A DOMINO’S pizza manager has allegedly gone on a rampage after someone parked in his spot, spray painting and scratching “do not park” on two cars outside his shop.

Elisha Park said she returned to her car parked near a Domino’s in Melbourne’s east after working a 10-hour shift nearby to find it blocked by another car.

She claims she inquired inside the Domino’s and found the car belonged to the middle-aged manager, and asked him to move it.

“He suddenly became very aggressive (mind you, he looked twice my age and there were maybe four other middle-aged, male co-workers in the store so I was already nervous to begin with) accusing me of taking his parking spot, he yelled at me ferociously, staring me down, whilst the coworkers snickered and laughed in the background,” Ms Park wrote in a post on Facebook.

“I sincerely apologised and kindly asked him again to move his car. He told me he was too busy when there were clearly workers at the back doing nothing and told me it wasn’t his problem.

“I stood in the store crying, but he didn’t budge and kept “working”. I waited for an hour.”

When she walked outside Ms Park said she discovered her car and a co-worker’s car had been vandalised.

Both had red paint saying “do not park” on the windscreens and the same words had been keyed on to the bonnets and the sides of the car.

The Herald Sun spoke to the Domino’s store manager, who would not confirm or deny the incident and referred us to the company’s head office.

However they did not return calls.

Victoria Police confirmed they were investigating the incident, the latest in a growing parking rage problem.

“We never once received a notice to alert us not to park there by paper or by person,” said Ms Park.

“The most hilarious thing is, I wasn’t even parking in their spot, I had parked in a spot that I had gotten permission for, from the actual owners.

“So he had verbally abused me and damaged my property for no absolute f***ing reason and he was bold enough to keep coming out to our cars yelling at us, playing victim, denying everything, disrespecting not only me but also my dad.

“I had never felt so much anger and fear towards one person. I’m still shaking and at a loss of words from what I just experienced.”

Ms Park’s Facebook page has been swamped with hundreds of people liking and sharing her post and commenting with support.

The store’s Facebook account has been inundated with people attacking the restaurant and its manager and employees as a disgrace and vowing to boycott the chain.

“I might not know ‘Elisha Park’ so well and whilst there are always two sides of the story, I was pretty convinced by a photo of a spray painted car window. ... How fulfilling must your lives be to bully and target an innocent woman ... Even if she was in the wrong what gives you the right to belittle her and spray paint her window,” said Tim Wang.

“After hearing what your manager did, you’re going to lose heaps of business,” said Nicole Bartlett.

The company did respond to its torrent of abusers on social media, with identical replies.

“We appreciate your concern. This matter has been escalated to Domino’s management and head office. We are taking this very seriously and we are currently investigating this matter with the store and the local police. We have also been in contact with the people involved with this matter,” the reply read in part.

Domino’s suffered global damage to its reputation in 2009 when a YouTube video went viral showing two employees at a North Carolina franchise in the US performing vulgar acts with food - who were charged by police - implying it was later served to customers, although the company denied that.