The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
bright-tern-597

My sister crashed a car that's in MY name and now I'm the one getting collection letters??

I don't even know where to start with this mess.

About two years ago my younger sister needed a car but couldn't get approved on her own — bad credit history, no steady income at the time. I agreed to put the car in my name and let her make the payments directly to me every month. We had a whole verbal agreement. I know, I know.

She rear-ended someone pretty badly back in the spring. She didn't tell me right away — I found out when a notice showed up at MY address from the insurance company. When I confronted her she downplayed it completely, said the other driver was fine and it was no big deal.

Fast forward to last week. I'm getting letters from what looks like a collections and claims processing office saying the damages — including the other person's medical bills — are pushing up against my policy limits. Now they're suggesting I may have personal exposure beyond what the insurance covers.

I wasn't in the car. I didn't cause the accident. I was at work 40 miles away.

I've been trying to get my name off the registration and loan for months but my sister keeps dragging her feet and making excuses. I genuinely can not afford a lawyer but it's starting to feel like I need one.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Being liable for someone else's accident just because the paperwork has your name on it feels insane. I'm losing sleep over this.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 14
    quiet-stoat-416

    Oh this hits close to home. I had a similar situation with a roommate — not a crash this bad, but I was the named insured and suddenly I was the one fielding all the calls. The second my name was on that policy I was the one on the hook. It's a nightmare. I'm so sorry you're going through this.

    • 0
      restless-late-shift410

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 16
    gentle-kestrel-141

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: when your name is on the registration and the insurance policy, you can potentially be exposed to liability if damages exceed your policy limits — even if you weren't driving. That 'personal exposure' language in the letter is not something to brush off. If you haven't at least had a free consultation with a PI attorney yet, now is the time. Many will take a quick call at no charge just to tell you where you stand.

    • 8
      swift-seal-560

      That letter is designed to scare you, but that doesn't mean the threat isn't real. Insurance companies will look for any angle to minimize their payout. If they can point fingers at you as the 'responsible party' on paper, they might. Don't talk to anyone from the other side's insurance without understanding what you're agreeing to first.

  • 11
    hearty-newt-384

    I used to work in claims and yeah — from the insurance company's internal perspective, you are the policyholder, full stop. It doesn't matter that you weren't driving. Your name on that policy is who they're dealing with. The good news is that your own insurer is still obligated to defend you up to your limits. The scary part is what happens if this goes over those limits. That's when things get personal. Get in front of this before it escalates further.

  • 13
    curious-wren-646

    I just want to say I'm really sorry. You were trying to help your sister and now you're the one stressed out and losing sleep. That's genuinely awful. Please don't try to handle this alone — even just talking to someone who knows this stuff could take a weight off you.

  • 22
    steady-lynx-237

    A few things worth knowing: First, document everything — every letter, every text from your sister, every date. If this ever goes further you'll want a paper trail showing you weren't aware of the accident when it happened and that you've been trying to get your name off the loan. Second, 'personal exposure beyond policy limits' is a real legal concept — it means the injured party could potentially come after your personal assets if a judgment exceeds what insurance pays. It's not super common but it happens. Third, a lot of PI attorneys offer free case reviews, even for situations like yours that are a little unusual.

    • 6
      steady-rider457

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

    • 0
      mellow-overpass529

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 8
    bold-raven-398

    Stop waiting on your sister to do the right thing. She's already proven she won't. You need to talk to the lender yourself, contact the DMV about what it takes to get your name off the title, and consult with a lawyer this week — not next month. Every day you wait is a day closer to someone filing a judgment against you.

  • 14
    careful-wolf-349

    I don't want to pile on but — is your sister at least acknowledging what's happening here? Like does she understand the position she's put you in? Because if she's still being dismissive that tells you something about whether she's going to cooperate going forward. Also, do you have anything in writing about your agreement with her?