The Shoulder
The Shoulder
52
calm-marten-577

Neighbor's runaway car hit my parked truck & fence — now they want to 'handle it privately'

So this happened four days ago and I'm still kind of in shock about the whole situation.

I was at work when I got a call from my wife saying a car had rolled down the street and slammed into our truck, which was just sitting in our driveway minding its own business. Apparently the neighbor two houses up hadn't set their parking brake properly, and their car drifted all the way down the hill, clipped our wooden fence, and then hit the truck hard enough to push it into our garage door frame. The frame is visibly bent and the door now sticks.

Here's where it gets complicated. The neighbor came over almost immediately, super apologetic, and offered to just "take care of everything out of pocket" rather than go through insurance. They mentioned something about their rates going up and asked us to just get a couple of quotes from shops they'd recommend.

Red flags for me:

  • They want to pick the repair shop
  • They haven't offered anything in writing
  • The garage door frame damage might be a homeowner's insurance issue, not just an auto claim
  • What if there's frame damage to the truck we can't see yet?

I don't want to be a bad neighbor but I also don't want to get stuck with repair bills six months from now because we shook on a deal and the damage turned out to be worse than it looked.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Do I need to file with my own insurance, their auto insurance, and maybe my homeowner's policy separately? I genuinely don't know how to handle the different types of damage hitting at once. Any advice is really appreciated 🙏

11replies

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11 replies

  • 19
    warm-sparrow-242

    So from the inside looking out — private deals fall apart constantly, and when they do, you've sometimes already lost leverage. If you wait too long to file a claim, insurers can push back on the timeline. The neighbor's insurance exists exactly for this situation. Their rates going up is genuinely their problem, not yours. I know that sounds cold but it's true.

    Also, the structural damage to your garage frame is a separate issue. That may actually go through your homeowner's policy first, which can then subrogate against the neighbor. Worth a quick call to your home insurer just to ask — you don't have to file to have a conversation.

    • 10
      humble-swan-292

      Quick question — did you actually get a police report filed at the time? Or any official documentation? If not, that's the first thing I'd try to get sorted before anything else moves forward. Without it, a private agreement gets even messier if something goes sideways.

  • 18
    clear-grouse-177

    Was anyone in the truck or near it when it got hit? I know you said you were at work, but just checking — sometimes the adrenaline of dealing with the property stuff makes people brush off any minor physical stuff. Just make sure everyone's actually okay.

    • 7
      soft-spoken-sidewalk974

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 17
    humble-dove-823

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: liability here seems pretty clear — an unattended vehicle rolled and caused damage. That's not ambiguous. The fact that the neighbor is motivated to avoid a formal claim doesn't change what actually happened. If you're unsure how to handle the multi-policy angle, a lot of PI attorneys offer free consultations and can at least point you in the right direction.

  • 8
    humble-otter-168

    Don't shake on anything verbal. If they're serious about paying, they can put it in a signed written agreement with a timeline, a payment structure, and acknowledgment of liability. If they balk at that, you have your answer. But honestly? Just file the claim. This is what insurance is for.

  • 5
    daring-newt-240

    Oh man, I went through almost the exact same thing two years ago — neighbor's car rolled into my parked vehicle and they begged us to keep it private. We agreed and honestly it was a nightmare. Their "guy" kept rescheduling, the repair was shoddy, and by the time we found additional damage they stopped returning calls. File the claims. I wish we had.

    • 5
      spry-hare-943

      The moment they said they pick the shop, that was the answer for me. That's not them being helpful, that's them controlling the damage assessment. A shop they're friendly with has every incentive to minimize what gets written up. Get your own independent estimate first, always.

    • 13
      kind-wren-683

      I really feel for you — it's so awkward when it's a neighbor because you still have to see these people. But your truck and your home are not small things. Please don't let the social discomfort push you into a bad decision financially.

  • 5
    clear-vole-510

    You're smart to flag the different types of damage. Auto damage and structural/property damage can involve completely different policies and different claims processes. Document everything right now — photos, video, timestamps. If you do end up in a dispute later, having a clear record of the condition immediately after the incident matters a lot.

    • 8
      mellow-backseat773

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.