The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagemellow-kestrel-743

Semi blew a tire on the highway, debris totaled my hood — now the carrier says they don't cover that truck??

I'm still kind of in shock and honestly just need to vent because I don't know what to do next.

About a month ago I'm driving to work on the interstate — early morning, barely any traffic. Out of nowhere there's this massive BANG and my car gets pelted with what I later found out was shredded tire chunks from a semi that had a blowout in the opposite lanes. The debris crossed the median and slammed into the front of my car. Hood crumpled, radiator cracked, one headlight completely gone. I barely kept the car on the road.

A couple other drivers stopped and confirmed what happened. One of them actually followed the semi until it pulled over and got the trucking company name off the door. We're talking a commercial rig here, clearly marked.

Cop came out, took statements, did the whole thing. Police report backs up everything — documents the blown tire, the debris field across both lanes, the semi pulling over. Pretty open-and-shut, right?

I filed a claim with the liability carrier listed for that trucking company. Took almost three weeks to even get a callback. Then today they tell me the policy was issued under a different legal entity name than what's on the truck door, and they're saying that means the truck involved might not actually be covered under that policy.

I've already paid out of pocket for a tow and a rental. My car is still sitting at a shop waiting for an answer.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Is the carrier just trying to dodge, or is the name mismatch actually a real legal problem? I feel like I'm being given the runaround and I don't even know where to start pushing back.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 20
    genuine-wolf-659

    Oh they are absolutely trying to run out the clock on you. The 'different entity name' thing is a classic dodge — trucking companies restructure, rename subsidiaries, reregister equipment under holding companies ALL the time specifically to make situations like this complicated. Don't accept that answer as final. Keep everything in writing from this point forward and stop taking calls without a way to record or document what they say.

    • 22
      clever-elk-033

      I went through almost the exact same thing — debris from a commercial vehicle, clear evidence it was their fault, and then weeks of silence followed by a denial. What finally moved things for me was sending a certified letter directly to the trucking company (not just the insurer) putting them on notice that I was holding them responsible. I don't know if it was the letter or the fact that I mentioned I was talking to an attorney, but suddenly the adjuster got a lot more cooperative. Don't just fight the insurance company — go at the actual company too.

    • 6
      kind-commuter971

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

  • 20
    clever-dove-977

    I worked claims for years and I can tell you this: when a carrier says 'that entity name doesn't match our policy,' that's the first move in a denial chain that's designed to make you go away. What they're not telling you is that most commercial trucking policies cover the vehicle as well as the named insured, and if that rig has a VIN, it can be traced to coverage regardless of what name is on the door. Request the declarations page of the policy in writing. You're entitled to know exactly what's covered.

  • 12
    swift-wolf-297

    A couple of things worth doing right now: First, look up the trucking company through the FMCSA website — any carrier operating commercially has a USDOT number and their insurance filings are public record. That'll tell you what carrier is actually on file for that truck regardless of what name the adjuster gives you. Second, if the truck crossed state lines at all, there are federal minimum liability requirements for commercial carriers that the carrier can't just dodge with a paperwork argument. Not legal advice, just things I've seen matter a lot in these situations.

  • 21
    keen-lynx-862

    Not legal advice, but the entity name mismatch issue you're describing is extremely common in commercial trucking cases and it's rarely as simple as the carrier makes it sound. Trucking operations often involve a web of LLCs — one owns the truck, one employs the driver, one holds the operating authority. An attorney who handles commercial truck cases can usually untangle that quickly and figure out which entity actually bears liability. Most do free consults. Worth a conversation before you spend more energy negotiating alone.

    • 6
      grounded-co-pilot840

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

  • 16
    bold-bison-242

    Please make sure you've seen a doctor even if you feel physically fine. Adrenaline during something this scary masks a lot — neck stiffness, headaches, and back pain from bracing for impact can show up days later. I see it constantly. If you did get any kind of medical treatment, keep every record. If you didn't but start feeling off, go now rather than waiting. It matters for your wellbeing and, from what I understand, for your claim too.

  • 10
    genuine-raven-211

    Stop calling them. Every phone call is them getting free information and buying time. Send everything certified mail, keep copies, and honestly just get a trucking accident lawyer on the phone this week. Commercial carrier cases have layers that a regular fender-bender claim doesn't, and you trying to negotiate solo is probably costing you money.

  • 19
    clear-owl-837

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this. You did everything right — pulled over safely, waited for police, got the report — and you're still getting jerked around. That's infuriating. Please don't let them wear you down into just eating the cost. You deserve to be made whole here.

    • 8
      weathered-offramp419

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

    • 3
      quiet-commuter805

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

  • 16
    tidy-marten-471

    Quick question — did you actually get the USDOT number or VIN off the truck, or just the company name from the door? Because company names on trucks can be outdated or even just branding that doesn't match any legal entity. If you only have a name, the insurer might actually have a legitimate point about not being able to confirm coverage. Not saying they're acting in good faith, just wondering if there's a documentation gap worth addressing.