The Shoulder
The Shoulder
48
Legal questionscool-marten-769

Someone drove my truck without asking, caused a wreck — now I'm getting calls from a stranger's lawyer??

I'm genuinely losing sleep over this and could use some outside perspective from people who get it.

So a few weeks ago my neighbor's adult kid — someone I barely know — apparently helped himself to my truck while I was out of town for work. He had access to my property because I'd asked the family to keep an eye on things. I never said he could touch my truck. Ever.

While I was gone, he took it out, clipped another vehicle at a gas station or a parking lot or something (details keep changing every time I hear the story), and just... parked my truck back in the driveway like nothing happened. Didn't tell me. Didn't tell his parents. Nothing.

Fast forward to last week — a voicemail from an attorney's office representing the other driver. Apparently that person is claiming a neck injury.

I filed a police report as soon as I found out. My insurance company says I might still be on the hook because my truck was technically on my property and not forcibly stolen. But the lawyer I spoke to (just a consultation) said that since I never gave permission and filed a report, my exposure might be limited.

Now I'm stuck between what my insurer wants me to do and what the attorney suggested, and they're basically opposite directions.

Has anyone been through something like this? The whole thing feels so wildly unfair — I did nothing wrong and I'm the one fielding calls and stressing out. What would you do?

10replies

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10 replies

  • 16
    bright-heron-356

    Oh man, this hits close to home. Something similar happened to me with a family member borrowing my car 'just to grab groceries.' Ended up in a fender bender, and I was the one dealing with the fallout for months. The thing I wish I'd done immediately was get everything documented — every conversation, every voicemail, every text. Start a paper trail right now if you haven't already.

    • 18
      plain-mole-486

      Stop taking calls from the other driver's attorney without your own representation. Seriously, stop right now. You are not required to talk to them, and anything you say can be used to establish liability. Get a PI attorney on the phone today — most do free consultations. Then let the professionals talk to each other.

    • 5
      kind-survivor861

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

    • 0
      level-sidewalk685

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 12
    curious-grouse-369

    Your insurance company telling you to accept liability is not them looking out for you — it's them looking out for themselves. Accepting liability could close a door you don't want closed yet. Talk to at least one more independent attorney before you do anything your insurer suggests. Remember: your insurer's interests and your interests are not always the same thing.

    • 8
      daring-stoat-251

      I used to work claims for a major carrier and honestly? The 'you might still be liable because it wasn't forcibly stolen' angle is something adjusters lean on because it often gets people to cooperate and accept coverage responsibility. Whether it's actually true in your specific state is a whole different question. The fact that you filed a police report is significant — that's not nothing. Don't let them wave that away.

  • 18
    swift-tern-470

    Not legal advice, and I don't know your state's laws — but the concept you're bumping into is called 'permissive use,' and it varies a lot by jurisdiction. Some states broadly hold vehicle owners liable if someone had any general access; others are much more protective once you establish no permission was given. The police report you filed matters. A second legal opinion from someone who knows your state's specific statutes would be worth every penny right now.

  • 20
    clear-stoat-772

    Quick question — when you say you 'filed a police report,' did you file it as a theft/unauthorized use of a vehicle, or just as an incident report? That distinction might actually matter a lot here. Also, do you have anything in writing — texts, emails — showing you never gave this person permission to use your truck? Even indirect stuff could help your case.

    • 10
      patient-crane-988

      This is so infuriating to read. You did the right thing — you filed a report, you didn't hide anything — and now you're the one suffering consequences for someone else's terrible decision. I really hope you find an attorney who fights hard for you. You don't deserve this.

  • 5
    hearty-swan-566

    I just want to say — the stress of something like this is real and it takes a physical toll. Please don't let this consume you to the point where you're the one who ends up with health problems. Whatever the legal outcome, make sure you're sleeping, eating, talking to someone you trust. The situation is awful but you will get through it.