What Coverage Questions Usually Mean
This question is usually about whether opening a claim with your own insurer hurts your right to recover for your injuries. In plain English, it usually does not. A liability claim is a claim against the at-fault driver, while a first-party claim involves benefits or protections available under your own policy, such as uninsured motorist coverage in a hit-and-run situation. Reporting the crash is often part of preserving options, not giving them up.
Common Potential Sources of Payment (High-Level)
- At-fault party liability coverage, if the driver is identified and coverage is available.
- Uninsured motorist coverage, which is often important in North Carolina hit-and-run cases involving bodily injury.
- Medical payments coverage or similar first-party benefits, if your policy includes them.
- Health insurance as an immediate payer for treatment, while the injury claim is being investigated.
Information to Gather
- Policy declarations pages, if available, along with any claim number and adjuster contact information.
- Basic crash details, including the date, general location, and the fact that it was a rear-end hit-and-run.
- Proof that the collision was reported, including the police report information and any witness information.
- A treatment timeline showing EMS transport, hospital evaluation, scans, follow-up care plans, missed work, and any work restrictions.
Common Coverage Disputes and Practical Next Steps
- If the at-fault driver is unknown, your own insurer may evaluate the claim under uninsured motorist rules rather than as a standard claim against another driver.
- In North Carolina, hit-and-run injury claims often turn on practical details such as prompt law enforcement reporting, reasonable notice to the insurer, and whether there was an actual collision.
- Reporting the crash to your own insurer does not automatically mean you accepted fault or gave up a personal injury claim, but your statements can still matter. Keep them accurate and consistent.
- Because North Carolina follows contributory negligence rules, insurers may look closely for any argument that the injured person helped cause the crash. That issue is often less favorable to the defense in a rear-end collision, but it still makes careful documentation important.
How This Applies
Apply to the facts: Here, reporting the hit-and-run rear-end collision to your own insurer does not, by itself, damage your case. It may be a necessary step if uninsured motorist coverage is part of the path forward, especially since there was a police report, a witness, EMS transport, hospital care, imaging, planned follow-up treatment, and missed work. The practical focus now is to keep the crash facts, symptom history, and treatment timeline consistent while preserving records that show how the collision affected you.
What the Statutes Say (Optional)
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52 – North Carolina generally gives three years to file many personal injury actions.
Conclusion
Reporting a crash to your own insurance company usually does not block an injury claim in North Carolina. In a hit-and-run case, it may help preserve a possible uninsured motorist path, but the details still matter. Keep your records organized, be careful with statements, and make sure the crash report, witness information, treatment timeline, and wage-loss information are all documented. The next step is to have a North Carolina attorney review the reporting history and claim options promptly.