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Distracted Driving Legal Resource

Underinsured Motorist Claims After Texting Accidents

When the texting driver's insurance isn't enough to cover your damages, your UIM coverage fills the gap. Learn about stacking coverage, limits, and strategies for maximum recovery.

23x
Texting drivers are
more likely to crash
5 sec
Average eyes off road
when texting
100 yards
At 55 mph, 5 seconds
driven blind
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Navigating Insurance Claims After a Distracted Driving Accident

Insurance claims involving distracted driving have unique challenges. Here's what to expect and how to navigate the process:

Reporting the Accident: Report to your own insurance company promptly, as policies typically require timely notice. Stick to basic facts—don't speculate about fault or provide recorded statements to the other driver's insurer without legal counsel.

The Other Driver's Insurance: Their insurer will likely contact you quickly, hoping to get a recorded statement or quick settlement before you understand your claim's value. Politely decline to provide statements and refer them to your attorney.

Coverage Investigations: Insurance adjusters investigate coverage defenses and comparative fault arguments. They may try to argue the other driver's phone use wasn't the cause of the accident or that you share blame.

Settlement Negotiations: Most claims settle without trial, but insurance companies start with lowball offers. Having an attorney signals that you're serious about pursuing full compensation, which often produces better initial offers.

Bad Faith Claims: If an insurance company unreasonably denies or delays your claim, you may have additional claims for bad faith. Our attorneys document all insurer communications to support potential bad faith claims.

Understanding Policy Limits and Coverage Stacking

Maximum recovery in car accident cases is often limited by available insurance. Here's how to maximize coverage:

Liability Coverage: The distracted driver's liability policy pays for your damages up to their policy limits. California requires minimum coverage of $15,000 per person, but many drivers carry $100,000 or more.

Underinsured Motorist (UIM) Coverage: If the at-fault driver's policy doesn't fully cover your damages, your own UIM coverage can provide additional compensation up to your policy limits.

Uninsured Motorist (UM) Coverage: If the distracted driver has no insurance at all, your UM coverage applies. This is particularly important for hit-and-run cases.

Medical Payments (MedPay) Coverage: This coverage pays for your medical bills regardless of fault. It's usually limited to $5,000-$25,000 but provides quick access to funds for treatment.

Commercial Policies: If the distracted driver was working, their employer's commercial policy typically has much higher limits—often $1 million or more for trucking companies.

Coverage Stacking: In some states and situations, you can "stack" coverage from multiple policies. Our attorneys identify all applicable coverage to maximize your recovery.

When Insurance Companies Deny or Delay Claims

Insurance companies are for-profit businesses motivated to pay as little as possible. Here are common tactics and how we counter them:

Delaying Tactics: Insurers may drag out investigations, request unnecessary documentation, or simply take months to respond to communications. Delays work in their favor because bills pile up and you may become desperate enough to accept a lowball settlement.

Denying Liability: Even with strong distraction evidence, insurers may deny their driver was at fault. They might blame you, claim the distraction wasn't the accident's cause, or argue their driver was using hands-free mode.

Minimizing Injuries: Adjusters may claim your injuries are exaggerated, pre-existing, or unrelated to the accident. They'll scrutinize medical records looking for anything to reduce the claim's value.

Quick Settlement Offers: Insurers often make early offers before you understand your injury's full extent. These offers rarely compensate for future treatment needs or long-term limitations.

How We Fight Back: We document everything, meet all deadlines, and aren't afraid to file lawsuits when insurers act in bad faith. Litigation often produces faster, fairer settlements than continued negotiation with unreasonable adjusters.

Key Takeaway

If you've been injured by a distracted driver, time is critical. Phone records are typically deleted after 1-2 years, dashcam footage gets overwritten, and witness memories fade. Contact our team immediately for a free consultation to preserve crucial evidence that can make or break your case.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I prove the other driver was distracted?

We use multiple evidence sources: cell phone records subpoenaed from the carrier, dashcam and traffic camera footage, vehicle "black box" data showing lack of braking, witness statements, and digital forensics examining app usage. Our team moves quickly to preserve this evidence before it's deleted or overwritten.

What compensation can I receive from a distracted driving accident?

You may recover medical expenses (past and future), lost wages, reduced earning capacity, pain and suffering, emotional distress, property damage, and potentially punitive damages for egregious conduct. Distracted driving cases often support larger non-economic damages because jurors view this behavior as particularly reckless.

How long do I have to file a distracted driving accident claim?

Statutes of limitation vary by state—typically 2-4 years. However, evidence degrades much faster: phone records are deleted after 1-2 years, dashcam footage overwrites in days, and witness memories fade. Contact an attorney within days of your accident to preserve critical evidence.

Should I accept the insurance company's first offer?

Almost never. Insurance companies make low initial offers hoping you'll accept before understanding your claim's full value. This is especially true early in treatment when you don't yet know the extent of your injuries. An attorney can evaluate whether an offer fairly compensates your losses.

Do I need a lawyer for a distracted driving accident case?

While not legally required, an experienced attorney typically recovers significantly more than unrepresented claimants—even after attorney fees. We handle evidence preservation, insurance negotiations, and litigation while you focus on recovery. Most importantly, we work on contingency: no fee unless we win.

What if the distracted driver was working at the time?

If the driver was working (delivery driver, trucker, rideshare, sales rep), their employer may be vicariously liable through "respondeat superior." This is significant because commercial insurance policies typically have much higher limits than personal auto policies, often $1 million or more.

Why Hire Our Distracted Driving Accident Lawyers?

Expert Evidence Collection

We subpoena phone records, secure dashcam footage, and work with accident reconstructionists to prove distraction.

Deep Insurance Knowledge

We understand policy limits, UM/UIM coverage, and how to maximize recovery from all available sources.

Trial-Ready Representation

Insurance companies know we take cases to trial. This leverage often produces larger settlements.

No Fee Unless We Win

You pay nothing upfront. Our fee comes from the settlement or verdict we win for you.

Time-Sensitive: Don't Let Evidence Disappear

Phone records, dashcam footage, and witness memories fade fast. Every day you wait makes your case harder to prove. Call now for a free consultation.