The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
Car accidentsmellow-raven-594

Rear-ended someone after swerving to avoid a truck — can I still have a claim?

This happened about ten days ago and my head is still spinning trying to figure out what my options even are.

I was on the highway doing the speed limit when a pickup in front of me suddenly locked up his brakes for no apparent reason. To avoid hitting him I jerked the wheel left — and there was a fully loaded semi coming straight at me in that lane. I yanked back right, clipped the guardrail, and then tapped the rear bumper of a sedan that was ahead of me. Nobody got carted off in an ambulance at the scene, so I told myself I was fine and drove home.

Except I wasn't fine. The next morning I could barely turn my neck, my shoulders felt like concrete, and I had a headache that lasted four days. I went to an urgent care and they documented the neck strain and told me to follow up.

Here's where it gets complicated: technically I hit the car in front of me, even though the whole thing started because the pickup slammed his brakes. My brother keeps telling me I should be able to make a claim against the pickup driver since he's the one who set everything in motion. But I'm also dealing with the fact that I haven't been able to go back to work — I do physical labor and my neck isn't there yet, plus honestly driving on that highway makes my heart race every time I even think about it.

I have no idea:

  • Whether I have any claim against the pickup driver
  • What happens with the car I rear-ended
  • Whether missed wages are something I can even pursue
  • If the anxiety/driving fear counts for anything legally

Has anyone been through something like this? I don't even know where to start.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 20
    plain-stoat-632

    Please be careful what you say to ANY insurance adjuster right now — yours or anybody else's. They will ask you leading questions and anything you say about 'jerking the wheel' or 'not seeing him in time' can get twisted into an admission. Do not give a recorded statement without understanding your rights first. They are not your friend, even if they sound super sympathetic on the phone.

    • 3
      weathered-co-pilot611

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 20
    keen-stoat-621

    I used to work on the claims side and I'll tell you this: insurers absolutely look for the 'last clear chance' argument to put fault on whoever made the final contact — in your case, you. They'll try to settle this quick and cheap before you understand what you actually have. The pickup driver's role in creating the emergency is the central argument in your favor, but you have to actually make that argument. It won't happen automatically. Get your urgent care records together and don't sign anything.

  • 13
    silent-hare-999

    The neck and shoulder stuff you're describing sounds like classic whiplash and it can absolutely get worse before it gets better, especially with physical labor. Please don't push through it at work before you've had a proper evaluation — sometimes an MRI catches things urgent care misses. Also, what you're feeling about driving — the racing heart, the dread — that's a real trauma response. Mention it to your doctor and get it in your medical records. It's not 'just nerves,' it's part of your injury picture.

  • 12
    hearty-raven-734

    A few practical things to do right now regardless of what you decide legally: (1) Write down everything you remember about the sequence of events — as much detail as possible — while it's fresh. (2) Get a copy of the police report if one was filed. (3) Keep every receipt and document related to treatment and every paystub that shows what you're missing from work. If you do end up talking to an attorney, having that paper trail organized will save you so much time.

    • 1
      grounded-offramp998

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

    • 6
      honest-passenger630

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 10
    candid-crane-583

    Not legal advice, but what you're describing is called a 'chain reaction' or 'forced collision' scenario, and fault isn't automatically pinned on whoever made the last contact. If the pickup driver created a sudden emergency that left you with no reasonable options, that matters — a lot. The anxiety and lost wages are also legitimate damages that get factored into these claims. Seriously worth at least one free consultation with a PI attorney before you talk to any insurance company. Not legal advice.

  • 8
    spry-crane-925

    I just want to say — please take care of yourself first. The legal stuff is important but you sound really shaken up and that's completely valid after something that scary. The driving anxiety is real. Lean on people around you right now.

    • 5
      thankful-offramp956

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 7
    careful-grouse-778

    Oh man, I went through something really similar — I was forced into a lane change by someone cutting me off and ended up making contact with another car. Everyone assumed it was my fault because I was the one who drifted. But the other driver actually got cited eventually because witnesses backed up what happened. The key for me was that there were people who saw the whole thing. Do you know if anyone stopped or if there's any dashcam footage from nearby? That stuff makes a huge difference.

    • 17
      sharp-badger-113

      Was there actually a police report filed at the scene? And did anyone get the pickup driver's info, or did he just drive off after causing the whole thing? I ask because if there's no report and no witness info on that driver, the situation gets a lot harder to untangle. Not impossible, but harder.