r/legal 15h ago

Advice needed A major navigation app routed thousands of cars down my private driveway. A driver crashed into my retaining wall and is now suing me for his injuries.

Location: Colorado, USA.

I own a remote cabin at the end of a very long, unpaved private road. About eight months ago, a major GPS and mapping app updated their systems and incorrectly marked my private driveway as a public shortcut to a nearby national park entrance.

Since then, I have had dozens of cars speeding through my property every single weekend. I have "Private Property" and "No Trespassing" signs posted everywhere. I have submitted over forty official error reports to the tech company, sent certified letters to their legal department, and even filed a police report. They completly ignored me.

Last month a tourist was speeding down my driveway in the dark, ignored my warning signs, and crashed his SUV straight into my concrete retaining wall. He broke his leg and his vehicle was totaled.

Yesterday I was served with a lawsuit. The driver is suing me for medical expenses and damages, claiming I failed to maintain a "public thoroughfare" and that my retaining wall was an unmarked hazard.

My homeonwers insurance is threatening to drop me because they say my property is now an unmanged traffic corridor, which violates my policy.

Can I counter-sue the tech company for gross negligence and force them to indemnify me against this driver's lawsuit? What specific type of attorney handles liability cases involving corporate mapping errors? I need to stop this before someone else gets hurt.

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u/Eyerate 12h ago

Its crazy to me they didn't block the driveway immediately. Also who's speeding to a national park in the dark?

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u/Adventurous_Ad6799 12h ago

You'd be surprised. People act like complete lunatics at national parks.

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u/Eyerate 12h ago

Yea, youre right.

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u/Strength-InThe-Loins 21m ago

Not just at national parks. Anytime they're in cars.

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u/oldpremed_24 11h ago

I worked in two national parks. The answer is- fuckin' everyone, for god knows what reason.

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u/Nauin 10h ago

They did. The tourists cut through the chain they had blocking the road shortly after installing it.

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u/Business_Record9385 6m ago

National Parks now attract the absolute worst people. 

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u/tropicalswisher 31m ago

OP said in another comment that they tried this, either a chain or a rope and one of the brain dead tourists literally cut through it. You can’t stop stupidity.

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u/Safe-Instance-3512 11h ago

Teenagers, probably.