Personally, I would think that employee should be on the hook for at least some if not all of the charges - he/she shouldn't have called the towing company without previously checking the status of the vehicle on the property - they appear to have overstepped their bounds and should be made to make good on their mistake. Although, yes, I think that towing company is being about as unfair as they can be by attempting a double charge, you can probably fight the double charge as technically it's not taking more space then it would with just the trailer alone. I'd definitly stay away from anything damaging property tho, otherwise you might end up owing a lot more that would actually be yours to owe... JMHO -Tony Cedric Chang wrote: I had a trailer located in the parking lot of a church. I had gotten permission to park it there. Due to some confusion, a new church employee called a towing company. The towing company owner was on vacation for 3 days and when he came back, he wanted towing charges plus 3 days storage. Oh yes, by the way, he doubled the towing and storage charges because there was a car loaded on the trailer. -- http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist