The Shoulder
The Shoulder
69
kind-newt-119

Left a note after bumping a car in a parking garage — now they're blowing up my phone demanding cash tonight

I feel sick writing this but I need some outside perspective because I'm spiraling.

I borrowed my roommate's bigger SUV yesterday to haul some stuff and scraped a parked car while pulling out of a tight spot in a parking garage. Nobody was around. I sat there for a few minutes, genuinely freaking out, then did what I thought was the right thing — wrote out a note with my name and number and tucked it under their wiper.

Fast forward two hours. The person calls me, seems calm at first, says they don't want to involve insurance or police and just wants me to pay them directly. I said okay, I'd need to see an actual repair estimate first. They sent a photo of one pretty quickly, which honestly felt... fast?

Here's my situation: I'm 23, just moved to a new city for a job that doesn't start for another three weeks. My savings are basically zeroed out from the move. The number they're quoting me is more than I have in my account right now. I told them I needed a day or two to figure things out and they said "sure" — but then texted me four more times in the next hour asking when I'd have an answer, and the last message said if I don't pay by tomorrow morning they're going to "handle it differently."

I don't even know what that means? I left a note. I did the right thing. Now I feel like I'm being pressured into something and I don't know if I should just go through insurance, try to negotiate, ask my parents for help, or what.

Has anyone been in this kind of situation? What would you actually do?

15replies

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15 replies

  • 6
    curious-beaver-360

    I went through something almost identical a couple years ago — did the right thing, left my info, and the other person used it to pressure me into a cash deal I wasn't ready for. My honest advice: stop responding to those texts tonight. You don't owe them an answer by tomorrow morning. That deadline is made up.

    • 15
      calm-bison-291

      Worked in claims for a long time. A few things here: one, that estimate showing up super fast is suspicious — legit body shop estimates usually take a day at minimum, sometimes longer. Two, 'handle it differently' almost certainly just means filing with insurance, which they can do regardless of whether you pay cash. The threat has no real teeth. Three, if you do end up going through insurance, the note you left actually works in your favor — it shows you acted in good faith and didn't flee.

    • 14
      patient-finch-496

      Honestly? You handled the initial situation with integrity. That matters. Whatever happens next, you're not the person who drove away — and that's actually meaningful both legally and just as a human being. This is stressful but it's solvable.

    • 7
      hopeful-survivor756

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 18
    patient-marmot-003

    That 'no insurance, just pay me cash' request is a flag worth noticing. They might be trying to avoid a claim going on record for their own reasons — maybe they have prior damage on that car, maybe their own insurance situation is complicated. The pressure timeline is a manipulation tactic. Don't let urgency make your decision for you.

    • 2
      weathered-road-soul127

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 7
    silent-grouse-580

    Just so you know — in most states, leaving a note with your contact info after a parking lot incident is considered fulfilling your legal duty when no one is present. You're not in any criminal jeopardy here. If they file a claim through insurance, that process has rules and protections for you too. You don't have to negotiate under pressure outside of that system.

    • 10
      steady-walker241

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 16
    careful-swift-929

    Not legal advice, but: you have no obligation to agree to any cash timeline a stranger sets for you via text. If they want to pursue this, insurance exists for exactly that. The threatening tone in those messages is actually worth screenshotting and keeping. Consult with someone before handing over any money — most PI attorneys will talk to you briefly for free.

  • 19
    hearty-tern-828

    Call your insurance company right now and just report what happened. Yes, your rates might tick up. But handing cash to someone who's already threatening you with no paperwork and no release of liability could cost you way more. You have zero protection in a cash handshake deal — they could take the money and still file a claim.

    • 14
      hearty-wren-194

      The anxiety you're feeling right now is real and it's messing with your ability to think clearly — that's just stress physiology. Try to eat something, step away from the phone for an hour, and come back to this with a clearer head before you do anything. Decisions made in panic mode rarely go well.

  • 5
    daring-owl-473

    You did the RIGHT thing leaving that note. A lot of people wouldn't have. Please don't let this person bully you into a panicked decision tonight. Take a breath, talk to someone you trust, and don't let a stranger's artificial deadline run your life.

    • 0
      soft-spoken-overpass305

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 12
    steady-otter-561

    How bad was the actual scrape? Like are we talking a paint scuff or something structural? And was the estimate from a specific body shop with a letterhead, or just like a photo of a handwritten number? Those details matter a lot for figuring out if this quote is even realistic.

    • 3
      steady-walker863

      How long did it end up taking in your case?