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4-way stop crash — is this really a 'he said she said' or can damage tell the story?

Hey everyone, hoping to get some outside perspective because I keep going back and forth in my head and I can't tell if I'm being rational or just defensive.

So I was coming through a 4-way stop intersection a few weeks ago. I did my full stop, counted my turn, and went. There was a pickup coming from my left — he was still a couple car lengths back from the stop line when I started moving, so I figured I had plenty of time to clear it. Normal stuff, right?

Except he blew through his stop sign entirely. Didn't slow down at all from what I could see. He clipped the rear driver-side quarter panel of my car as I was already most of the way through the intersection.

Here's where it gets complicated:

  • No dashcam on either vehicle
  • No traffic camera at that corner
  • The one witness nearby told the responding officer they "didn't really see how it started"
  • His insurance is already making noise like it's a shared-fault situation

My damage is on the rear of my car. Doesn't that actually support my version — that I was already through the intersection and he ran into me, rather than me pulling into his path? Or am I reading too much into that because I want it to be his fault?

I've got photos of both vehicles, the police report, and my own written account I put together right after. No injuries beyond some soreness in my neck and shoulders that I'm getting checked out.

Anyone dealt with something similar where the physical damage pattern actually helped (or hurt) their claim? Feeling pretty lost here.

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9 replies

  • 10
    plain-kestrel-158

    Honestly the fact that you have photos of both vehicles, a police report, and a written account you made right after is already a better starting position than a lot of people end up in. You're not starting from zero here. Keep pushing.

  • 8
    cool-wren-621

    Former adjuster here. Insurers push the 'shared fault' angle early because a surprising number of people just accept it and move on. The damage pattern you're describing — rear of your vehicle hit — is genuinely useful. In most fault analyses, if you're already through the intersection far enough that the contact is at your rear, that supports the idea you had cleared it. That doesn't mean they'll hand you a win, but it's not nothing. Document everything obsessively and don't give a recorded statement to his insurer without thinking it through first.

  • 5
    candid-sparrow-518

    A few things worth doing right now if you haven't already: write out a full timeline while it's fresh (sounds like you did, good), preserve all your photos in original format with metadata, and request a copy of the official police report as soon as it's available. If the report notes a stop-sign violation on his part — even informally in the narrative — that matters. Also, that witness who 'didn't really see how it started' might remember more if contacted soon. Memory fades fast.

  • 3
    careful-kestrel-271

    Went through almost exactly this two years ago — rear quarter damage on my end, other driver claiming I cut him off. My attorney actually brought in someone to do a basic accident reconstruction based on the photos and damage locations alone, and it made a real difference. Damage placement absolutely can tell a story. Don't let anyone convince you it's meaningless.

  • 5
    tidy-wolf-196

    The moment his insurance said 'shared fault' without a full investigation, my eyebrows went up. That's a classic opening move — float the idea early so you start second-guessing yourself and maybe settle for less. The damage being at your rear is literally evidence. Don't let them hand-wave it away.

  • 9
    hearty-badger-161

    Stop talking to his insurance without knowing your rights. Seriously. You're not obligated to give them a recorded statement and anything you say can get twisted into 'claimant admitted they were still entering the intersection.' Talk to someone on your side first, even just a free consult.

  • 3
    spry-heron-036

    Please don't brush off the neck and shoulder soreness. Soft tissue injuries from impacts like this can seem mild for days and then get significantly worse. Get evaluated now, follow through on any recommended treatment, and keep a simple daily log of how you're feeling. If this turns into a claim, a documented medical timeline is really important. Don't tough it out and then have a gap in care that gets used against you.

  • 3
    clever-owl-307

    Not legal advice, but damage patterns are genuinely considered in fault determinations — they're part of how reconstructionists piece together what happened. Rear-of-vehicle contact when you were the through-traffic at an intersection is a meaningful data point. Whether it's enough depends on a lot of other factors. Might be worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney so you understand your position before you talk further with his carrier.

    • 9
      gentle-heron-454

      I don't want to be harsh, but I'd want to know more before assuming the damage totally clears you. How fast were you going through the stop? Was your stop a full stop or more of a rolling one? And was the pickup truck's view of the intersection at all obstructed? Not saying you're wrong, just that his insurer is going to ask all of this, so it's better to think it through now.