Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a car when I lived in the suburbs and you could park anywhere. I sold the car and moved to another city far away, and haven't owned a car in 20 years. This week I am house-sitting for people, and they told me that today I needed to move the car to the other side of the street until 2pm for street cleaning. I went to move the car this morning, but it was electric (first time driving one), it was rush hour, and the only spot was a tight parallel parking job. I couldn't do it, so I went around the corner and parked there.
I just went to get the car and got a ticket! Turns out that street has specific times you can't park on the side I parked. Ugh, it didn't occur to me to look for street-parking signs! I'm fully responsible for paying this, right? Not the owner of the car?
Well yeah. You moved it. Should have left it alone. No good deed goes unpunished right?
No, I shouldn’t have left it - they asked me to move it and I said yes. It’s just they asked me to move it to the other side of the street and I couldn’t parallel park where they said to, so I parked around the corner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a car when I lived in the suburbs and you could park anywhere. I sold the car and moved to another city far away, and haven't owned a car in 20 years. This week I am house-sitting for people, and they told me that today I needed to move the car to the other side of the street until 2pm for street cleaning. I went to move the car this morning, but it was electric (first time driving one), it was rush hour, and the only spot was a tight parallel parking job. I couldn't do it, so I went around the corner and parked there.
I just went to get the car and got a ticket! Turns out that street has specific times you can't park on the side I parked. Ugh, it didn't occur to me to look for street-parking signs! I'm fully responsible for paying this, right? Not the owner of the car?
Yes. However, it was a bit much to include moving their car twice a day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a car when I lived in the suburbs and you could park anywhere. I sold the car and moved to another city far away, and haven't owned a car in 20 years. This week I am house-sitting for people, and they told me that today I needed to move the car to the other side of the street until 2pm for street cleaning. I went to move the car this morning, but it was electric (first time driving one), it was rush hour, and the only spot was a tight parallel parking job. I couldn't do it, so I went around the corner and parked there.
I just went to get the car and got a ticket! Turns out that street has specific times you can't park on the side I parked. Ugh, it didn't occur to me to look for street-parking signs! I'm fully responsible for paying this, right? Not the owner of the car?
Yes. However, it was a bit much to include moving their car twice a day.
Anonymous wrote:I had a car when I lived in the suburbs and you could park anywhere. I sold the car and moved to another city far away, and haven't owned a car in 20 years. This week I am house-sitting for people, and they told me that today I needed to move the car to the other side of the street until 2pm for street cleaning. I went to move the car this morning, but it was electric (first time driving one), it was rush hour, and the only spot was a tight parallel parking job. I couldn't do it, so I went around the corner and parked there.
I just went to get the car and got a ticket! Turns out that street has specific times you can't park on the side I parked. Ugh, it didn't occur to me to look for street-parking signs! I'm fully responsible for paying this, right? Not the owner of the car?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, legally it’s the car owner’s responsibility.
But ethically, yes, you made the mistake.
Talk to the owners. See if they’ll split with you. Next time do not agree to move a car.
No, do not ask them to split it with you. Your mistake. You pay.
NP. I disagree.
Did the house sitters disclose this ahead of time? That you'd be responsible for moving their car, and did they share with you how best to do for the neighborhood? If the OP knew all this and agreed in advance, then they should pay. But if the owners didn't share this info in advance, I think it's on them. I've had someone hosuesit for my home, and I left detailed neighborhood parking info.
OP here. They told me ahead of time and to park in front of a specific person's driveway, that they'd cleared it with him. I chose to go around the block to a quieter/less busy street.
Last question: I will pay this ticket. Do I have to tell them? I feel so stupid.
I would tell them because it's part of their record. I can enter my car in the local database and all my parking tickets come up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, legally it’s the car owner’s responsibility.
But ethically, yes, you made the mistake.
Talk to the owners. See if they’ll split with you. Next time do not agree to move a car.
No, do not ask them to split it with you. Your mistake. You pay.
NP. I disagree.
Did the house sitters disclose this ahead of time? That you'd be responsible for moving their car, and did they share with you how best to do for the neighborhood? If the OP knew all this and agreed in advance, then they should pay. But if the owners didn't share this info in advance, I think it's on them. I've had someone hosuesit for my home, and I left detailed neighborhood parking info.
OP here. They told me ahead of time and to park in front of a specific person's driveway, that they'd cleared it with him. I chose to go around the block to a quieter/less busy street.
Last question: I will pay this ticket. Do I have to tell them? I feel so stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell then and offer to pay. They might offer to pay it for you. Or at least realize that they need to be clearer in the future.
But they don’t need to be more clear. They told OP EXACTLY where to park and OP chose to park somewhere else.
Anonymous wrote:Tell then and offer to pay. They might offer to pay it for you. Or at least realize that they need to be clearer in the future.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a car when I lived in the suburbs and you could park anywhere. I sold the car and moved to another city far away, and haven't owned a car in 20 years. This week I am house-sitting for people, and they told me that today I needed to move the car to the other side of the street until 2pm for street cleaning. I went to move the car this morning, but it was electric (first time driving one), it was rush hour, and the only spot was a tight parallel parking job. I couldn't do it, so I went around the corner and parked there.
I just went to get the car and got a ticket! Turns out that street has specific times you can't park on the side I parked. Ugh, it didn't occur to me to look for street-parking signs! I'm fully responsible for paying this, right? Not the owner of the car?
Well yeah. You moved it. Should have left it alone. No good deed goes unpunished right?