She Parked in My Driveway One Too Many Times—So I Had Her Car Towed in Front of the Whole Neighborhood
🚗 She Parked in My Driveway One Too Many Times—So I Had Her Car Towed in Front of the Whole Neighborhood
I’m Diane Keller—62, widowed, retired, and fiercely protective of the quiet life I’ve built. My house sits on a calm suburban street where most of the neighbors know each other by name. After my husband passed ten years ago, I found peace in the rhythm of solitude—morning tea, gardening, and the soft hum of wind chimes. It wasn’t glamorous, but it was mine.
After a bad fall last winter, I now walk with a cane. That means I rely on my driveway—not out of convenience, but out of necessity. It’s the shortest path between my front door and the world, and anything farther becomes a painful obstacle course. That small stretch of pavement? It’s my lifeline.
Then came Melissa.
She moved in next door one Saturday morning in a flurry of moving trucks, loud music, and a stream of overly bronzed twenty-somethings carrying houseplants and designer handbags. She was in her early 30s, sharp-tongued, and dressed like she was permanently on her way to a reality TV reunion.
I brought over a plate of cookies as a welcome gesture. She barely opened the door, muttered thanks, and shut it before I could say, “I’m next door if you need anything.”
A week later, I found her SUV in my driveway.
I assumed it was a mistake. People get confused when they move. It happens. So I left a kind note under her windshield: “Hi neighbor! This is my private driveway—please don’t park here. Thanks so much!”
The next morning? Her SUV was there again.
This time I knocked. She answered wearing a silk robe and holding an iced coffee the size of her head.
“Hey,” I said gently. “I noticed your car in my driveway again. I really need that space—I walk with a cane, and it’s very difficult for me to get around.”
She didn’t even look guilty. She rolled her eyes and said, “Relax. I won’t be long.”
But she was. Hours passed. That night, I parked down the street and clutched my cane as I struggled up the sidewalk in the dark.
The next day, I put up a small sign near the entrance to the driveway: Private Driveway – Do Not Block.
She tore it down.
I called the HOA. They said they’d send her a warning.
She parked there the next day anyway.
For weeks, I kept trying to handle it the civil way. Notes. HOA complaints. Even asking a friend to help me make a larger, more noticeable sign. She ignored it all. Every time I spoke to her, she got ruder.
“You’re retired. What do you even need the driveway for all day?”
That one stung. The kind of dismissiveness that makes you feel invisible.
But I wasn’t invisible. Not anymore.
So I changed tactics.
I began taking photos. Every time she parked there, I logged it. Date. Time. Angle. I even bought a small security camera and pointed it right at the driveway. Within five days, I had more than a dozen clear shots of her car—and even one video where she could be heard laughing as she told a friend, “She can’t even walk that far. She’s not gonna do anything.”
She was wrong.
I called my nephew Eric, who runs a towing company out of town. I explained everything and sent him the footage.
“You’ve got everything you need,” he said. “Just say the word.”
So I did.
That Saturday, I heard her car door slam. I peeked through the blinds. There it was again—bold as ever. Parked right across my driveway like it owned the place.
I dialed Eric.
He arrived 20 minutes later with his truck. No flashing lights, no drama—just a quiet hook, lift, and go. I watched from my porch swing, sipping my tea as her car was pulled away.
She didn’t even notice until an hour later. When she did, her scream was loud enough to make the crows scatter from the trees.
“Where’s my car?!”
She banged on my door like it owed her money.
“You towed my car?!”
“I did,” I said calmly. “I have every right. This is private property, and I have documentation.”
She called the police.
They arrived, and I greeted them with a binder—literally. Photos. Notes. HOA emails. Her ripped-down sign. Even the video.
She tried to talk over me, but they waved her off.
“Ma’am,” one of the officers said, “this isn’t your driveway.”
She was issued a citation. The HOA fined her. She had to pay nearly $400 to retrieve her car. And just like that—she stopped parking in my space.
The next morning, there was a folded card in my mailbox. Inside, five signatures from neighbors on the block.
Thank you for standing up. We were all sick of her too.
Sometimes people think being quiet means being weak. They assume kindness equals inaction. But here’s the truth:
Even the softest voice can make noise when it matters.
I didn’t want a war. I wanted respect. And thanks to one well-timed tow truck and a folder full of patience, I got it.
The best part? She still crosses the street to avoid me.
And I sleep just fine.