The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damagedaring-raven-326

Uninsured driver totaled our jointly-owned car — whose policy actually covers this?

This situation is a little complicated so bear with me.

My husband and I are legally married but living in separate residences while we figure some things out. Because of that, we each carry our own auto insurance policies tied to our respective households. We still co-own a lot of things together — including a pickup truck that's titled in both our names.

He borrowed the truck last weekend to haul some stuff for a project he was doing. Parked it on a public street, completely legally, went inside somewhere, and came back to find it absolutely wrecked. Someone had sideswiped it badly enough that the frame looks bent. The truck is almost certainly a total loss.

The person who hit it? No insurance. A bystander who saw the whole thing said the driver didn't even slow down much before impact. Police came, report was filed, the other driver admitted to having a lapsed policy.

Here's my question: whose uninsured motorist coverage applies here? Mine (since it's titled partly in my name and I'm the primary policyholder on the older policy that's been active longer)? His (since he was the one who parked it and it's listed under his household's coverage)? Both?

I've read a little about how UM coverage works but I keep going in circles. I also don't know if notifying both insurance companies is going to somehow create a problem — like one of them trying to deny because the other one exists.

And once the insurance pays out, do they go after the uninsured driver on their own, or is that something we'd have to push for?

Any insight from people who've dealt with something like this would really help. We're not trying to double-collect, just want the truck replaced fairly.

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10 replies

  • 15
    warm-newt-552

    Not legal advice, but this is genuinely a multi-policy coverage question that's worth a short consultation with a PI attorney before you file anything. Some states have anti-stacking rules, others don't, and the wrong move early can limit your options. Many PI attorneys do free consultations and this kind of question takes about 15 minutes to sort out with someone who knows your state's law.

  • 13
    brave-crow-212

    We had something similar-ish — car titled to both me and my mom, insured under her policy, and I was driving when an uninsured guy ran a red light. The claim went through her UM coverage without any drama. The key thing our agent told us was that the vehicle being listed on a policy mattered more than who was physically present. But your situation with two separate policies adds a wrinkle I didn't have to deal with.

    • 10
      quick-stoat-124

      Generally speaking, UM/UIM coverage follows the vehicle first, then the driver. So the policy that actually lists the truck would typically be the primary one to file under. If the truck is on your husband's policy, that's probably where to start.

      That said, some states allow "stacking" — meaning both policies could potentially contribute, especially if one policy's limits aren't enough. Whether that helps or creates complications depends entirely on your state and the specific policy language. I'd pull both policies and look at the UM sections before you call either insurer. And when you do call, you don't have to volunteer information about the second policy right away — just answer what they ask honestly.

    • 0
      tired-walker395

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 12
    hearty-marmot-079

    So from the inside, here's what actually happens in situations like this: adjusters look at what's called the "vehicle schedule" on each policy. If the truck appears on Husband's policy and not yours, his carrier is on the hook first. Your policy might be triggered as excess depending on how it defines covered vehicles and household members — but that's a secondary conversation.

    The subrogation piece you asked about — yes, once the insurer pays out, they absolutely pursue the uninsured driver on their own. You don't have to do anything there. Whether they actually recover anything from someone with no insurance is a different story, but that's their problem to chase, not yours.

  • 12
    tidy-swan-868

    File under his policy since that's where the truck lives. Be honest when they ask questions. Get the police report copy in hand before the first real call. Don't overthink the second policy angle until his carrier tells you there's a gap in coverage — then cross that bridge. Most of these UM claims on parked vehicles are pretty clean as long as the police report is solid.

  • 10
    candid-swift-066

    Be careful here. The moment you mention a second policy exists, adjusters sometimes use it as an excuse to slow-walk your claim or argue over which company is "primary." They'll point fingers at each other while you're left waiting. Document everything NOW — photos, the police report number, the witness contact info — before you talk to either insurer in detail.

  • 8
    sharp-otter-109

    Quick question — is the truck actually listed by VIN on his policy, or is it just covered because he's the named insured and it's a vehicle in his household? That distinction actually matters here. Some policies cover any vehicle you own or regularly use, others require the specific vehicle to be scheduled. Worth checking the declarations page before assuming his policy is the right one to lead with.

    • 2
      kind-passenger429

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

  • 7
    curious-marten-179

    Was anyone hurt in the impact? Even if no one was in the truck, sometimes these situations come with hidden stress injuries from the chaos afterward — adrenaline does weird things. Just making sure you're also taking care of yourselves and not just the property side of this.