Where This Fits in the Claim Process
This usually happens during the opening or investigation stage of a claim. The insurer may still be figuring out who the correct adjuster is, whether the claim belongs in one unit or another, or what policy and vehicle information applies. In a North Carolina injury claim, that kind of handoff can affect communication, but it does not change the need to preserve records, keep the facts consistent, and watch deadlines.
Practical Steps That Usually Help
- Control the communication: Ask for the full name, direct phone number, email, mailing address, and claim number for the current handler. If the contact changes, send one short written message confirming that all future communication should go through counsel and asking the new handler to confirm receipt of the file.
- Protect the record: Keep a simple log with the date, time, who contacted you, what was said, and what documents were requested. Save voicemails, emails, letters, and screenshots. If you speak by phone, send a short follow-up email or letter confirming the main points.
- Escalation options: If messages bounce back, calls go nowhere, or different people give different answers, ask for a supervisor or the insurer’s general claims department to confirm the current adjuster in writing. If you are represented, your lawyer can press for a clear point of contact and written confirmation about where claim materials should be sent.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Giving a fresh statement to each new claims representative without understanding why it is being requested.
- Assuming a new adjuster has read the file or knows prior communications.
- Relying only on phone calls instead of creating a written paper trail.
- Guessing about whose policy applies when the vehicle ownership and coverage information are unclear.
- Letting communication problems distract from preserving evidence and meeting legal deadlines.
How This Applies
Apply to the facts here: If the injured person was already contacted by an insurance representative and then directed the insurer to speak with counsel, the safest next step is to keep that boundary in place and have counsel confirm the correct adjuster and claim channel in writing. Because the vehicle appears to belong to a relative and there is confusion about policy information and possible coverage changes, early written confirmation matters. That helps reduce the risk that one claims representative says one thing, another says something different, and the file moves forward on incomplete information.
Conclusion
When adjuster contact information is wrong or keeps changing, the goal is to create a clean written record and pin down one reliable claims contact without changing your story or guessing about coverage. In North Carolina, those communication issues can slow a claim, especially when vehicle ownership and policy details are unclear. The next step is simple: have all contact confirmed in writing through counsel or, if unrepresented, through the insurer’s main claims department.