The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagebold-marten-379

Parked car totaled by hit-and-run driver — owner's insurer now claiming no coverage??

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

About three weeks ago my car was parked on the street in front of my house — completely unoccupied — and some guy plowed right into it and drove off. Neighbors saw it happen and actually followed him a few blocks until he stopped. Cops came, got the guy, and he ended up being charged with DUI on top of everything else.

Here's where it gets maddening. The car he was driving belongs to someone else — apparently a coworker. I've seen the police report and it literally says the owner handed the guy the keys before the night started and told him to "take it easy" with the car. That sounds like permission to me??

But the owner's insurance company is now telling me they're denying my claim because they're disputing whether the driver actually had permission to use the vehicle. Like... the owner gave him the keys. How is that not permission?

My own collision coverage stepped in and paid for most of the damage, but I'm stuck eating my deductible and my rates could go up now. That feels completely wrong when I didn't do a single thing to cause this.

A few questions I'm trying to figure out:

  • Does the driver's own personal auto policy (for whatever car he normally drives) cover this situation?
  • Is there any way to fight the at-fault insurer's denial on the permissive use thing?
  • Can my insurance company go after them on my behalf to get my deductible back?

I have a call scheduled with both insurers tomorrow but I genuinely don't know what I'm walking into. Has anyone dealt with anything like this before? What did you say or do that actually helped?

9replies

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9 replies

  • 23
    clear-finch-819

    Ugh this is almost exactly what happened to my brother-in-law a couple years back. Different circumstances but same "permissive use" runaround from the other driver's insurer. The key thing that eventually moved it forward was that my brother-in-law's own insurance actually went to bat for him through subrogation — basically they sued the at-fault insurer to get their money back, and his deductible came back as part of that process. It took a few months but he did get it. Don't give up just because they deny you upfront — that's kind of their first move with everything.

  • 22
    steady-raven-495

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest — "permissive use" denials are sometimes legitimate but they're also sometimes just a pressure tactic to see if the claimant pushes back. When there's documentation like a police report showing the owner physically handed over keys, that's pretty hard to argue against in arbitration or court. Your own insurer has financial motivation to pursue this too since they already paid out. Ask your adjuster directly whether they plan to subrogate against the at-fault carrier. If they say yes, that process can pull your deductible back in.

    • 14
      hearty-swan-163

      To answer your question about the driver's own policy — yes, in many states a personal auto policy can extend liability coverage when the insured is driving a non-owned vehicle with permission. It's worth calling that driver's insurer directly and asking whether his policy has "non-owned vehicle" liability coverage. You might get a different answer there than you're getting from the car owner's insurer. Also, document everything — every call, every email, every name of every rep you speak to. That paper trail matters if this escalates.

    • 9
      careful-badger-184

      I know this is mostly about the car and money, but were you or anyone else injured at all? Even indirectly — like if the stress of this has been messing with your sleep or you've had any physical symptoms? I only ask because sometimes people overlook that piece when the property damage is the obvious headline. Just making sure you're taking care of yourself through this mess too.

  • 20
    genuine-beaver-891

    Not legal advice, but this fact pattern — keys physically transferred, police documentation, DUI involved — is exactly the kind of thing a PI attorney would look at pretty quickly in a free consult. The permissive use doctrine is well-established in most states and courts have generally found that physically handing someone keys creates at least implied permission. The drunk driving element can also open up other avenues depending on your state. Might be worth a consult before you say too much to either insurer.

    • 1
      honest-survivor199

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 19
    calm-badger-927

    Stop talking to these insurers on the phone without knowing your rights first. Every call is recorded and adjusters are trained to get you to say things that help their case. Get a free consult with a PI lawyer before tomorrow if you can — many will do same-day calls. You don't have to hire anyone, just go in informed.

  • 10
    wise-fox-561

    That denial is a classic lowball opening move. Insurers know most people will just accept it and go away. The fact that the police report documents the key handoff is huge — that's not nothing. Do not let them brush past that detail on your call tomorrow. Ask them specifically, in writing, what their legal basis is for the denial and what evidence they're relying on to claim there was no permissive use. Make them put it in writing. The moment you start asking for written explanations, the tone often changes.

  • 9
    sharp-hare-117

    This is so unfair. You were literally just parked at your own house doing nothing wrong and now you're the one scrambling to make calls and fight for money you shouldn't owe. I'm sorry you're dealing with this. Sending you patience for tomorrow — hope those calls go better than expected.