The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Legal questionsdaring-otter-459

Person who caused my accident failed suing me once — now they're trying again with a new lawyer??

I genuinely don't even know how to process this so I'm just gonna type it out and hope someone here has dealt with something similar.

About eight months ago a driver blew through a stop sign and T-boned me while I was going straight through an intersection I had the right of way on. Both vehicles were wrecked. I walked away shaken up but physically okay. The at-fault driver got a citation on scene — it's in the police report, no ambiguity.

A few months later I find out she's suing ME. Claims she suffered serious injuries that have affected her daily life. No mention that she, y'know, ran a stop sign. My insurance handled it, her claim got thrown out, and I thought that was the end of it.

Fast forward to last week. I get paperwork in the mail. Same person. New attorney. Suing me again.

I honestly had to read it three times because I couldn't believe it. She caused the crash, got cited for it, her first lawsuit went nowhere, and now she's just... trying again? With a different lawyer?

I called my insurance company and they're saying they'll assign a defense attorney again, which okay fine, but I'm stressed. Like what stops this from happening a third time if it gets dismissed again? Is there any point where the courts say "enough"? Can something be done to actually stop this cycle?

Also — should I be talking to my own attorney separately from whoever my insurance assigns? I feel like my interests and my insurance company's interests might not be exactly the same here.

Any insight appreciated. This whole thing has me losing sleep.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 15
    daring-badger-690

    Oh wow. I thought my situation was wild but this takes it to another level. I had someone try to pin a fender-bender on me when they clearly rolled into my car in a parking lot. One round of that was enough to rattle me — I can't imagine going through it twice with the same person. So sorry you're dealing with this.

    • 15
      gentle-marmot-238

      I worked in claims for a long time and I'll tell you — some plaintiff attorneys will take a second swing if the first dismissal wasn't ironclad, especially if they think there's insurance money on the table. They're not always fully vetting the case history before filing. The good news is that a solid paper trail (police report, prior dismissal docs, the citation she received) makes this very defensible. Keep copies of absolutely everything.

    • 1
      curious-traveler815

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

  • 8
    wise-heron-221

    Not legal advice, but what you're describing could potentially be addressed through a legal doctrine called res judicata — basically the idea that once a matter is decided, it can't be relitigated. Whether that applies depends on how the first case was resolved. If it was dismissed "with prejudice" that's very different from "without prejudice." Worth asking whoever is handling your defense about that distinction specifically. Your instinct about having your own separate counsel is also not a bad one.

    • 5
      clear-fox-188

      This sounds so exhausting and unfair. You did nothing wrong, you've already been through this once, and now you have to do it all over again? I really hope you have people around you to lean on. The stress of this kind of legal stuff can really wear on you even when you know you're in the right.

  • 8
    sharp-crane-977

    Please don't just sit back and let your insurance company run the whole show here. Their assigned defense attorney is technically working for you, but they're being paid by the insurer and their primary goal is limiting the insurer's payout — not necessarily protecting YOUR record or future premiums or anything beyond this claim. Consult with an independent PI attorney even just for a one-time call to understand where your interests might diverge.

  • 15
    patient-owl-413

    The key question here really is how that first dismissal was entered. "With prejudice" means she's legally barred from bringing the same claim again — and if that's what happened, her new attorney may not even be fully aware of the prior action, or they're gambling that yours won't raise it properly. Pull whatever paperwork you have from round one and get it to whoever is defending you immediately. Courts don't look kindly on this kind of thing when it's brought to their attention the right way.

  • 12
    quick-newt-355

    Two things you need to do right now: 1) Gather every document from the first lawsuit — the dismissal order especially. 2) Call a personal injury attorney for a free consult independent of your insurance. Don't just wait around hoping the system handles it. Be an active participant in your own defense.

  • 15
    keen-crane-020

    Quick question — when you say the first case "got thrown out," do you know the exact reason? Was it dismissed by a judge, or did she voluntarily withdraw it? And was there any written order? The answer to that changes things a lot in terms of whether she's even allowed to refile.

  • 15
    spry-dove-708

    I know this feels like a nightmare but honestly — she's coming back with a weaker hand than before. You now have proof that this exact claim was already decided. That's not nothing. Courts notice patterns and so do judges. You've got more ammunition this time around than you did the first time.

    • 1
      quiet-optimist710

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.