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Rear-Ended on I-90? Why the Insurance Company Might Blame You

Rear-Ended on I-90? Why the Insurance Company Might Blame You

An insurance adjuster inspecting vehicle damage after a rear-end accident on I-90 in Spokane to look for evidence to blame the lead driver.

While Washington law generally presumes the rear driver is responsible for a collision, this presumption is not absolute. Insurance companies sometimes use defenses like sudden emergency or allegations of abrupt stopping to rebut this presumption. On a high-speed corridor like I-90, where traffic flow changes instantly, these arguments are difficult to disprove without hard data.

The real danger is the application of comparative negligence. If the insurer convinces a jury, or even just you, that you were partially responsible for the crash, your compensation drops by that exact percentage.

Adjusters typically delay admitting fault. They might request a recorded statement to catch you admitting to stopping suddenly, or claim you cut off their policyholder. To secure full compensation, we must secure evidence that proves the rear driver was following too closely for the conditions, effectively neutralizing their defense that you created a hazard.

If you were rear-ended on I-90 and the insurance company is suggesting you caused the accident, call Fannin Litigation Group. A Spokane car accident attorney will evaluate the crash report and physical evidence to determine exactly where liability stands.

Key Takeaways for Rear-End Accidents on I-90

  • Washington law presumes the rear driver is at fault. This is a rebuttable presumption, meaning the other driver’s insurance company will try to prove you contributed to the crash to reduce their payout.
  • Insurers use I-90’s unique conditions to shift blame. They may argue that factors like sudden traffic stops near Mercer Island or weather on Snoqualmie Pass created an unavoidable emergency for their driver.
  • Your compensation may be reduced by your percentage of fault. Under Washington’s pure comparative negligence rule, if you are found 10% responsible for the accident, your final financial award is reduced by 10%.

Specific Arguments Insurers Use to Shift Blame on I-90

I-90 presents unique driving conditions that insurance adjusters leverage to build their defenses. You might hear one of the following arguments designed to minimize their driver’s liability.

The Sudden Emergency Defense

The insurer may argue that traffic stopped so abruptly that their driver had no reasonable way to avoid the crash. This is common in two specific areas:

  • Snoqualmie Pass: Adjusters blame sudden weather changes or black ice for the crash, arguing it was an unavoidable accident rather than driver negligence.
  • Mercer Island Interchanges: The heavy bottlenecks here lead to standstill traffic. Insurers argue that the sudden compression of traffic created an emergency that their driver could not anticipate.

The Swoop and Squat Allegation

This defense claims you made an unsafe lane change. They will argue you merged into the lane directly in front of their driver and immediately hit the brakes, removing their safe stopping distance.

On I-90, merging is constant. A standard merge followed by traffic slowing is frequently misinterpreted or intentionally mischaracterized as an aggressive cut off.

Mechanical Failure Defenses

If the rear impact destroyed your taillights, the other driver might claim your brake lights were non-functional before the crash. They argue they had no warning of your deceleration. Proving your lights were working requires forensic analysis of the filaments in the light bulbs.

Impeding Traffic

Under RCW 46.61.425, drivers may not drive so slowly that they impede the normal flow of traffic.

If you were in the left lane driving below the speed limit when hit, the insurer will argue you created a hazard.

How Pure Comparative Negligence Affects Your Payout

Washington is a pure comparative negligence state under RCW 4.22.005. This statute allows you to recover damages even if you are partially at fault, but your award is reduced by your percentage of fault.

This system gives insurance companies a strong financial incentive to blame you. They know their driver is mostly at fault. Their goal isn’t necessarily to get a 0% liability ruling, but to chip away at the total payout by manufacturing doubt about your driving decisions. This is why they nitpick details like when you signaled or how hard you braked.

A driver on the phone at a Spokane crash scene, illustrating the risk of insurance companies using sudden stop defenses to shift blame after being rear-ended on I-90.

Evidence We Use to Defeat the Sudden Stop Defense

To stop the insurance company from rewriting the narrative, we move beyond he-said-she-said arguments and look for hard data.

Event Data Recorders (Black Boxes)

Most modern vehicles contain an Event Data Recorder (EDR). These devices capture vehicle dynamics in the 5 seconds leading up to an impact. We work to preserve and download this data.

  • From the Rear Vehicle: We look for data showing late braking, lack of braking, or excessive speed, which points to distraction.
  • From Your Vehicle: We look for evidence of steady deceleration. This disproves the allegation that you “slammed” on your brakes unnecessarily.

WSDOT and Traffic Cameras

I-90 is heavily monitored by the Washington State Department of Transportation. We locate footage from traffic cams that might have captured the traffic flow at the time. This can disprove the sudden emergency claim by showing that traffic was slowing gradually, and the other driver simply wasn’t paying attention.

Cell Phone Records

If the rear driver claims they were reacting to your driving, we may subpoena phone records. Evidence that they were sending a text or scrolling social media at the moment of impact negates their ability to judge the road conditions correctly.

FAQ for Rear-End Collisions on I-90

What if I was rear-ended in a chain-reaction crash on I-90?

Multi-car pileups are complicated. Typically, you pursue a claim against the driver immediately behind you. However, if that driver was pushed into you by a third vehicle, liability may be split. We investigate to identify the initial impact that started the chain reaction.

Can I still claim damages if I was cited for a broken taillight?

Yes. A traffic citation is not the final word on civil liability. We would argue that the other driver should have maintained a safe distance regardless of the light, or that ambient lighting on I-90 made your vehicle clearly visible.

Does Washington law apply if the other driver was from out of state?

Yes. If the accident happened on I-90 in Washington, Washington’s tort laws and comparative negligence rules apply. It does not matter if the other driver holds a license from Idaho or Oregon.

The other driver says I brake-checked them. How do I prove I did not?

Brake checking implies specific intent to cause a collision or alarm. Proving you braked for a legitimate road hazard, such as debris or slowing traffic, using witness testimony or EDR data is the most effective way to counter this.

What if the at-fault driver is uninsured?

If the driver who hit you lacks insurance, your own Uninsured Motorist (UM/UIM) coverage should step in. However, your own insurance provider may still use the same comparative negligence arguments to minimize their payout to you.

Do Not Let an Insurance Adjuster Rewrite the Facts

Being rear-ended should be a straightforward claim, but insurance companies are adept at turning clear liability into complicated disputes. A denial or a lowball offer based on shared fault is not the final verdict. It is simply the opening position of a business trying to protect its bottom line.

Call Fannin Litigation Group to discuss your accident. We will review the facts, tell you whether the insurance company’s defense holds water, and outline the steps required to secure the compensation available to you.

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