The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancewarm-wren-682

Neighbor hit my parked car, claim denied over 'damage height mismatch' — what now?

I'm honestly at a loss and a little furious right now, so bear with me.

About six weeks ago I came out in the morning to find a pretty nasty scrape along the rear quarter panel of my car. My neighbor had been moving a large utility trailer around our shared alley the evening before — I actually watched him from my kitchen window struggling to maneuver it for like 20 minutes. He bumped into things, repositioned, the whole circus.

I filed a police report the same day, took a ton of photos, and even have a Ring camera that partially caught the incident — you can see him struggling to maneuver but the actual contact moment is just off frame. Classic.

Here's the thing: when I called his insurance carrier, the rep I spoke with actually mentioned that the trailer had some fresh scuffing along its rear corner that the neighbor himself pointed out. I recorded that call (I'm in a one-party consent state). I thought that was basically the ballgame.

Wrong. They just denied my claim, citing that the height of the damage on my car doesn't match the height of the trailer's contact point. My scrape is at roughly bumper-to-lower-panel height on my car. They're claiming the geometry doesn't work given the trailer model.

Here's what bugs me:

  • The alley has a noticeable slope. Wouldn't that change the angle/height of impact?
  • My car was purchased just a couple months ago and was clean when I bought it — I have the pre-purchase inspection report proving zero body damage
  • The neighbor has barely spoken to me since this happened, which feels telling

Is the 'height mismatch' thing a legitimate reason for denial or is this just an adjuster looking for any exit ramp? And how do I even go about proving the geometry argument on my own?

Any advice appreciated — I really don't want to eat this repair cost.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 13
    curious-bison-870

    The 'damage height doesn't match' excuse is one of the oldest moves in the denial playbook. Adjusters use it because it sounds technical and most people don't know how to push back. The slope of the alley alone could easily account for several inches of height difference — a trailer on an incline sits totally differently than on flat ground. Don't accept this as the final word. Push back in writing and ask them to explain their exact methodology.

    • 10
      steady-driver767

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 18
    quiet-marmot-596

    I used to work claims, and honestly? Height-mismatch denials are sometimes legit but a LOT of the time they're a lazy out, especially when the adjuster never actually visited the scene. Here's what I'd do: go back to that alley, measure the slope angle if you can, and take photos showing the grade. If your car was parked slightly downhill from where the trailer was sitting, the physics change completely. Also, the fact that you have a recorded call where they acknowledge fresh damage on the trailer is genuinely significant — don't let them bury that.

    • 6
      careful-passenger586

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 21
    daring-seal-867

    A few practical steps that could help your appeal: First, get the denial in writing if you haven't already — you want their exact stated reason documented. Second, that recorded call is potential gold; make sure it's backed up in multiple places. Third, you can request the adjuster's full notes and damage assessment report — you're generally entitled to that. Most carriers have a formal appeal or re-inspection process, and sometimes just requesting one signals that you're not going away quietly, which can shift things.

    • 1
      patient-commuter343

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 7
    swift-marten-842

    Not the legal side of things, but just want to check — are you doing okay? Stuff like this is genuinely stressful, especially with a neighbor you still have to see every day. Chronic stress from disputes like this is real. Make sure you're not letting it eat you up while you fight the claim.

    • 8
      genuine-bison-425

      Quick question — did you actually file the claim against his insurance, or through your own? Because how you filed matters a lot for the process and your leverage. Also, did the police report name him specifically or just document the damage? Those details change what options you realistically have.

    • 3
      weary-survivor945

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 18
    bold-tern-400

    Almost identical thing happened to me — neighbor, shared driveway, 'inconclusive' camera footage, denial. What finally moved the needle was getting an independent body shop to write a formal estimate that included their opinion on what type of object caused the damage and at what general height range. A good body shop tech can look at the scrape pattern and tell you a lot. That third-party written opinion gave my appeal some actual teeth.

    • 1
      careful-traveler306

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 5
    hearty-vole-279

    Two things. One: file a complaint with your state's department of insurance. It's free, takes 20 minutes online, and insurers hate the paper trail. Two: if the repair cost is significant, talk to a PI attorney — most do free consults and some will send a demand letter for cheap or free if the facts are solid. Your recorded call is a real asset here. Don't just let this sit.

  • 8
    steady-heron-833

    Not legal advice, but the recorded admission of fresh matching damage on the trailer is the kind of thing that makes a denial harder to defend if this ever escalated. The height-mismatch argument isn't automatically disqualifying — context like road grade, tire inflation, and load weight all affect trailer height. An attorney reviewing this could probably identify whether the denial reasoning holds up. Most will tell you in a free consult whether it's worth pursuing.

  • 12
    sharp-beaver-670

    This is so frustrating to read. You did everything right — report, photos, documentation — and still got denied. The fact that your neighbor is suddenly avoiding you says a lot. I really hope you get this sorted. Don't give up on it.