The Shoulder
The Shoulder
66
bold-heron-589

My parked car got clipped by a delivery van — no police report, what happens now?

So this happened a few days ago and I'm still kind of shaken up about it honestly. I was parked on a side street near my gym — completely off, engine not running, nobody in the car — when a large commercial delivery van caught the rear corner of my car pulling out of a loading zone.

A woman who was walking her dog nearby actually stopped and told me she saw the whole thing, which was a relief. The driver did stay at the scene, thankfully. He works for some kind of regional delivery company and said the van was company-owned. He gave me his info and I got photos of both vehicles, the damage, his company ID badge, and the van's license plate.

Here's the thing — cops were called but they said since nobody was hurt they wouldn't be coming out. So there's no official police report. I went ahead and filed a claim directly with his employer's commercial insurance carrier, submitted everything I have.

My questions:

  • How do they actually figure out who's at fault when it's basically my photos + a witness vs. whatever the driver tells his company?
  • Does the lack of a police report seriously hurt me?
  • Should I be trying to get a written statement from the witness now before she's hard to track down?
  • Is there anything the insurance adjuster is going to try to pull that I should watch out for?

The damage looks pretty significant — the rear quarter panel is pushed in and my trunk won't latch properly. I'm just a regular person who parks their car legally and now I'm dealing with all this. Any experience with this kind of situation would be really appreciated. 🙏

10replies

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10 replies

  • 18
    plain-wolf-376

    Watch out — commercial carriers can be slow-walked on purpose hoping you'll just accept a lowball repair estimate to make it go away. Don't let them steer you to their 'preferred' repair shop if you don't want to. You have the right to get your own independent estimate. And if they ask you to give a recorded statement, you are NOT required to do that.

  • 16
    sharp-raven-268

    You're in a pretty strong position honestly. Parked car, photographic evidence, a witness, and the driver stayed — that's about as clean as these situations get. File everything in writing, not just phone calls. Keep copies of everything you send them. And get that trunk looked at by a body shop you trust before you agree to any repair number the insurance company gives you.

    • 8
      tired-dreamer645

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 13
    hearty-dove-901

    Not legal advice, but for what it's worth — commercial vehicle claims often move differently than personal auto claims because the company has more at stake reputationally and their carrier typically has more resources to settle cleanly. That said, 'more resources' also means more experienced adjusters. If the repair estimate comes back lower than what you're actually seeing from your own shop quotes, or if they start pushing back on liability in a way that doesn't make sense, it might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your options. Many won't charge for that conversation.

  • 11
    keen-marmot-770

    YES get that witness info locked down immediately, like today if you can. I had a similar thing happen — parked car, no report, and I had a witness who I waited too long to contact. By the time the adjuster asked for corroboration she'd moved and I couldn't reach her. Your photos are great but a real human who watched it happen is gold.

    • 15
      clever-elk-213

      A few practical things: First, get that witness's full name, phone number, and email, and ask if she'd be willing to write down what she saw in her own words — even a text message from her describing the incident can help. Second, document your trunk latch issue specifically in writing to the adjuster because mechanical damage that isn't visible in photos sometimes gets overlooked in initial estimates. Third, keep a simple log of every call and email with the insurance company — dates, names, what was said. It adds up if things get complicated later.

  • 9
    silent-otter-260

    I used to work claims for a mid-size carrier and I'll tell you — a parked car scenario is actually one of the cleaner liability calls we'd deal with. A legally parked vehicle that gets struck is pretty hard to argue comparative fault on. The adjuster assigned to this will look at the physical damage pattern on both vehicles to see if the story is consistent, and your photos help a lot with that. The no-police-report thing is annoying but it's not a dealbreaker. Happens constantly. Just make sure everything you've submitted is timestamped and consistent.

    • 10
      honest-rider935

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 6
    patient-kestrel-904

    I know you said nobody was hurt, but I'd just gently say — sometimes the adrenaline of dealing with the scene and the paperwork masks things. If you have any neck stiffness, headaches, or back soreness in the next few days, please don't shrug it off. Even if you weren't in the car at the time, stress can manifest physically. Just worth keeping an eye on how you're feeling overall.

  • 6
    silent-wren-191

    This sounds so stressful, especially dealing with it alone. The fact that you did everything right — stayed calm, got photos, got the driver's info — really puts you in a good spot. Hang in there and don't let them pressure you into settling before you know the full picture.