What happens if the insurance adjuster says they can’t reach the at-fault driver and keeps mentioning a short deadline—does that affect my claim?

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What happens if the insurance adjuster says they can’t reach the at-fault driver and keeps mentioning a short deadline—does that affect my claim? - North Carolina

Short Answer

Usually, no. In North Carolina, an insurance adjuster’s “short deadline” is often an internal company deadline, not the legal deadline that controls your right to recover. Your claim is mainly controlled by the statute of limitations (often three years for a typical injury claim), and the insurer’s inability to reach its insured driver does not automatically erase your right to pursue the at-fault driver—so long as you protect the real legal deadlines.

Understanding the Problem

If you were hurt in a North Carolina car wreck and you’re still treating (for example, getting chiropractic care), it’s common for the at-fault driver’s insurance adjuster to say they “can’t reach their driver” and to push you to act fast. The practical question is whether that claimed “deadline” changes your ability to bring an injury claim, or whether it’s mainly pressure to settle before you understand your injuries.

Apply the Law

In North Carolina, the key legal deadline for most car-wreck injury cases is the statute of limitations—the time limit to file a lawsuit in court. Adjusters often have internal timelines (for closing files, setting reserves, or getting recorded statements), but those internal deadlines generally do not change the statute of limitations that applies to your claim.

Also, the at-fault driver’s insurance company typically needs cooperation from its insured to investigate and evaluate the claim. If the insurer truly cannot reach its insured, it may delay making a decision, deny the claim for lack of cooperation, or take a “wait and see” approach. That can affect settlement timing, but it does not eliminate your underlying right to pursue the at-fault driver—provided you file suit on time and properly serve the defendant.

Key Requirements

  • Know the real deadline: Your right to recover is protected by filing a lawsuit within the statute of limitations, not by meeting an adjuster’s internal deadline.
  • Identify the correct claim type: Injury claims and property-damage claims can follow different rules and timelines, so you need to track the right one for what you are seeking.
  • Do not sign away your case by accident: A “quick settlement” can come with a release that ends your injury claim even if treatment is ongoing.
  • Preserve proof early: Medical records, bills, photos, and witness information matter more when the insurer says it cannot reach its driver.
  • Protect service of process: Even if you file on time, you still must properly serve the at-fault driver to keep the case moving.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because you are still treating after a motor vehicle accident, a “short deadline” from the adjuster is often a sign they want to close the file before the full medical picture is clear. The insurer’s difficulty reaching the at-fault driver may slow down negotiations, but it does not change the core legal requirement: you must protect the statute of limitations by filing suit in time if the claim does not resolve. You also need to be careful not to sign a release that ends your injury claim while you are still receiving care.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: The injured person (plaintiff). Where: North Carolina state court (typically the Superior Court or District Court in the proper county). What: A civil complaint and summons starting the lawsuit. When: Generally, you must file within three years of when the injury claim accrues under North Carolina law.
  2. Next step: Serve the at-fault driver with the summons and complaint using a legally valid method. If the driver is hard to locate, service issues can become a real bottleneck, so you plan for that early.
  3. Final step: Once the case is filed and served, the insurer typically assigns defense counsel and the case proceeds through investigation, exchange of information, and (often) settlement discussions or mediation before trial.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Confusing internal deadlines with legal deadlines: An insurer can close its file, but that does not automatically end your legal claim. The bigger risk is that you wait too long to file suit.
  • Signing a broad release too early: A quick payment can come with paperwork that releases “all claims,” including injury claims, even if you are still treating.
  • Recorded statements and incomplete medical information: Early statements can lock you into details before you know the full extent of your injuries. Be accurate and cautious.
  • Service problems when the driver is hard to find: If the at-fault driver is difficult to locate, you may need extra time and strategy to complete service properly after filing.
  • Waiting for the insurer to “do the right thing”: If the insurer cannot reach its insured, it may delay or deny. Your leverage often comes from being ready to file and prove the case.

Conclusion

An adjuster’s claim that they can’t reach the at-fault driver—and their talk about a “short deadline”—usually does not change your legal rights in North Carolina. What matters is the statute of limitations and whether you protect it if the case does not settle. The safest next step is to calendar the three-year deadline and, if negotiations stall, file a civil complaint in the proper North Carolina court before that deadline expires.

Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney

If you’re dealing with an adjuster who says they can’t reach the at-fault driver and is pressuring you with a short deadline while you’re still treating, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Reach out today. Call [CONTACT NUMBER].

Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.

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