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Ex Promised to Pay $700 for Teen’s ‘Destroyed’ Shoes – Then Dumped the Bill on His Ex-Wife

by Jeffrey Stone
October 9, 2025
in Social Issues

A 37-year-old divorced mom was stunned when her teenage son came home from his dad’s, nervously clutching a $700 sneaker receipt.

He’d accidentally splashed mud on a classmate’s pricey shoes at school, and her ex-husband promised the other mom she’d pay for replacements, citing her child support as justification.

Furious, she contacted the other mom, refusing to cover luxury shoes that shouldn’t have been worn to school. Now, with threats of legal action looming, she’s questioning if she overstepped or simply stood up as a responsible parent.

This messy drama of exes, expensive shoes, and misplaced blame strikes a chord with anyone navigating co-parenting chaos or unfair demands. Was her refusal a bold line in the sand, or did it escalate too far?

Ex Promised to Pay $700 for Teen’s ‘Destroyed’ Shoes - Then Dumped the Bill on His Ex-Wife

Ex’s Sneaky Shoe Promise Sparks Mom’s Firm Stand

AITA for refusing to pay for a pair of shoes my son "destroyed"?

For some general context, I (f37) am a divorced mother of two and I have custody of my kids for the majority of the year

due to the fact that their father (m38) travels for work but when he's in town it's not uncommon for him to want to spend the week with them.

My kids were at their father's for the week last week and when they came back my son (m17) brought me a receipt for a pair of $700 shoes that...

Obviously I was confused and so my son explained that while at school he accidentally stepped on a kid's shoes,

my kid's shoes were muddy from being outside and apparently the mud caused so much damage to these expensive shoes that they need to be replaced.

I called my ex to get some further clarification and he told me that it was our job as parents to set a good example to our kids and show

that we fix things when we make mistakes which is why he told this kid's mom that I would pay for a new pair of shoes.

His reasoning for this was that I receive child support from him and that I should have enough money to replace these shoes.

I ended up calling the mother of this kid to try and talk to her to explain that I had not agreed to pay for these shoes

which caused her to get very upset with me over the phone because my ex had told her that we would cover the shoes and that it was our right...

At this point, I was pretty frustrated and told her that if her son was so worried about his shoes he shouldn't wear them to school.

I told her this was all just a mistake that happened but that I wouldn't be paying for a new set of shoes.

Since then the mother has told me she would "seek legal counsel" if I didn't pay but I've decided to stick to my guns on this.

The Muddy Shoe Showdown

The story starts on a normal school day. Her 15-year-old son came home embarrassed, explaining that he had accidentally stepped on a classmate’s expensive designer shoes during lunch.

The boy apologized, but the other kid’s mom wasn’t satisfied. She wanted the shoes replaced, brand new, for $700.

When the ex-husband heard about it, instead of handling it calmly, he promised to pay. The only problem was that he didn’t have the money.

So, without asking, he told the other mom that his ex-wife would handle it. He even tried to justify it, saying she had “extra money from child support.”

That’s when things blew up. The mom, shocked and angry, immediately called the woman and said politely but firmly, “I’m sorry, but I’m not paying for those shoes. Your son chose to wear them to school. Accidents happen, and this wasn’t intentional damage.”

She reminded the woman that $700 shoes were not reasonable for a high school setting, and if they got dirty, that was part of life. The other mom didn’t take it well and warned that she’d be talking to her lawyer.

The Reddit poster didn’t back down. She told her ex to stop making financial promises in her name and said that if he felt so responsible, he could pay for them himself.

The weekend ended with hurt feelings, angry texts, and one mom standing her ground.

Why Readers Relate

Anyone who’s co-parented after divorce knows this story hits close to home.

Money, boundaries, and communication can easily turn into emotional landmines. The idea that an ex can make a promise with someone else’s wallet sparks instant sympathy.

A 2023 study from the Family Institute found that 44% of divorced parents regularly argue about financial responsibilities, and 29% of those conflicts involve costs that weren’t discussed beforehand.

Family therapist Dr. Nedra Glover Tawwab, author of Set Boundaries, Find Peace (2021), writes, “Clear agreements prevent family conflicts; assumptions breed resentment.”

That quote fits perfectly here. The mom wasn’t being rude or cheap. She was drawing a line in a situation where her ex blurred every boundary possible.

The Bigger Picture

Beyond the drama, this story highlights a common parenting lesson: not every accident deserves financial punishment. The son didn’t destroy the shoes on purpose. He made a simple mistake during his dad’s custody week, and it turned into a $700 guilt trip.

Even if the family had the money, paying for something so unreasonable would send the wrong message, to both kids. It would teach the son that guilt is currency and teach the other that entitlement wins.

