You felt the bump, stepped out, and saw nothing obvious. No scratches, no visible dents. But Kansas law does not require you to see damage before your legal obligations apply. Under K.S.A. 8-1605, if your vehicle collides with an unattended car and damage results, you must stop, leave notice, and contact police. What qualifies as damage is rarely something you can determine from a parking lot walkthrough. At Fincher Law, we help drivers navigate situations exactly like this. We have spent more than 30 years representing Kansans in vehicle-related legal matters. Call 785-510-2317 for a free case evaluation.
Modern vehicles hide significant damage behind surfaces that appear untouched from the outside. A low-speed impact that leaves the exterior paint clean can still produce real repair costs that the other driver discovers hours or days later.
Several categories of damage are commonly missed in roadside visual inspections:
The owner may not notice anything wrong until they drive the vehicle. When they do, the damage will not feel minor to them. And if they file a claim or a police report, the record will show that you left the scene without leaving a note.
Our team at Fincher Law regularly helps clients whose parking lot contact turned into a property damage dispute or a misdemeanor charge. We review the full factual record and work to protect your position from the beginning.
You deserve clear answers about your responsibilities after Hitting A Parked Car



Kansas law is clear about what you owe when your vehicle makes contact with a parked car. Under K.S.A. 8-1605, if you collide with an unattended vehicle and the collision results in any damage, you are required to stop immediately, make a genuine effort to locate the owner, and take specific steps before driving away.
The statute does not require you to confirm that damage exceeds a particular dollar threshold. Any damage to the other vehicle creates the legal obligation.
A legally sufficient note under K.S.A. 8-1605 must contain three specific pieces of information, placed in a conspicuous and secure location on the vehicle:
Leaving a phone number and a brief explanation of what occurred is not required by statute but is strongly advisable. It gives the owner a direct way to reach you and demonstrates good faith, which matters significantly if the situation becomes a legal dispute.
Photograph the note before you place it, and photograph it secured on the vehicle. Those images serve as evidence that you fulfilled the obligation if the note is later lost or blown away.
You must also notify the nearest law enforcement authority under K.S.A. 8-1605 even after leaving a note on an unattended vehicle. Additionally, under K.S.A. 8-1604, you are required to report the incident to the police if damage to the other vehicle appears to reach $1,000 or more, or if the owner cannot receive your information.
Situations where calling the police is both required and advisable include:
A police report, even for a minor property damage incident, creates a contemporaneous factual record. If the other driver later claims injuries or damage far beyond what the scene showed, that report protects your account of what actually happened.
Taking the right steps at the scene gives you the strongest possible position if the incident later becomes a claim or a legal matter. Every action you take in the first few minutes shapes the evidentiary record going forward.
Follow these steps in order:
Our team can help you organize and present this documentation clearly if the incident becomes a property damage dispute or a legal matter requiring a formal response.

Driving away without leaving a note is a misdemeanor under K.S.A. 8-1605, regardless of whether you believed damage occurred. The statute's obligation is tied to whether damage resulted from the collision, not to whether you personally concluded it did.
A misdemeanor conviction under K.S.A. 8-1605 carries real legal consequences, with penalties set forth in K.S.A. 8-2116. Beyond any fines, a conviction can produce lasting effects:
The explanation that you believed no damage occurred is one that courts hear regularly. Without evidence that you stopped, assessed the situation, and acted responsibly, that explanation provides limited protection in a misdemeanor proceeding.
Surveillance coverage in commercial parking areas throughout Topeka is far more comprehensive than most drivers realize. Retailers, grocery stores, restaurants, and apartment complexes typically record continuously and retain footage for 30 to 90 days.
Additional sources that capture incidents drivers assume went unobserved include:
Insurance investigators routinely request footage from these sources when a hit-and-run claim is filed. The assumption that no one was watching rarely holds up.
Yes, you should report the incident to your insurance company promptly, even when you believe no damage occurred. Most auto insurance policies include a duty to report accidents and potential claims within a reasonable period after the incident.
If the owner of the parked car later identifies damage and files a claim with your insurer or contacts you directly to demand payment, your insurer will investigate. If you did not report the incident first, the insurer must reconstruct the events with no prior information.
The consequences of not reporting promptly can include:
Reporting the incident immediately and providing full documentation gives your insurer a complete picture from your perspective.
Your rates may increase if a claim is filed against you, depending on your insurer's rating practices and your prior claims history. However, the financial exposure from a disputed hit-and-run claim, potential misdemeanor defense costs, or a civil judgment for concealed damage significantly outweighs a modest rate adjustment. Reporting is the lower-risk path in nearly every scenario.
If you left the scene without a note, the situation is often recoverable, but the window for acting in good faith closes quickly. Moving promptly is essential.
Steps to take if you have already left without fulfilling your obligations under K.S.A. 8-1605:
Kansas drivers often have specific questions about their legal obligations after hitting a parked car, particularly when visible damage is not apparent at the scene.
Under K.S.A. 8-1605, the obligation applies when the collision results in damage. Since a roadside visual check rarely confirms the absence of damage, leaving a note is always the safer legal position.
Photographs of the note in place on the vehicle serve as evidence that you fulfilled your obligation under K.S.A. 8-1605. This is why photographing the note before and after placement is essential.
Yes. The owner can file a claim or police report regardless of when they discover damage. Documentation gathered at the scene is your strongest protection against later disputes.
Yes. K.S.A. 8-1605 requires you to notify law enforcement after hitting an unattended vehicle, even after leaving a note. A report number creates a formal record that protects you.
Fulfilling your legal obligations does not automatically affect your driving record. A misdemeanor conviction under K.S.A. 8-1605, however, can result in a vehicle offense that Kansas records in your driving history.
What begins as a minor parking lot contact can quickly escalate into a misdemeanor charge, a property damage claim, or an insurance dispute. If you have received a call from the other driver, a notice from law enforcement, or a letter from an insurer, legal representation is now essential.
Attorney Roger Fincher has spent more than 30 years representing clients in vehicle-related legal matters throughout Topeka and Kansas. Our firm is recognized by Best Lawyers in America and Super Lawyers. We handle cases on a contingency fee basis. Call 785-510-2317 or contact us online for a free case evaluation.



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