Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Email them this:
“My response requires me to retain legal counsel. Please standby for a response from my attorney. Just as a courtesy, I want to let you know I plan to ask counsel to seek legal costs from you.”
This is way crazier than the initial text. Legal counsel? After one text request? YTA.
+1
People who go straight to lawyers just sound unhinged.
Pretty sure this was meant to be funny in that it is as over the top as requesting compensation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How odd. I’ve run over a nail a number of times (unfortunately) and have never “felt” when I ran it over. Didn’t notice until my tire pressure was low or had a flat. No way to know where it came from.
I’d just respond “Sorry to hear- that stinks! We haven’t thrown away any nails, so we are not the culprit 🤣 I’ve seen a few construction trucks go by recently- probably from them but who knows. Hope you had a good Thanksgiving weekend otherwise- good luck with the tire!”
I’d be friendly and light but take no responsibility at all. I would not under any circumstances pay for a new tire. Hopefully neighbor was just upset at the time, feels foolish and lets it blow over.
The bolded. I'm very surprised he felt it, got out and immediately had a flat tire. Must've been some nail!
Anonymous wrote:It is very cheap to get a nail hole fixed in a tire - not an insurance event. I would say that you haven’t been doing any kind of home repairs and are sorry they ran over an errant random nail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Email them this:
“My response requires me to retain legal counsel. Please standby for a response from my attorney. Just as a courtesy, I want to let you know I plan to ask counsel to seek legal costs from you.”
This is way crazier than the initial text. Legal counsel? After one text request? YTA.
+1
People who go straight to lawyers just sound unhinged.
Anonymous wrote:I recently got a nail in a tire and never in a million gazillion years would it have occurred to me to try to weasel money out of a neighbor to fix it. I would respond with absolutely no opening of a discussion about it:
“Oh no! I’m sorry to hear that. We don’t throw away sharp objects like that. Best of luck!
Anonymous wrote:Just say thanks for the warning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Email them this:
“My response requires me to retain legal counsel. Please standby for a response from my attorney. Just as a courtesy, I want to let you know I plan to ask counsel to seek legal costs from you.”
This is way crazier than the initial text. Legal counsel? After one text request? YTA.
Anonymous wrote:Our little street has construction for months due to a McMansion. Practically all the neighbors got nails or other rubble/objects into their tires during construction, such that one neighbor complained in a group email that the workers should be more careful about clean-up.
And that was that. No one asked for compensation for tire damage. Stuff happens. We all renovate at some point.
You can reply: "I'm sorry to hear you had a flat tire, Frank. We did not throw away any nails or objects that contain them."
Anonymous wrote:Email them this:
“My response requires me to retain legal counsel. Please standby for a response from my attorney. Just as a courtesy, I want to let you know I plan to ask counsel to seek legal costs from you.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How odd. I’ve run over a nail a number of times (unfortunately) and have never “felt” when I ran it over. Didn’t notice until my tire pressure was low or had a flat. No way to know where it came from.
I’d just respond “Sorry to hear- that stinks! We haven’t thrown away any nails, so we are not the culprit 🤣 I’ve seen a few construction trucks go by recently- probably from them but who knows. Hope you had a good Thanksgiving weekend otherwise- good luck with the tire!”
I’d be friendly and light but take no responsibility at all. I would not under any circumstances pay for a new tire. Hopefully neighbor was just upset at the time, feels foolish and lets it blow over.
The bolded. I'm very surprised he felt it, got out and immediately had a flat tire. Must've been some nail!
Sounds like a scam to me, honestly.