Unfortunately, you may well be right - you take a realist's point of view. I can only remain optimistic in the hope that 'justice' will be done. As I've said already, I can only wait to see what happens.autolycus wrote:Legally and indeed morally you are right to have informed your insurance company. Practically, it will be an albatross round your neck for years, as you'll have to tell anyone whose car you want to drive, and they'll have to tell their insurer. Most insurers will probably ignore one claim or accident, but add in, say, a windscreen claim, and a genuinely no-fault claim... It's OK for Footman James to say what they have, but it's not them trying to insure another car.
I understood what you're saying happened, though the relevance of the other driver's deceleration isn't clear without knowing your acceleration or deceleration. But when two drivers on a roundabout each claim the other drifted out of position, and there are no witnesses, you'll need a very expensive expert to prove who hit whom - if indeed that's a meaningful concept at all. You were both moving, and your trajectories crossed. You may well be completely innocent, but unless the other driver has a sudden pang of conscience, why should he do anything other than claim that the mirror image of your scenario actually occurred? That he was pootling round the roundabout, when a car on his off side accelerated and crossed into his path?
Watch out for claims of betterment, too, and a corresponding request to contribute to the repair. If the wing's too rusty to knock out a relatively shallow dent, the insurer may try that one on.
Kevin
Someone just crashed into me :-(
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Ryan Watson

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I think it just shows how many of us have been wrung through the car insurance mangle at some point.ani wrote:Oh so much gloom!



Alex Holden - http://www.alexholden.net/
If it doesn't work, you're not hitting it with a big enough hammer.
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I know exactly what you mean - I suppose the sharing can be looked on as a form of therapy
Insurance is such a strange thing - years ago you used to always stay with the same one because the premium got cheaper. Doesn't seem to do that anymore - so most people I know just find the cheapest each year and take advantage of the discounted on-line initial price. So much for loyalty:-( Never making a claim is obviously the best way - but we shouldn't be penalsed when we do - that's why we pay the premiums!!!! Sadly it's one of those necessary evils.

To some extent it's an age thing: I envy the energy of the many younger members of this forum, but you can't help trying to warn people when their enthusiasm or optimism seems very likely to lead to disappointment. "Si jeunesse savait, si vieillesse pouvait".ani wrote:Oh so much gloom! I bet rsawatson never shares a story again
I hope it doesn't put anyone off sharing their experience - we've all still got plenty to learn.
To the OP: make something positive of it: try to get it repaired by someone who'll let you watch him tap it out, so you can do it yourself next time.
Kevin