I caused a fender-bender and now I'm terrified they'll come after my house and savings
I feel sick about this. A few weeks ago I wasn't paying attention at a red light and tapped the car in front of me. We're talking maybe 5 mph, barely any damage to either vehicle. The other driver seemed okay at the scene — walked around, exchanged info, no ambulance.
Now I'm getting calls from an attorney representing her, and I just found out she had a prior back surgery from an older accident. Her lawyer is already talking about "exacerbation of pre-existing injuries." I'm not trying to dismiss her pain — if she's hurting more because of me, I genuinely feel awful. But I'm also scared.
Here's my situation: I carry solid liability coverage — not the bare minimum, but not unlimited either. The problem is I own my home outright, I have investment accounts, and I've spent 20 years building up savings. I'm not obscenely wealthy but I'm definitely not judgment-proof either.
I keep reading that most claims settle within policy limits, but also that if someone has significant damages and the at-fault driver has assets, plaintiffs' attorneys will sometimes pursue what's above the policy. Is that actually common? My insurance company assigned me a defense attorney and told me to let them handle communication — I'm doing that — but they also have a financial interest in only paying up to my limit, not protecting everything above it.
Do I need to hire my own personal attorney separate from whoever my insurance assigned? Am I overreacting? Has anyone been on the at-fault side of something like this and come out okay? I could really use some perspective from people who've been through it.