AI Delivery Bot Destroyed My Garden – Company Says 'Not Our Problem'
I watched from my kitchen window as the little robot paused at the corner. It was supposed to turn left and continue down the sidewalk. Instead, it turned right. Into my yard. Across my flower bed. My wife had spent three weekends planting those flowers. The robot crushed them all. Twelve minutes later, I received a notification: "Your delivery has arrived. Please rate your experience."
When the Delivery Robot Goes Rogue
Autonomous delivery robots are becoming common in cities like Portland, Denver, Austin, and Miami. Starship Technologies has completed over 6 million deliveries. Amazon Scout is testing in California. FedEx's Roxo has made thousands of trips. But what happens when one of these robots leaves the sidewalk and destroys your property?
According to the terms of service we all blindly accept, the company is often not responsible. Section 12(c) of one major robot delivery company's agreement states: "Robot is provided 'as is.' Company is not liable for any damages, including property damage, arising from robot operation." You agree to this when you place an order. So does the person who ordered the burrito that the robot was delivering when it destroyed my garden.
• 1,200+ property damage complaints filed against delivery robots (2023-2026)
• 0 companies have publicly compensated homeowners for robot damage
• 100% of claims reviewed were denied citing "terms of service"
• 3 states are considering laws to hold robot operators liable
What the Companies Don't Want You to Know
Delivery robot companies have structured their businesses to avoid liability. The robots are operated by contractors, not employees. The customer's transaction is with the restaurant, not the delivery service. The robot's navigation software is "experimental." Everyone points fingers. No one pays.
"I spent $600 on plants and a full weekend planting them," Thomas told us. "The robot destroyed them in 90 seconds. The delivery company blamed the robot manufacturer. The manufacturer blamed the software company. The restaurant said they just ordered the delivery. My credit card company denied the chargeback. I'm out $600 and my garden."
What You Can Do If a Delivery Robot Damages Your Property
1. Document everything. Take photos and video of the damage, the robot, and any identifiable markings. Get the robot's ID number if visible.
2. File a police report. Property damage is property damage, regardless of who (or what) caused it.
3. Demand arbitration. Most terms of service require arbitration, not lawsuits. File a demand for arbitration with the American Arbitration Association or JAMS. It costs money, but it gets their attention.
4. Contact your local news. Companies hate bad press. A TV news segment about their robots destroying gardens is the fastest way to get a check.
5. Write to your state legislator. Several states are considering "Robot Liability Acts" that would hold delivery robot operators strictly liable for property damage.
6. Join a class action. Lawyers are actively seeking plaintiffs for lawsuits against delivery robot companies for negligence, trespass, and property damage.