The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
Car accidentsplain-otter-952

Rear-ended someone but it wasn't really a rear-end — does fault actually follow the damage?

So I know how this looks on paper and I'm already dreading the conversation with my adjuster, but hear me out.

I was cruising in the far right lane on the highway, normal speed, plenty of space ahead of me. Out of nowhere a pickup merges halfway into my lane from the left — no signal, no warning — then immediately brakes hard. I had maybe a second to react. I clipped the back corner of his truck with the front corner of my car.

The damage tells the story if anyone bothers to look: my front-left is crumpled, his rear-right has the scrape. If I had just plowed straight into the back of him, the damage patterns would be totally different. This was a sideswipe-meets-rear-end situation caused by HIS lane change.

Cops showed up, took statements from both of us, and left without citing either driver. The other guy was super calm and friendly at the scene — almost weirdly so — but I have a feeling his story is going to shift once insurance gets involved.

No dashcam (ordering one tonight, lesson learned the hard way). No witnesses that stopped. Just me, him, and two very different versions of events.

Has anyone fought a presumed rear-end fault determination and actually won? I feel like the physical evidence is on my side but I don't know if adjusters even care about that or if they just default to "you hit someone in front of you = your fault, end of story."

Really not trying to eat a rate increase for something that wasn't my fault.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 20
    silent-bison-600

    No citation is actually a decent starting point — means the officer didn't see it as clear-cut either. That gives you room to argue. And the fact that you're thinking about this carefully and documenting now puts you ahead of most people in this situation.

  • 19
    tidy-crow-309

    Whatever happens with the insurance stuff — are you physically okay? Even low-speed impacts can do weird things to your neck and shoulders that don't show up until a day or two later. If anything feels off, go get checked out and make sure it's documented medically. Don't wait and see.

  • 18
    humble-beaver-037

    Order that dashcam tonight — seriously, front AND rear, they're cheap. For right now: document everything, photograph both vehicles from every angle before anything gets repaired, and don't assume your own insurance company is automatically in your corner. They have their own reasons to settle fast.

    • 0
      weary-survivor557

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 17
    bright-grouse-132

    I went through almost this exact situation two years ago. Different highway, same basic story — guy cut in and braked, damage was offset just like yours. My adjuster initially tried to pin it on me but I pushed back hard and kept pointing to the damage locations. It took a few weeks of back and forth but they eventually split liability. Wasn't perfect but way better than 100% on me. Don't just accept the first determination.

    • 23
      curious-swan-045

      Former adjuster here. The damage pattern you're describing absolutely matters — we were trained to map contact points to reconstruct what actually happened. An offset front-left to rear-right impact is NOT consistent with a straight-on rear-end, and any experienced adjuster will know that. The problem is caseload. If your file lands on someone overwhelmed, they may default to the easy call. Request that your insurer do a proper damage analysis and put that request in writing. Also ask whether they'll be doing a recorded statement — think carefully before agreeing to one without understanding what you're walking into.

  • 16
    curious-owl-871

    A couple of things worth doing right now if you haven't already: (1) Write down everything you remember in as much detail as possible — time, weather, lane positions, speeds, sequence of events — while it's fresh. (2) Go back to the scene if you can and photograph the lane markings, any skid marks, sight lines. (3) If there are any businesses or traffic cameras along that stretch, note them — footage gets overwritten fast. The physical evidence and documentation are going to be your best friends here.

    • 8
      careful-survivor597

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 12
    daring-stoat-643

    Please be careful about talking to the OTHER guy's insurance company. You don't have to give them a recorded statement and whatever you say will be used to minimize his liability. Stick to your own insurer and even then, keep your answers factual and brief. Adjusters are not your friends — on either side.

    • 1
      restless-road-soul469

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

  • 12
    clear-finch-871

    I'm not doubting you but I want to ask — how much of his truck was actually in your lane when contact happened? Like was it fully merged, halfway, just a tire over the line? That distinction could matter a lot for how fault gets split. Also were you following at a distance where you had any realistic chance to stop if someone did brake in front of you, even unexpectedly?

    • 6
      grounded-road-soul457

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 8
    clear-newt-478

    Not legal advice, but the scenario you're describing — an incomplete lane change followed by sudden braking — can absolutely support a comparative or even full fault finding against the other driver. The key is evidence. Damage analysis, any available camera footage, and witness accounts all matter. If your insurer isn't fighting this aggressively on your behalf, a personal injury attorney can sometimes intervene even on the property/liability side of things. Most do free consults. Worth at least a call.