you can get sued for any reason in the USA, even if you don't cause damage or injury. if lawyers actually had to do a legal duty by their clients of advising whether to sue or not, we'd have a lot less **** like this clogging up the courts. all these lawyers are doing is looking at the big payoutAs others had mentioned, just get a swing-a-way post.
Building a mailbox that can withstand WWIII, then situating it right next to a street, is just inviting trouble. Are the odds high you'd get sued over your mailbox? Probably not. Can you get sued if it causes damage or injury? Absolutely. Even replacing your mailbox and post ten times a year for life is cheaper than an attorney.
Doubt they would. We had to put up curbside boxes because of a neighbor down the street harassing the mail man. If you chose not to put up a box, you had to get a PO box or not get any mail.Fine, now he can get out of his car and walk your mail up to your front door.
That's what I did. Also makes it easy to switch it out for a different style or to repaint it.The upper mail box post was made from the same material with a mating four bolt flange at the bottom.
Our post office opens at 9 and closes at 5 during the week and is open 9-12 on Saturday. The lobby gets locked too. So if you work a 9-5 it's worthless.The best way is what I did. Remove mailbox and post, get a PO box at the post office and just add the PO number to your current address.


I'm not a fan of mailbox posts in the center of the box, too easy for the postman to bump the post with the front bumper while trying to get close. I would get a post that is on the back edge of the box to give more room and allow the post to be a little further from the edge of the road. Then perhaps a short a curb even with the front edge to give folks more incentive not to get too close. Maybe use some 6" tall landscape stones or railroad tie.
Back in the early 80s the local high school kids would make the rounds on Friday night after football games smacking mail boxes with (I presume) baseball bats. During football season I would generally get hit 2-3 times. Most times I could clean them up well enough for use but not always. Finally, I built a wooden mail box out of full 2" rough cut cypress kinda in the shape of a house including a shingled 'roof'. After that I noticed a few dings in the roof but no real damage to the 'box'. I think the kids must have gotten quite a jolt when they hit it because even the dings stopped after a couple weeks.
![]()
FIFYI'm retired, but worked for the DOT for 30 years in a number of positions, one being a county maintenance supervisor. In my state, WV, on state maintained roads, the rules are maximum of 4X4 wooden post or a 2" diameter steel pipe. I've seen it happen where a beautiful 16 year old girl is checking her phone for likes on her instagram and runs off the road, strikes a brick enclosure made with a mailbox inside, and the damage to her appearance was terrible and permanent.
That happened to our mailbox in Illinois.Back in the early 80s the local high school kids would make the rounds on Friday night after football games smacking mail boxes with (I presume) baseball bats. During football season I would generally get hit 2-3 times. Most times I could clean them up well enough for use but not always. Finally, I built a wooden mail box out of full 2" rough cut cypress kinda in the shape of a house including a shingled 'roof'. After that I noticed a few dings in the roof but no real damage to the 'box'. I think the kids must have gotten quite a jolt when they hit it because even the dings stopped after a couple weeks.
![]()
LOL! I don't think UPS would deliver to the mailbox, and the truck would certainly not be damaged by bumping a 6" high movable curb. The illustration in the post office guidelines shows the box should be 6-8" back from the curb, but that just makes it harder to reach. Moving the mailbox back a foot doesn't help, the mailman still has to get close to open it and the photo shows there is plenty of room between the edge of the road and the box.Bad idea. Why not just set the mailbox back from the road a little more? Why go through all the effort to make something that will stop a 15000 lb UPS truck moving at five mph, when you could spent fifteen minutes moving the mailbox back a foot.

Didn’t say UPS will deliver to a mailbox. They don’t . The op said a UPS truck hit his mailbox.LOL! I don't think UPS would deliver to the mailbox, and the truck would certainly not be damaged by bumping a 6" high movable curb. The illustration in the post office guidelines shows the box should be 6-8" back from the curb, but that just makes it harder to reach. Moving the mailbox back a foot doesn't help, the mailman still has to get close to open it and the photo shows there is plenty of room between the edge of the road and the box.
Under common law you are responsible if you make something in a public way that hurts someone. You are doing it purposefully reinforcing to do damage to the car.I'd like to reinforce this post so that the next time it's hit, the damage goes to the vehicle rather than my post. Any ideas?
You can take some solace in the fact they messed up the wheels and/or suspension on their car when they hit the driveway.All this talk about mailboxes jinxed me.. Some a-hole did a dukes of hazard over my driveway and obliterated our mailbox and our trashcan.. kept on going...
You mean the ones that roll the guardrail up as it collapses so it can't go through a windshield?Hmmm... I wonder what the difference is when the state installs a guardrail termination with a heavy square plate on the end? Hit one of these at speed and you are a goner. Some are quite close to the road. Dangerous indeed.

1974 Vega GT was my first new car and only new one until 2008. They didn't crack or warp, the honing process to expose the silicon in the aluminum alloy was not done properly and the piston would wear the cylinder walls very easily.
Pistons in high silicon content aluminum blocks is a tried & true process now. 911 Porsches used it, might still for all I know, many Japanese cars. And of course Vega's had a tendency to rust but then so did a lot of cars in those days before galvanized body panels and better drainage design.
I LOVED my Vega, drove the piss out of it and mechanically it held up just fine. But I absolutely doted on it like only a car minded 17 year old could do. The only picture I have of it that has survived:
![]()
I have an IR that is over 20 years old that survived 10+ years of daily use in a body shop and is still going. I am a fan of IR tools.
No bluetooth on most TV's. I don't have bluetooth on mine. I'm in a mobile and such I have 110 other families in the space that use to be between me and my neighbors. I was going to get a soundbar but realized I couldn't utilize it. Standing outside I can hear everyone else's TV's not just on my road but the next roads over too.
I was going to get a pair of TV wireless headphones (RF, base plugged into the audio output.) And there's the issue again popping up, I can't go spend $180-200 on a pair of headphones that I haven't listened to. I want and expect a high quality sound out of expensive headphones way higher than a set of earbuds and if I don't know the quality I'm getting, it's tough to go and spend $200.
I've gone all Makita electric with a mower, trimmer and blower. Hard to overstate how much nicer it is than gas/cords.
FIFY
FIFY
They’re collapsible, energy absorbing devices. At least the new ones are. Take a look at them. They’re safer than the older ones that act like a ramp to tip over your car.Hmmm... I wonder what the difference is when the state installs a guardrail termination with a heavy square plate on the end? Hit one of these at speed and you are a goner. Some are quite close to the road. Dangerous indeed.
I do have a funny story however. Received $35 in the mail once and an apology for damage to my mailbox. Funny thing was, it was not my mailbox that was hit, it was my son's, who live 2 doors down. So next time my son came to visit I showed him the note and money and slid both back into my pocket. The look on his face was priceless. After a minute or so I gave it to him, we both got a laugh!
I saw one that was destroyed, looks like a heavy truck hit it and was destroyed as well. I cannot envision some of those i have seen "rolling up". I know of at least one young woman who was killed. Her father has been on a campaign to eliminate them.
