The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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humble-marten-473

Settlement being split with passengers from the OTHER car?? Someone explain this to me

My husband got rear-ended pretty badly at a red light a few months back — totally not his fault, the other driver even admitted it at the scene. His truck had serious damage, he's been doing physical therapy for his neck ever since, missed weeks of work. It's been a whole ordeal.

We hired an attorney after the other side lawyered up, and things have been moving slowly but okay. Until last week.

Our lawyer explained that the settlement pool is going to be split — and part of what's available is going to go toward claims filed by two people who were riding in the car that hit my husband. The car that caused the accident. They're claiming injuries too.

I'm sitting here trying to wrap my head around this. My husband is the one who was stopped at a red light doing absolutely nothing wrong. His neck is messed up, we've got mountains of medical bills, and now we're sharing a pot with people from the car that plowed into him?

I get that insurance doesn't really assign "blame points" to passengers — they didn't cause anything — but emotionally this is really hard to accept. It genuinely feels like the system is built to punish the victim twice.

Our attorney says this is normal and that the liability limits just get divided among all claimants. Is that actually how this works everywhere? Has anyone else dealt with this? I'm not trying to be heartless toward those passengers but also… my husband is the one who got hurt through no fault of his own and it feels deeply unfair that his recovery comes out of the same pool.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 7
    genuine-lynx-740

    Ugh, I went through almost exactly this after a crash a couple years ago. The other driver ran a stop sign and I ended up splitting the liability payout with a passenger from their car. I was furious. My attorney explained the same thing yours did — passengers are considered "innocent" third parties regardless of which car they were in. It still stings but it is legitimately how it works.

  • 21
    clever-beaver-944

    Not legal advice, but your attorney is correct. When multiple people have valid claims against a single at-fault driver's policy, they all draw from the same per-occurrence liability limit. Passengers in the striking vehicle have no fault in causing the crash, so they can file claims too. The frustrating part is that policy limits are often too low to fully cover everyone. Worth asking your attorney whether your husband has his own underinsured motorist coverage — that's a separate channel that only he can access.

  • 9
    silent-heron-075

    This is one of those situations where low policy limits work in the insurance company's favor. They pay out the cap, split it across claimants, and everyone walks away undercompensated. The insurer isn't losing sleep over this. Make sure your side has pushed hard on every possible coverage source before you agree to anything final.

  • 14
    candid-badger-320

    The term to look up is "per occurrence limit" vs "per person limit." The per-person limit is the max any single claimant gets. The per-occurrence limit is the total the insurer pays out for the entire incident combined. When you've got multiple claimants eating into that occurrence cap, everyone's share shrinks. It's not a scam — it's just a structurally frustrating design. A good attorney will also look at whether your husband's own UM/UIM policy can make up the gap.

  • 17
    plain-owl-259

    Former claims adjuster here. When I worked in auto liability, multi-claimant crashes were genuinely some of the messiest files. We'd have to track every claimant and negotiate the split carefully, sometimes interpleading the funds with a court so a judge could decide allocation. Your attorney should be making sure your husband's claim is documented as thoroughly and compellingly as possible so his share reflects the actual severity of his injuries relative to the others.

  • 14
    brave-owl-598

    The medical documentation piece is so important in exactly this situation. If your husband's injuries are more severe than the passengers', that needs to be crystal clear in the records — imaging results, treatment duration, functional limitations, time off work, all of it. Don't let his case get treated as equal to someone with minor complaints just because the paperwork isn't as detailed.

  • 19
    careful-beaver-487

    I'm so sorry you're both dealing with this on top of everything else. It just doesn't seem right that the people in the car that CAUSED the crash get any slice of this. I totally understand why you're frustrated. Hang in there — at least you have an attorney fighting for you.

  • 8
    sharp-grouse-809

    Bottom line: ask your attorney two specific questions. One — what is the exact per-occurrence limit you're all drawing from? Two — does your husband have underinsured motorist coverage and has a claim been opened on it yet? Those two answers will tell you whether there's more money available that doesn't have to be shared with anyone else.

    • 10
      calm-rider122

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

  • 8
    quick-elk-778

    Are the passengers from the other car represented by a separate attorney, or is one attorney handling all the claimants? And do you know yet what the split actually looks like — is it proportional to documented injuries or just divided equally? The details matter a lot here because "this is how it works" doesn't mean everyone is necessarily being treated fairly within that process.