In many Uber/Lyft cases, the argument isn’t “who was driving?”—it’s which insurance layer applies and what everyone was doing at the exact moment of impact.
Common Springfield scenarios we see include:
- Rear-end collisions during commute traffic where the rideshare driver claims they were stopped/slow-moving and the other driver claims sudden lane entry.
- Pickup/drop-off injuries near busy storefronts and parking areas, where it’s unclear whether the injured person was a passenger, a pedestrian, or simply in the wrong place at the wrong time.
- Crashes involving distracted driving—phone use, navigation, or a rideshare app prompt—where the “story” changes once an adjuster gets involved.
Because rideshare coverage can vary by trip status and timing, what you remember (and what you can prove) matters more than most people expect.


