The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Medical & injuriesgentle-kestrel-918

Unlicensed commercial truck wiped out my car — no injuries, no lawyer will touch it. Now what?

I'm honestly still in shock about how this whole thing went down and could use some perspective from people who've been through something similar.

About six weeks ago I was merging onto a state highway when a commercial flatbed — later found to be operating without proper permits and with a suspended company DOT certification — drifted into my lane and forced me completely off the road. I managed to avoid a direct hit but my car caught the embankment and it was a total loss. The responding officer cited the truck driver, noted the vehicle violations in the report, and I was cleared of any fault.

Here's where it gets frustrating. I had basic coverage, no gap insurance (I know, I know), so after the payout I'm still sitting on a balance I owe the lender out of pocket — not a small number — for an accident I had zero part in causing. The dashcam footage is clear as day.

I've reached out to probably eight or nine personal injury attorneys and almost all of them passed. A few were at least honest and said without medical bills or physical injuries, the case value isn't there for them to take on contingency. I get it from a business standpoint. It just stings when the other party was this clearly in the wrong and apparently had no business being on the road at all.

I'm not trying to get rich here. I just don't want to be the one eating the financial hit for something that was entirely someone else's fault — and a preventable fault at that.

Has anyone dealt with a situation like this where you had property damage but no injuries? Did you find any path forward, or did you end up just absorbing the loss? Feeling really stuck right now.

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14 replies

  • 18
    tidy-owl-053

    The fact that this company was operating outside its permits and certifications is actually significant, even on a property-damage-only claim. When a commercial operator is found to be in violation of licensing or regulatory requirements at the time of the incident, it can open up negligence per se arguments — basically meaning the violation of the regulation is itself evidence of negligence. That doesn't automatically mean a PI attorney will take it on contingency, but it might make small claims or a demand letter more compelling. Keep copies of everything — the police report, any DOT violation records, your dashcam footage. That paper trail matters.

    • 20
      curious-crane-667

      Former claims adjuster here. A few things worth knowing: if the company's insurance was also lapsed or their policy excluded unlicensed operations, their insurer might try to disclaim coverage entirely. If that happens, you'd be looking at your own uninsured/underinsured motorist property damage coverage — if your policy has it. Pull out your declarations page and look for UMPD. A lot of people don't even know they have it. Also, the regulatory violations you described? I've seen those used to escalate claims internally because the company's exposure goes beyond just your car — document everything publicly available about those violations.

  • 16
    plain-swift-172

    I just want to say I'm really sorry this is happening to you. It's so unfair that you did everything right, have it all on video, and you're still the one scrambling. I hope you find a path through this. Sending support your way.

    • 3
      quiet-driver414

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

  • 14
    hearty-dove-535

    Quick question — did you confirm whether the company actually has active commercial liability insurance, and if so, have you filed a third-party claim directly with their carrier rather than going through your own? Sometimes people wait on attorneys and forget they can go straight to the at-fault party's insurer independently. That seems like the most direct first step before anything else.

    • 7
      kind-commuter424

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

    • 5
      thankful-backseat340

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 10
    swift-crane-346

    Ugh, I feel this so much. I had a commercial vehicle clip my car in a parking structure a couple years back — clear fault, clear footage — and I couldn't find anyone to take it either because my injuries were minor. I ended up filing in small claims against the company directly for the gap between payout and what I owed. It was a hassle but I actually won. Might be worth looking into depending on your state's small claims limit.

    • 7
      quick-heron-826

      Please be careful if the company's insurer reaches out directly to settle the property claim. They are going to lowball the vehicle value, drag their feet, and hope you just accept whatever they offer because you're tired and need a car. Don't sign anything that says 'full and final settlement' without understanding exactly what you're releasing. Even on a property-only claim, those releases can be broad.

  • 10
    careful-elk-773

    Not legal advice, but worth mentioning — the attorneys turning you down on contingency doesn't mean your claim has no merit, it just means the math doesn't work for their business model. You might have luck consulting with an attorney who handles commercial vehicle or trucking cases specifically, even just for a flat-fee consult to tell you your options. Trucking liability has its own regulatory layer (federal motor carrier rules, etc.) that a generalist PI attorney might not want to dig into for a smaller case, but a specialist might see angles others missed.

    • 6
      gentle-commuter539

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

    • 2
      grounded-co-pilot276

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 5
    hearty-elk-365

    Here's the blunt version: send a formal demand letter to the company yourself, certified mail, laying out the damages and the documented violations. Companies with real legal exposure sometimes pay to make things go away quietly before it escalates. If that fails, small claims is your next move. Don't wait around hoping a lawyer swoops in — start the process yourself.

    • 10
      weary-walker314

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.