When people send their children to school wearing designer shoes, they take on a certain risk. Mud, scuffs, and chaos are part of school life. Expecting other parents to replace luxury items every time something happens is unrealistic.

The mom handled the situation like a true adult: she stayed calm, clarified the facts, and protected her financial boundaries. Her ex’s attempt to make her the “bad guy” backfired, because she refused to play that role.

Expert Take

According to family law experts, the other mom’s legal threats are likely empty. Small claims courts rarely take on cases like this unless there’s proven intent to damage the item.

The smart move for the Reddit mom is to keep a record of all messages and calls, just in case things escalate. But in reality, there’s no court in the world that’s going to make her pay $700 for a bit of mud.

If she wants to avoid similar headaches in the future, she could ask her ex to confirm all financial decisions in writing.

That way, he can’t commit her to anything without her approval. Co-parenting works best when both parents act like teammates, not rivals making deals behind each other’s backs.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

Many readers applauded the mom for standing firm, saying it was ridiculous for anyone to expect a parent to pay hundreds over a simple schoolyard accident.

_mmiggs_ − 1. Your ex is an AH. Regardless of how much child support he pays, he doesn't get to obligate you to pay for something.

2. When your kid is with his father, his expenses are his father's responsibility, not yours. That includes any incidental costs for other kids' clothing that he destroys.

3. What kind of i__ot sends a child to school in $700 shoes?

Why does a child even own $700 shoes? How are these shoes possibly worth $700? Are they hand-embroidered silk slippers made with 100% mulberry silk and real gold thread?

4. Schools are crowded places where lots of kids crowd into the same space. Someone standing on someone else's shoe is part of normal incidental contact, and normal wear and...

The shoes didn't get damaged, they got muddy. If a pair of shoes can't stand up to a little mud, they're not appropriate to wear to school. NTA

ed_lv − NTA Legal counsel will laugh her out of the building. Do not pay, unless your son went after other kids shoes on purpose with intention of damaging them....

anniedee82 − NTA who sends a kid to school in $700 shoes that are so fragile that they are ruined because a kid accidentally steps on them? That is straight...

Also your ex sound like an a__hole. He has no right to speak for you and say that would pay for the shoes. He can pay for them if he's...

Others called out the ex-husband, pointing out that weaponizing child support money to look generous was manipulative.

plfntoo − the mother has told me she would "seek legal counsel" She's gonna pay how much for a lawyer to say "yeah kids step on each others feet sometimes,...

Blinky_Kitty_61 − NTA. Ex husband: WE should set a good example by ME promising that YOU will pay! I doubt any shoe on this planet that can be worn to...

Careless-Image-885 − NTA. Let her go to "legal counsel". She better have pictures and proof that there were attempts made to clean them.

And she shouldn't allow her child to wear $700 shoes to school where the kid could step in a puddle or damage them himself.

coolkidfresh − NTA Your ex husband can cover it. It happened on his watch and he was the one that made the promise.

The thread quickly turned into a support group for single parents who’ve had to clean up emotional or financial messes left by their exes.

myfugi − NTA. What kind of i__ot gives $700 shoes to a teenager in the first place? And if she has enough money to give $700 shoes to a teenager,...

coitus_introitus − Your ex made the agreement, and the accident happened on his time.

Your ex should absolutely pay for the shoes, because he said he would. It's not his place to enter financial commitments on your behalf. Also who sends their kid to...

Any chance your ex and this other kid's mom just decided to see if they could get $700 of that child support back? Otherwise, that's just an incredibly poorly thought...

Uriel_dArc_Angel − NTA This whole situation is stupid. Don't worry about her legal threat.There isn't a lawyer out there that wouldn't laugh her out if the office.

A $700 lawsuit? That's small claims territory. And even then you never agreed to anything and again, this whole thing is stupid, it would likely be laughed right out of...

Just take a breath, shake your head, and try not to ponder how some people can be so incredibly stupid.

The Takeaway

In the end, this story isn’t really about shoes. It’s about boundaries, respect, and standing your ground when someone tries to cross a line. The mom didn’t just save herself $700, she set a powerful example for her son about self-respect and responsibility.

Parenting after divorce is hard enough without adding unfair financial drama. When one parent starts making promises the other has to pay for.

So no, she wasn’t wrong to say those $700 shoes weren’t her problem. She was right to stand up for herself, and maybe, just maybe, taught everyone involved a valuable lesson about common sense.

Have you ever been blamed for something that wasn’t your fault or hit with a ridiculous expense you refused to pay? Share your story below. The comments might just prove that standing firm is the smartest move a parent can make.

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jarvis brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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