It started with a note tucked neatly under our windshield wiper. In bold, tidy handwriting, it read: “ONE CAR PER HOUSE!” At first, I laughed it off, assuming it was a joke or some overzealous neighbor trying to play traffic cop. Both of our cars were parked fully on our own driveway, not blocking the sidewalk, not touching the street. We didn’t think much of it. That is, until three days later, when the neighbor herself came knocking.
She stood there in a pastel pink cardigan, a matching headband, and crisp white capri pants, smiling like she was doing us a favor. Without small talk, she announced that our HOA had a rule: only one car per household in the driveway. “Very friendly, but firm,” she said, tilting her head as if that softened the blow. I blinked, genuinely confused. One car? Jack calmly explained that both cars fit on the driveway and weren’t bothering anyone. She didn’t care. “One house, one driveway, one car. No exceptions,” she said, then turned and walked away.
We ignored her. The rule sounded absurd, and we’d never received anything official from the HOA. Three days later, we woke up to an empty driveway. Both cars were gone. Towed. My stomach dropped. And there she was, standing across the street, smiling so wide it looked rehearsed. When I confronted her, she seemed almost offended that I was upset. She said she was “just enforcing the rules” and couldn’t understand why we were angry.
That’s when I smiled back. “Oh, I’m not angry,” I said. “I’m just realizing you owe us twenty-five thousand dollars.” Her smile vanished instantly. She stammered, asking what I was talking about. I walked over to where the cars had been and pointed at the small metal marker embedded at the edge of the driveway. A symbol she hadn’t noticed. A protected property designation.
Turns out, our driveway was officially registered as a shared-access easement with special protections. Any unauthorized towing from that space was illegal and carried heavy penalties. The towing company had already admitted they acted solely on her call. Between damages, fees, and fines, the total added up fast. Very fast.
Her face went pale. The confidence drained out of her like air from a balloon. She tried to backtrack, mumbling about misunderstandings and rules. But it was too late. The HOA confirmed there was no such “one car per house” rule. She’d made it up, and now she was on the hook.
Sometimes people confuse authority with entitlement. That morning, she learned the difference the hard way. And our driveway has been very quiet ever since.