The Shoulder
The Shoulder
47
silent-raven-065

Paid someone cash at the scene to settle it — now they're lawyering up on me??

I'm so frustrated I don't even know where to start.

A few months back I bumped someone in a parking lot. We're talking a low-speed tap — their bumper had a tiny scuff, maybe already there, honestly. They seemed annoyed but okay. No one called the police, no report, nothing.

They kept saying they didn't want drama and just wanted to be "made whole" on the spot. I handed over cash — not a small amount either — and they shook my hand and said we were square. I didn't get anything in writing because honestly I panicked and just wanted it handled.

Fast forward to last week: I get a letter saying they've retained an attorney and are pursuing an injury claim through my insurance. Whiplash, pain and suffering, the whole thing.

My insurer is involved now and says they'll handle it up to my policy limits — but here's what's keeping me up at night: what happens if their medical bills or demand goes over my limits? Am I personally on the hook for the difference? And what about the cash I already handed them — does that just disappear into the void?

I feel completely played. I tried to do the "right thing" by handling it quickly and now I'm somehow in a worse position than if I'd just called the cops and filed a report like a normal person.

Has anyone been through something like this? Did the cash payment factor in at all legally? I have no idea if I should just let my insurance handle everything or if I should be talking to someone independently.

Really stressed out and any perspective helps.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 14
    steady-vole-159

    Ugh, I'm so sorry — something similar happened to a buddy of mine (he was on the receiving end of a tap, not the at-fault driver) and the whole "settle it at the scene" thing always gets messy. The big mistake in both cases was no written agreement and no police report. That piece of paper matters SO much more than people realize in the moment.

    • 20
      gentle-raven-643

      The cash payment without a written release is the crux of the problem. A valid settlement release — even an informal one — can bar future claims. Without it, they can argue the cash was just a goodwill gesture and doesn't prevent them from pursuing further compensation. Whether your insurer's assigned counsel will try to use the payment as leverage in negotiations is a different question, but don't count on it saving you automatically.

    • 6
      quiet-commuter139

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

  • 10
    tidy-dove-649

    Spent years on the inside and I can tell you this pattern isn't unusual at all. People accept cash at the scene feeling fine, then wake up sore two days later — sometimes genuinely, sometimes not. The problem is you have no documentation of that exchange. No signed release, no text confirmation, nothing. That cash might as well not have happened as far as a claims process is concerned. The lesson everyone learns the hard way: even a handwritten note signed by both parties saying "paid in full, no further claims" is better than nothing.

    • 9
      quiet-survivor393

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 8
    daring-crow-724

    Not legal advice, but the coverage-gap question you're asking — what happens if their demand exceeds your policy limits — is genuinely important and worth a real conversation with a personal injury defense attorney sooner rather than later. Some people don't realize their own auto policy may have provisions that matter here, and an independent attorney (not just the one your insurer assigns) can explain your actual exposure. Most PI defense attorneys do free consults.

    • 6
      mellow-road-soul358

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

  • 8
    keen-vole-281

    This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The fact that you tried to handle it responsibly and are now in this position feels really unfair. Please don't just white-knuckle through this alone — even one call with someone who knows this stuff could probably clear up a lot of the anxiety around the "what ifs."

  • 7
    quiet-otter-258

    First thing: do NOT give your insurance company more detail than they ask for right now. They are not on your side — they're managing their own exposure. The minute you start volunteering information about the cash you paid, you could be muddying the waters in ways that hurt you. Let them work the claim, but keep your answers tight and factual.

  • 6
    keen-newt-902

    Blunt take: the cash is probably gone. It wasn't legally documented so it's not going to function as a settlement. Focus your energy on the actual claim now. Let your insurance handle what they're supposed to handle, find out exactly what your policy limits are, and if there's any chance of a gap, talk to an independent attorney before this thing escalates.

  • 6
    careful-grouse-296

    A few questions because the details matter a lot here: Do you have any record of the cash exchange at all — Venmo, a photo, even a text from that day? Did you get their name and contact info? And do you know if they actually sought medical treatment the same day or much later? The timeline of when they started claiming injury can be really significant.