The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Legal questionshumble-owl-787

Teenager T-boned by a drugged driver in a company van — do we need a lawyer?

I'm still kind of in shock writing this so bear with me.

My son (17) was driving home from his part-time job Tuesday evening when a delivery van blew through a yield sign and slammed into the driver's side of his car. Witnesses at the scene said the driver of the van was acting completely out of it — stumbling, slurring — and sure enough, he ended up being arrested on the spot for driving under the influence of something. The van had a company logo on the side, so this wasn't just some random guy in his personal vehicle.

My son was taken by ambulance to the ER. I was terrified the whole drive there. After a bunch of scans and tests, the doctors said no spinal fracture — huge relief — but he's been diagnosed with two bulging discs in his lower back and some soft tissue damage in his shoulder. He's 17. He shouldn't be dealing with this.

We started him with a physical therapist this week because he can barely sit through a full class period without pain.

Here's where my head is spinning: his car is totaled. I had just finished paying it off last year and put new brakes and tires on it maybe six weeks ago. The number the other driver's insurance floated for the vehicle feels insultingly low — like they just pulled it from some computer database without accounting for anything.

I guess my real question is: is this a situation where getting an attorney actually makes a difference? The at-fault driver was clearly impaired AND was working for a company at the time. That feels like it matters somehow but I don't really know what I'm doing here.

Any experience with something like this? He's a minor, the injuries are real, and there's a company involved. I just want to do right by my kid.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 22
    genuine-badger-986

    Not legal advice, but speaking generally — when you have a minor victim, documented injuries like disc damage, AND a commercial vehicle involved, that's exactly the kind of situation where attorneys tend to step in because the liability exposure is much larger than a typical fender-bender. The employer of the at-fault driver can potentially share responsibility, which opens up different insurance coverage entirely. Most PI attorneys offer free consults and work on contingency, so there's no cost to at least having a conversation. Don't wait too long though — there are deadlines that matter, and some evidence (like the company's maintenance or HR records on that driver) can disappear.

    • 16
      genuine-grouse-359

      A couple of practical things: because your son is a minor, any settlement will likely need court approval depending on your state — this is actually a protection for him, not a hurdle. Also, the fact that the driver was arrested means there's a criminal case running parallel, and the police report, toxicology results, and any criminal conviction can all be really useful evidence in a civil claim. Make sure you request copies of everything from the police department sooner rather than later.

  • 21
    spry-seal-956

    I worked in claims for years and I'll be straight with you: when there's a commercial vehicle and an impaired driver, the company's insurer knows the exposure is serious. They will absolutely try to settle with you quickly and cheaply before you understand what the long-term value of those disc injuries might be. Bulging discs in a 17-year-old can affect him for decades. An adjuster's job is to close files, not to make sure your son is fully compensated. Please at least talk to an attorney before accepting anything.

    • 20
      swift-hare-836

      Oh my gosh, I can only imagine how frightening that phone call was. I'm so glad he's okay in terms of nothing more serious. Please take care of yourself too — parents in these situations often run on adrenaline for weeks and then crash hard. Rooting for your family through this.

    • 2
      quiet-survivor699

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 16
    swift-marten-421

    My wife got hit by a contractor's truck two years ago — similar situation, driver was impaired, company vehicle. We tried to handle it ourselves for about three weeks before we realized we were completely out of our depth. The moment we brought in an attorney, the whole dynamic changed. The company's insurer stopped low-balling us almost immediately. I'd say get at least a consultation before you sign or agree to anything with their insurance.

    • 17
      wise-crow-739

      That 'computer database' number they gave you for the car? Yeah, that's a tactic. They pull an average market value that doesn't reflect your specific car's condition, your recent repairs, or anything that makes YOUR car worth more. You can and should push back with documentation — receipts for those tires and brakes, any service records, comparable listings in your area. Don't just accept the first number they throw out.

    • 7
      weary-neighbor569

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 14
    silent-raven-381

    Stop talking to their insurance without a lawyer. Full stop. You're not equipped to negotiate against professional claims adjusters whose literal job is to pay you as little as possible — and no offense, but neither is almost anyone who hasn't done this before. The company being involved makes this bigger than a normal accident claim. Get a free consult this week.

    • 2
      kind-commuter984

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

  • 12
    silent-wren-666

    It sounds terrifying, but the fact that witnesses were there, the driver was arrested on scene, and there's a clear company connection actually puts you in a much stronger position than a lot of people who come here. Evidence-wise you're starting from a solid place. Hang in there — this is manageable.

  • 9
    wise-mole-324

    The disc injuries concern me a little — not to scare you, but bulging discs in teenagers don't always behave predictably. Some kids recover really well with PT, others end up with chronic pain that follows them into adulthood. Make sure he's actually being monitored by a spine specialist, not just the ER doc. And keep EVERY record — imaging, therapy notes, symptom journals. All of that matters medically and, if you pursue a claim, legally too.