Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would respond with
We didn’t throw away anything sharp, and our trash was fully contained in our bins, not loose at the curb. You getting a flat tire has absolutely nothing to do with us. It happened on public property on the public street.
Don’t mention you have camera footage. But Save that if they escalate.
+1
Though I'd nice it up a bit.
"What a bummer that happened to you! We didn’t throw away anything sharp, and our trash was fully contained in our bins, not loose at the curb. Not sure where that nail came from, but very unlikely to have come from us. Best of luck with your car!"
This. They are looking for a target so all you want to do is take yourself out of their crosshairs so they move on. Like PP said, if they press you can double down that you have no construction materials in use and you have Ring camera footage that substantiates what happened to his car that morning on the public road.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would respond with
We didn’t throw away anything sharp, and our trash was fully contained in our bins, not loose at the curb. You getting a flat tire has absolutely nothing to do with us. It happened on public property on the public street.
Don’t mention you have camera footage. But Save that if they escalate.
+1
Though I'd nice it up a bit.
"What a bummer that happened to you! We didn’t throw away anything sharp, and our trash was fully contained in our bins, not loose at the curb. Not sure where that nail came from, but very unlikely to have come from us. Best of luck with your car!"
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.