The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsbold-stoat-727

Rear-ended at a red light by a chain reaction — now BOTH other insurers say it's not their problem??

I've been going back and forth with two different insurance companies for almost three weeks now and I'm losing my mind.

Here's what happened: I was completely stopped at a red light. The car directly behind me was stopped too. Then a third car came flying up and slammed into that car, which shoved it right into me. Classic chain reaction. I didn't do a single thing wrong.

Now the fun part. The insurance for the car that caused the whole thing (the one in the back) says they're not responsible for my damage because they never made contact with my vehicle. And the insurance for the car that actually hit me says they weren't at fault because they got pushed into me — so they're pointing the finger right back at the car behind them.

I'm just sitting here like... so nobody hit me? Cool cool cool.

My damage isn't catastrophic — some crumpling on the rear quarter panel, a broken tail light assembly, and my trunk doesn't close right anymore. Definitely driveable but it's not nothing. I skipped comprehensive/collision when I renewed last year to save a little cash and now I'm kicking myself.

On top of the property damage headache, my neck has been really stiff and I've had low-grade headaches since the day after the crash. I haven't gone to a doctor yet because I honestly didn't think it was serious enough, but it's not going away.

Has anyone actually dealt with something like this? Did you eventually get one of them to cave, or did you have to take it further? I don't even know where to start.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 10
    swift-bison-813

    Oh man, I went through almost the exact same runaround about two years ago. Same finger-pointing — the car that started the chain said 'we didn't touch you,' and the middle car said 'we were a victim too.' What finally moved things along for me was sending both insurers a formal written demand at the same time and cc'ing my state's insurance commissioner. Suddenly they got a lot more responsive. Don't let them just volley you back and forth indefinitely.

  • 16
    bright-vole-903

    This is a classic delay tactic. They're betting you'll get frustrated and either give up or settle for way less than you should. Do NOT give either adjuster a recorded statement until you know what you're doing. Anything you say can and will be used to reduce what they pay out.

  • 11
    calm-crane-677

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest — the 'we didn't make direct contact' argument is one adjusters use to stall, not necessarily because it holds up legally. In most states, the car that initiated the collision is considered the proximate cause of all the damage in the chain, including to your vehicle. That argument tends to fall apart fast once you push back formally or involve an attorney. They know it too.

    • 0
      patient-wanderer513

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 15
    spry-crane-712

    Please go get checked out. I'm not trying to be dramatic, but neck stiffness and persistent headaches after a rear-end hit can be soft tissue stuff that gets way worse if you ignore it for weeks. And from a practical standpoint, if you wait too long to see a doctor, insurance will use that gap to argue your symptoms weren't from the accident. Go to an urgent care or your primary care doc and just get it documented, even if it turns out to be nothing serious.

    • 7
      tired-traveler816

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

  • 10
    quiet-swift-565

    A few things worth knowing: First, most states hold the at-fault driver (the one in the rear who started everything) liable for all downstream damages in a chain-reaction crash — courts and insurance regulators generally recognize this. Second, you can file a complaint with your state's department of insurance if you feel a carrier is acting in bad faith or unreasonably delaying. That complaint goes on record and insurers really don't like those. Third, since you have bodily symptoms now, this isn't just a property damage claim anymore — that changes things significantly.

  • 11
    calm-owl-403

    Not legal advice, but I'd strongly suggest at least a free consult with a PI attorney before you say much more to either insurer. The liability question here — proximate cause in a chain collision — is actually pretty well-established law in most jurisdictions, and the 'no direct contact' defense is weak. What concerns me more is that you have ongoing physical symptoms you haven't documented yet. That needs to happen soon. Most PI attorneys take these on contingency so there's no upfront cost to just talk to someone.

  • 12
    keen-swift-766

    Stop calling. Start writing. Send certified letters to both insurance companies stating clearly that you are holding them jointly responsible and that you expect a written response within 10 business days. Paper trails matter. Phone calls disappear.

    • 19
      curious-swift-187

      This sounds so stressful, I'm really sorry you're dealing with it. You did everything right — you were stopped, you weren't even moving — and now you're the one chasing everyone down. Please take care of yourself physically too. That neck stuff sneaks up on you.

  • 11
    patient-sparrow-271

    Do you have a copy of the police report? And did the officer note who was at fault or just document the scene? That report is going to be really important here — if it clearly shows the rear car initiated the collision, that undercuts the 'no direct contact' argument pretty fast. If there's no police report, that's a tougher road.

  • 6
    patient-dove-795

    The good news is chain-reaction liability cases like this tend to resolve in the innocent front driver's favor once there's any real pressure applied. You have a strong factual position. It feels impossible right now but a lot of people in your exact situation do eventually get made whole — especially once they stop trying to resolve it informally and escalate a little.

    • 10
      gentle-driver126

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