At work, we all expect some level of respect for our personal space and belongings, but what happens when that boundary is crossed? For one employee, the theft of his $1800 office chair became the spark for a dramatic series of events that would change his job and his coworker’s career forever.
When the chair he owned was taken by a colleague and not returned, what should have been a simple conversation about ownership spiraled into a standoff.
The employee, armed with proof of ownership, took legal action, resulting in an arrest and a chain of consequences no one could have predicted. Scroll down to find out how this petty office incident led to a shocking outcome.
A man gets his coworker arrested for stealing his expensive chair, despite being fired for it





















When someone repeatedly challenges your personal space, whether it’s your time, your feelings, or in this case, your chair, it can feel like a violation.
For the OP, the stolen chair wasn’t just furniture. It symbolised his comfort, investment, and the respect he assumed came with it.
The moment his possession was taken without permission, the sense of being undermined took over, and what should have been a simple workplace disagreement became a question of dignity.
Emotionally, two halves of this conflict emerge. On one hand, the OP felt entitled to guard his personal belongings, $1,800 is no small value, and saw his coworker’s refusal to return it as not only disrespectful but a sign of disregard for his effort and comfort.
On the other hand, the coworker may have viewed the chair as simply “free to use,” likely unaware of the boundary violation unfolding. That mismatch, between personal ownership and communal mindset, fueled the escalation.
When someone ignores your property or self‑defined space, it triggers the same emotional response as ignoring your emotional boundaries: you feel unseen, inferior, or expendable.
What began as claiming a chair ended up claiming one’s worth. Place that in the workplace: mixing personal property with communal spaces demands clarity; without it, conflict becomes inevitable.
Expert insight backs this up. According to the article “Why Is It Important to Have Personal Boundaries?” from Psychology Today, healthy personal boundaries allow us to “live in tune with our desires, needs, and feelings,” ensuring we “don’t allow other people to define who we are.”
Additionally, the more recent piece “Navigating Relationships: The Power of Healthy Boundaries” emphasises that boundary‐setting is a positive, necessary strategy in relationships, personal or professional, and neglecting it can lead to burnout, resentment or perpetual conflict.
Connecting this to the OP’s story: his chair, his choice to bring it, his expectation that it should be respected, these were his boundaries.
The coworker’s refusal to comply signalled a disregard not only for his property but for his self‑defined comfort and worth. When the boss sided with “first‑come first‑serve,” it erased the OP’s boundary, making his only recourse a dramatic assertion.
So, setting and maintaining boundaries is vital, especially when ownership, respect, and personal space intersect. While the OP’s reaction was extreme, it followed a pattern: his comfort already ignored, his boundaries repeatedly violated, his dignity compromised.
In workplaces, personal property often blurs with communal space, so making your expectations clear, early, matters. If someone repeatedly disrespects you, yes, the situation might escalate. And sometimes, defending yourself isn’t overreaction; it’s self‑respect.
Take a look at the comments from fellow users:
This group supported taking action against the boss’s unfair treatment











One emphasized the legal rights to sue the company for retaliatory firing

This commenter humorously pointed out the overuse of the Herman Miller Aeron chair as the go-to office chair brand


What do you think? Was it an overreaction, or did the coworker get exactly what he deserved? Share your thoughts below!







