At-fault driver's insurance is trying to make ME deal with the salvage auction — is that even legal?
So I was rear-ended at a red light about three weeks ago. Total non-event for fault — there's a police report, dashcam footage, the whole thing. The other driver's insurance accepted liability almost immediately. Fine.
But now that my car has been declared a total loss, things have gotten weird.
Their adjuster is telling me that their company never takes possession of the salvage — apparently it's just their blanket policy. Instead they want me to:
- Contact some auction house they've already lined up
- Coordinate the tow myself
- Handle all the DMV title/salvage paperwork
- And then they'll deduct whatever the auction house pays from my settlement
I told them flat out I don't want to do any of that. I didn't cause this accident. Why am I doing administrative legwork for their claim process? The adjuster basically shrugged and said his supervisor would probably just say the same thing and then I'd be stuck with it anyway.
A few things I'm genuinely confused about:
1. Can they actually require me to manage the salvage process? It feels like they're offloading their responsibility onto me. I want them to take the car and pay me out — period.
2. Storage fees. My car is sitting at a lot their network tow company brought it to. Now they're saying because I'm "retaining" the vehicle (I never agreed to this!), I'm on the hook for daily storage. The lot has already started calling me. Settlement isn't even close to done yet.
3. Registration fees. I paid my annual registration in full a few months before this happened. If the car is totaled, shouldn't they factor in the unused portion of that?
I feel like I'm being gaslit into thinking this is all normal. Is it? Has anyone dealt with a third-party claim where the insurer tried to pull this kind of stuff?