Hi! Yeah, so I hope you had a great Thanksgiving (if you're American) or... whatever holiday may have fallen, by coincidence, on the same day or weekend that we celebrate Thanksgiving in America. Or, hey, if it wasn't a particular holiday where you're from, then I hope you had a great weekend!
I had a pretty good weekend, thanks for asking. There was a minor incident, though, that I thought I'd seek some advice on. Tell me what you all think I should do.
I was parked somewhere this weekend, and someone accidentally maneuvered his car into my car while I wasn't there. I knew this because the doors had a bunch of white streaks on them that looked an awful lot like salt road spray. But there is no road salt right now, so that's not it. I wiped a bit, and wouldn't you know it... there's a long crease along the bottom of the doors on the driver's side. Some paint is missing too. :(
I got in the car to see if it recorded the event, but before I had a chance to check that, I discovered a note under the windshield.
The note had a name, a number, was deeply-apologetic, and offered to get it straightened out.
I know. I was shocked, too.
We live in a world now where that would have happened and the offending driver would have just... driven away like it didn't happen. But this guy left a note.
Turns out, he's a new driver. I feel terrible for him, because he probably left that note, and then dwelled on it all day until I contacted him. It probably put a damper on his weekend, too. I don't want that for him.
I would, however, like the car to be fixed. I've never owned a new car until I bought this one, and I want it to look pretty. I like it, and I take care of it. I talked to the driver and he has insurance, but would like to avoid using it to keep his premiums from skyrocketing. This seems reasonable to me, but I feel like I need to do something to mark this. I already made an appointment with Tesla to get it looked at (that's late February). Do I need to call my insurance and tell them? Do I need to try to get his insurance info anyway? Police report? Call the President?
I want to do something right by him for leaving the note. I hate the "No good deed goes unpunished" saying, but in this case, it's one of those things where it often applies. I'll try to do something to make it right for him. I really want this to be something he forgets about in a couple of months and never thinks about again--because I know how it feels to gently back up your car into your sister's car in the driveway and break every single piece of her BMW 318's bumper, causing thousands of dollars of damage somehow, and then relive that experience every time you see a Z3 or a 318 for the next 20 years.
What do you guys think? What would you do?