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The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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silent-otter-196

A car crashed into my aunt's house last night and she didn't make it. I don't know where to start.

I'm still shaking as I write this. Yesterday afternoon a driver lost control and plowed straight through the front of my aunt's house. She was inside — she never had a chance. The impact was catastrophic. The structure is completely uninhabitable now and the rest of my family can't even go back in to get their things.

The driver apparently told first responders his brakes failed, but we don't know if that's true or just something he said in the moment. He was taken away by ambulance and we have no idea what's happening on his end.

My family is completely devastated. My aunt basically raised half of us. On top of grieving, we're suddenly dealing with:

  • Nowhere for my cousins to live
  • No idea who pays for the destroyed home
  • Questions about whether the driver even has enough insurance to cover any of this
  • Whether the car manufacturer could be responsible if there actually was a mechanical failure

I keep Googling things and getting overwhelmed. Terms like "wrongful death," "premises liability," "product liability" keep popping up and I genuinely don't know which of those applies here or if it's all of them.

Can someone just talk me through what type of attorney handles something like this? Is this even a personal injury case or something bigger? My brain is not functioning right now and my family is leaning on me to figure this out. Any guidance is appreciated — even just knowing what questions to ask would help.

8replies

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8 replies

  • 12
    genuine-stoat-472

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking: what you're describing could involve multiple overlapping claims — wrongful death, property damage, and potentially product liability if a vehicle defect contributed. These don't have to be filed separately; a personal injury attorney who handles wrongful death cases can typically evaluate all of it. The most important thing right now is not to wait too long, because evidence disappears fast — surveillance footage, the vehicle's data recorder, witness memories. Even just a free consultation call this week could make a difference. Again, not legal advice — just general info.

    • 7
      candid-mole-637

      One practical thing: try to get a copy of the police report as soon as it's available — usually a few days after the incident. It'll have the driver's insurance info, any citations issued, and the officer's preliminary notes. That document becomes really important if you pursue any kind of claim. You can usually request it through the responding police department's records division.

  • 10
    bright-swift-384

    I'm so sorry for your loss. Please don't forget to take care of yourself and the rest of your family physically right now too. Acute grief and shock can manifest as real physical symptoms — trouble breathing, chest tightness, inability to eat or sleep. If anyone in your family needs to talk to someone or even just needs to be checked out medically, please don't put that off. You can handle the legal stuff AND take care of yourselves at the same time. You don't have to choose.

  • 10
    candid-sparrow-149

    Here's what I'd do right now, in order: (1) Don't talk to any insurance company without a lawyer present. (2) Call two or three personal injury attorneys this week for free consultations — most wrongful death cases are taken on contingency so you pay nothing upfront. (3) Preserve everything — photos, texts, any video from neighbors. That's it. Everything else can wait a few days while you breathe.

  • 8
    calm-stoat-951

    Please be really careful if the driver's insurance company reaches out to anyone in your family before you have representation. They may sound sympathetic and helpful, but their job is to minimize what they pay out. Don't let anyone sign anything or give a recorded statement. Not yet.

  • 6
    curious-swift-736

    First, I'm so deeply sorry. When something this sudden and violent happens, your brain genuinely cannot process everything at once — that's completely normal.

    When a driver hit my family member's property a couple years back, we had no idea who handled cases like that either. What we eventually learned is that personal injury attorneys often also handle wrongful death claims — they're usually the same type of lawyer. If there's also a potential vehicle defect angle (like failed brakes), some PI attorneys work with product liability co-counsel. You don't have to figure out every angle yourself. A good attorney will sort out which claims apply after they hear the full story.

    • 13
      calm-wolf-879

      I used to work on the insurance side and I want to second what the person above said. In high-severity cases like this — fatality, structural destruction — the insurer will have a major claims team assigned within 24-48 hours. They are already building their file. Your family should be doing the same. Document everything you can: photos of the damage, names of any witnesses, police report number, anything the driver or his passengers said at the scene. That stuff matters more than people realize.

    • 6
      kind-mole-436

      I just want to say I'm so sorry. You shouldn't have to be researching legal stuff while you're grieving. Is there anyone who can sit with you and help you make calls or just be there while you figure this out? Please don't try to carry all of this alone.