The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
Car accidentsclear-kestrel-285

Swerved for a dog in the road, got rear-ended hard — am I the one who caused this??

Still kind of shaken up writing this so bear with me.

I was driving home from work last week, totally normal Tuesday. I'm going maybe 30 mph — right at the speed limit — on a two-lane road near my neighborhood when this big dog just bolts out from between two parked cars directly in front of me. I mean directly in front of me, no warning whatsoever.

I hit the brakes hard and managed not to hit the dog. The truck behind me did NOT manage to stop in time and slammed into my rear end pretty good. My car got pushed forward about 15 feet. The rear end is crushed, airbags didn't deploy but my neck and upper back are already stiffening up and I went to urgent care the same night.

Here's where my head is spinning: the other driver is telling his insurance company that I "braked suddenly and without reason" and that I'm responsible for the collision. His adjuster called me already and was asking a lot of pointed questions about whether I "had to" stop or could have just swerved.

Do I have any ground to stand on here? I feel like I did the instinctively right thing — you brake when something runs in front of you. But now I'm worried I accidentally made myself liable for this whole thing.

My car might be totaled. I can't really absorb that financially right now. And honestly my neck doesn't feel great.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Do I have any recourse or am I just stuck holding the bag?

11replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

11 replies

  • 7
    cool-marten-191

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me — a kid on a bike cut out and I braked, got rear-ended by an SUV. The other driver's insurance tried the same "sudden braking" angle on me. Ultimately fault landed on the driver behind me because following too closely / not maintaining a safe stopping distance is on THEM, not you. Hang in there, this is more common than you'd think.

  • 9
    bold-vole-229

    Do NOT keep talking to the other driver's adjuster. Seriously, stop. That "pointed questions" thing you described is them building a case against you. Every answer you give them can be used to minimize your claim or shift blame. You don't owe them a recorded statement. Decline politely and let your own insurance handle communication for now.

  • 12
    patient-swan-588

    I used to work claims and I'll tell you exactly what's happening: the other driver's adjuster is doing their job, which is to find ANY angle that reduces their company's payout. "Sudden and unnecessary braking" is a standard tactic. The thing is, braking to avoid a road hazard — including an animal — is considered a reasonable, foreseeable driving action. The driver behind you has a legal duty to maintain a safe following distance. That's where the argument really lives.

  • 18
    brave-owl-844

    A few practical things that will matter here: Did anyone witness the dog? Any chance a nearby house has a doorbell or security camera that might have caught it? Also, did you or the other driver mention the dog in the police report? If it's documented anywhere that there was an animal in the road, that corroborates your account significantly. Start pulling together everything you have — photos of the scene, the damage, your urgent care paperwork, anything.

    • 8
      wise-hare-013

      Not legal advice, but generally speaking: rear-end collisions carry a strong presumption of fault against the following driver in most states. The reasoning is exactly what others said — they're expected to keep a safe distance and be prepared to stop. An animal darting into the road is a recognized road hazard, not reckless behavior on your part. Given you have property damage AND potential injury, it might be worth at least a free consultation with a PI attorney before you say anything more to the other driver's insurance.

  • 9
    curious-elk-275

    Please don't ignore that neck and back stiffness. I know it feels like "just soreness" right now but whiplash-type injuries often get significantly worse 48–72 hours after the impact, not right away. Go back in or see your regular doctor, get it properly documented, and follow whatever treatment they recommend. Your medical records from day one are going to matter a lot if this becomes a bigger claim.

    • 6
      curious-survivor330

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 6
    curious-beaver-066

    Short version: stop talking to their adjuster, document everything, get to a doctor and keep going back as needed, and consult a personal injury lawyer — most do free consultations. You're not in a strong position negotiating this alone against someone whose literal job is to pay you as little as possible.

    • 6
      gentle-wanderer693

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 16
    careful-tern-496

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this on top of just being physically hurt and scared. It's so unfair that you did the right thing — you didn't hit the dog, you reacted like any decent person would — and now you're the one stressed out about money and blame. I really hope you get the support you need here. Please take care of yourself first.

    • 8
      kind-rider725

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.