The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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genuine-crow-140

Parking lot scrape — who's actually at fault when someone backs into moving traffic?

So this happened to my cousin last week and she asked me to post because she doesn't want to make an account anywhere right now. She's still pretty shaken up.

She was driving through a grocery store parking lot, totally normal speed, maybe 10-12 mph. A pickup truck was parked in one of those oversized spots near the back of the row — you know the kind that sticks out a little because it's so big. A sedan was parked right next to it, completely hidden from view on her side.

The sedan just... reversed straight out. No pause, no creep-out-slowly moment, nothing. By the time my cousin even registered what was happening, the sedan's rear quarter panel had already swung into her lane and she clipped it on her front left corner trying to swerve.

Both drivers pulled over. The other driver immediately got defensive and started saying my cousin should have been watching for people backing out. My cousin was shaken and didn't say much. A witness who was loading groceries nearby said the sedan never stopped before pulling out.

Now the other driver's insurance is saying it's a "shared fault" situation which honestly feels insane to me. My cousin was in a travel lane, moving normally, and someone reversed into her path without checking.

A few things we're not sure about:

  • Does the witness statement actually matter?
  • Can the other insurance really just decide shared fault?
  • Should she even be talking to the other driver's insurance at all?

She has her own full coverage but doesn't want to use it if the other person was clearly at fault. Any insight from people who've dealt with similar stuff would really help.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 14
    cool-hare-494

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me in a mall parking lot two years ago. Someone reversed out from behind a van and hit my door. The other driver's insurance tried the shared fault angle with me too — I think it's almost automatic for them to try it. I pushed back, got the police report, and eventually they backed down. The witness statement helped a lot in my case, so don't let anyone tell you it doesn't matter.

    • 5
      humble-sparrow-798

      "Shared fault" is one of the oldest tricks adjusters use to lower their payout. The moment they sense you don't know your rights, they'll float that language and see if it sticks. Your cousin should stop talking to the other driver's insurance entirely until she understands what she's agreeing to. Anything she says can and will be used to justify reducing the at-fault percentage on their end.

    • 1
      calm-neighbor145

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 15
    bold-crane-440

    I used to work claims for a carrier and honestly, the initial fault determination is not final — not even close. It's a negotiating position. The backing driver almost always carries the majority of fault in these scenarios because the driver in the travel lane has the right of way. A witness statement, especially an unaffiliated one like a random person loading groceries, carries real weight when it goes to arbitration or dispute. Make sure that witness info is documented somewhere official if possible.

  • 13
    clever-seal-154

    A couple practical things: First, your cousin should request a copy of the police report if one was filed — that document often shapes how fault gets assigned. Second, she does NOT have to give a recorded statement to the other party's insurance company. That's optional and I'd strongly suggest she decline until she's had a chance to at least consult with someone who knows this stuff. Third, if the witness gave contact info, your cousin should reach out and ask if they'd be willing to put their account in writing.

  • 8
    tidy-tern-371

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking: in most states, a driver who is backing out of a space has a duty to yield to vehicles already in the travel lane. The fact that the sedan was obscured by a larger vehicle doesn't shift that duty onto your cousin — if anything, it means the sedan driver should have been more cautious, not less. Whether or not shared fault applies depends heavily on state law. Worth a free consult just to understand where she stands.

  • 13
    patient-marmot-145

    I just want to ask — how is your cousin doing physically? Even low-speed parking lot impacts can cause soft tissue stuff that doesn't show up until a few days later. Neck, shoulder, sometimes lower back. If she's feeling any soreness or stiffness, she should see a doctor and get it documented NOW, not next week. Insurance companies love to argue that delayed treatment means no real injury.

    • 1
      patient-wanderer508

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

  • 12
    brave-tern-609

    Was there actually a police report filed, or did they just exchange info and leave? And did the witness stick around long enough to give your cousin their name and number? Those two details change the situation pretty significantly. Without documentation it becomes a he-said-she-said situation, and insurance companies know exactly how to work that in their favor.

  • 14
    tidy-hare-970

    Here's the short version: stop letting the other driver's insurance run the conversation. They work for the other driver, not your cousin. She should file through her own insurance, let them fight it out, and focus on getting her car fixed and herself checked out medically. Her rates shouldn't go up if she's not at fault, and her insurer has way more leverage in these disputes than she does alone.

  • 20
    warm-wren-679

    The good news is she has a witness. That's honestly huge. A lot of parking lot accidents are total word-against-word situations with no way to sort it out. The fact that someone unconnected to either driver saw what happened gives her something real to stand on. It's stressful now but this isn't hopeless at all.