard them like gold.

  • 19
    clear-beaver-923

    Worked claims for years. Honestly, private settlements happen all the time and most of them are fine. BUT — and this is a big but — without a signed release, there's nothing legally stopping her from filing. That said, if she does file, your insurer will want to know why she accepted money from you privately first. That text chain is evidence. It won't guarantee anything but it definitely helps your story.

    Also, consider sending her one calm, clear text saying something like 'Just confirming you received [amount] as full payment for the damage from the incident on [date] and consider this matter resolved.' If she agrees in writing, even over text, that's meaningful. If she ignores it or denies it, you'll know something's up.

    • 0
      mellow-sidewalk501

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 14
    clear-kestrel-199

    A written settlement release is exactly what you needed here, but since you don't have one, a text confirmation is the next best thing. Send a clear message referencing the date, the amount, and ask her to confirm it's settled. Keep the tone totally neutral — not accusatory. If this ever ends up in a dispute, having her say 'yes we're good' in writing changes everything.

    • 15
      humble-otter-110

      Not legal advice, but in most states a verbal or text-based agreement to settle a damage claim can be enforceable — it's not nothing. The problem is proving mutual intent. That text exchange you mentioned where she told you the amount and you paid it? Document it carefully. If she later tries to claim additional damages or files with insurance, that evidence becomes your defense. Might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your exposure. Most will talk to you for 15 minutes at no cost.

    • 11
      genuine-seal-636

      Honestly the fact that you have a text thread with the amount she named and proof of payment through an app is way better than nothing. A lot of people in your situation have zero paper trail. You're not totally unprotected here.

  • 12
    mellow-swift-656

    Ugh, I did something almost identical last year and the anxiety afterward was brutal. The good news in my case was that the texts ended up being really important. Screenshot absolutely everything — every single message — right now if you haven't already. Timestamps matter.

  • 12
    sharp-beaver-991

    I'm sorry you're dealing with this, the guilt spiral after an accident is so real even when it wasn't a big deal. You were trying to do the right thing and be decent about it. Don't beat yourself up — just focus on protecting yourself going forward. You've got this.

  • 11
    brave-bison-894

    Send the confirmation text TODAY. Don't overthink the wording, just something simple and factual. You want her response — or her silence — on the record before too much time passes. Stop waiting.

    • 5
      grounded-sidewalk680

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 6
    clever-stoat-896

    Did you ever actually see the damage on her car up close, or did you just take her word on the repair cost? I'm not saying she's scamming you, but it's worth knowing whether the crack you saw realistically matched what she said the quote was. Also — did you take any photos at the scene at all?

    • 4
      grounded-backseat578

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.