The Shoulder
The Shoulder
48
Property damagemellow-otter-014

Uninsured driver totaled my sister's car and the officer basically told her to pray 😤

I'm so frustrated on her behalf right now I could scream.

So my sister was sitting at a red light yesterday morning, minding her business, when some guy blew through the intersection and T-boned her on the driver's side. His truck barely had a scratch. Her car? Completely done. Airbags deployed, frame bent, the works.

Here's where it gets worse: the guy had no insurance. None. Lapsed months ago apparently.

The responding officer filled out the report, got the guy's info, and then basically shrugged at my sister and said "you might want to try working something out with him directly." Like... sir. This random stranger who just blew a red light is definitely going to cut her a check out of the goodness of his heart. Sure.

My sister does have her own car insurance but she's pretty sure she only has the bare minimum — liability only, basically so she's legal to drive. She doesn't think she has anything that covers her car when someone else hits her.

She doesn't have savings to fall back on. She needs her car to get to work. She's already missed two shifts because she has no transportation and her job isn't remote-friendly.

Does she have ANY options here? Can she sue the guy personally even if he's clearly broke? Is there anything in her own policy she might be missing? The officer made it sound completely hopeless and I refuse to believe that's actually true.

Any advice from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 19
    spry-beaver-619

    Oh man, I went through almost this exact situation two years ago. Uninsured driver, my car totaled, officer told me basically the same thing. What nobody told me at the scene — and I had to figure out on my own — was to dig into my own policy and look specifically for something called uninsured motorist property damage coverage. I had it and didn't even know. Have your sister pull up her full declarations page, not just what she thinks she has. She might be surprised.

    • 4
      honest-rider178

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 19
    bold-marten-762

    Even if she does have uninsured motorist coverage, be careful how she talks to her own insurance company. They're still trying to pay out as little as possible even when they're the ones covering her. Don't let them pressure her into a quick settlement before she knows the full extent of the damage. Get everything in writing.

    • 6
      careful-traveler722

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 11
    silent-fox-465

    Former adjuster here. A few things worth knowing: First, check the policy declarations page for UM/UIM property damage — a lot of people carry it without realizing it's there because agents bundle it in. Second, even liability-only policies sometimes have limited uninsured motorist bodily injury coverage depending on the state, so if your sister was hurt at all, that matters. Third — and people don't love hearing this — suing the at-fault driver personally is an option but collecting on a judgment against someone with no insurance and presumably limited assets is genuinely hard. Not impossible, but hard. The policy review is the most productive first step.

  • 15
    gentle-elk-666

    She should also make sure she gets a copy of the official police report as soon as it's available — sometimes within 3-5 business days. That report is going to be important for everything that follows, whether it's an insurance claim or any kind of legal action. Also worth noting: many states have an uninsured motorist fund or similar program for exactly this kind of situation. Not sure which state she's in but worth a quick search.

    • 2
      patient-traveler579

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

  • 12
    silent-swan-264

    Not legal advice, but: don't count out a personal injury attorney consultation even if this seems like "just" a property damage situation. If your sister was injured at all — even soft tissue stuff she's brushing off — that changes the picture significantly. Most PI attorneys do free consultations and work on contingency, so there's usually no upfront cost to at least find out what her options are. The cop's job isn't legal advice, and "nothing you can do" is rarely actually true.

  • 19
    candid-sparrow-374

    Please make sure your sister actually gets checked out medically even if she thinks she's fine. Adrenaline after an accident masks a lot. I've seen people walk away from T-bone collisions saying they're okay and then be dealing with neck and shoulder issues weeks later. If she did sustain injuries, having a medical record that starts close to the date of the accident matters a lot if she ever pursues any kind of claim.

  • 8
    calm-raven-136

    This is so unfair and I'm sorry she's going through this. The fact that she's already missed work shifts because of something that wasn't her fault at all... ugh. I hope she finds a path forward. Rooting for her.

  • 15
    clever-heron-602

    Three things she needs to do right now, in order: 1) Get the full declarations page of her insurance policy and read every line of coverage. 2) Stop talking to anyone about the accident on the phone without knowing exactly what coverage she has first. 3) Look up whether her state has an uninsured motorist fund. The officer gave her vibes, not legal reality. There are usually more options than cops lead people to believe.

    • 1
      curious-optimist772

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