If she's dinging doors just give hers a knee strike wearing trackies or something, avoid trading paint and getting it traced back to your property. Make sure it's not too big a dent, just enough to be noticeable, but not insurable.
If she escalates (she will) and damages your door properly enough to warrant insurance claims, you can fuck her hard.
Adam Morales
OP, she's just giving you door dings?
Cooper Cox
That sounds like an effective barrier against dings. I'd take it out of my trunk and put it up in some other parking areas, but people would probably come and steal it or take it and bash my car with it. People are just plain angry nowadays at everything because they are not prospering much while they always hear in the media how well the upper crust are doing.
Ryan Martin
>yeah you should drive your car perpendicular into her car going under 10mph. You don't have a homeowner association to regulate such nonsense?
Josiah Collins
>Neighbor hit my car 8 times over about 2 months.
OP stopped commenting since it was pointed out this was just door dings and not the implied vehicle collisions suggested by the wording in the initial post. Door ding prevention and restitution is still a valid problem though. Certainly many others have the problem at apartment complexes that "cheap out" by making parking spaces super narrow and the driving aisles very thin. That forces door dings to occur, so maybe OP lives at such a place.
Brayden Fisher
>File a claim in court against your neighbor and their insurance company
You still need proof. If you prematurely file, you use up your opportunity. So if you get evidence later, they could simply dismiss your re-re-re-refiling as nuisance or even bring harassment charges on you for refiling too many times.
This is necessary to get rid of "Customers From Hell" who only have a billion hyper-sensitive complaints and can never be satisfied. There are customers out there determined to never be satisfied as that is their personality.
Blake Bell
This. Take them to small claims court. You have enough evidence to get a judgment, and your neighbor knows it, meaning they'll probably settle.