Film, Media & TV2 mins ago
Is it legal to raise bar prices during an evening?
I was at a wedding yesterday and the drink prices were raised at 7 o'clock, which i thought was disgraceful, never mind if it was legal!!!
I am at the same venue for another wedding next week so just wondered how they stood regarding the law on this matter.
Tm
I am at the same venue for another wedding next week so just wondered how they stood regarding the law on this matter.
Tm
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by tranceman. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Any trader can charge what he likes, when he likes and to whom he likes for the goods or services he offers for sale.
As long as the licensee doesn't breach discrimination laws (e.g. on the grounds of a customer's race), he can say that he'll charge �2.50 per pint before 7.00pm and �2500 per pint thereafter. He can refuse to serve people with brown shoes, he can give the stuff away free to people with black shoes, he can charge people wearing trainers one million pounds per pint and he agree to serve people wearing sandals only on condition that they strip stark naked and stand on their heads while singing the Latvian national anthem.
If you're selling something, you have every right to dictate the conditions under which the sale is made.
I was once working behind the bar in a pub which was jointly run by two half-brothers. About half an hour after we opened on a Sunday lunchtime, brother A was walking past me as I served a round of drinks. On hearing what I charged the customer, he started to lecture me about my inability to charge the correct prices. I pointed out the prices on the shelves and proved that I've added them up correctly. "That's ridiculous", he shouted. "My brother doesn't know what he's doing". There and then, he went round all of the shelves and added about 20% to the prices. Understandably, this caused a few grumbles when customers returned to the bar and found that the price of their round had just shot up!
Half an hour later, brother B appeared and asked why all of the new prices were on the shelves. I told him. He swore about his brother and then changed all of the prices back to what they were before! Half an hour later, brother A reappeared and all of the prices went up again! This was all incredibly confusing for the customers (and embarrassing for me) but it was still perfectly legal!
Chris
As long as the licensee doesn't breach discrimination laws (e.g. on the grounds of a customer's race), he can say that he'll charge �2.50 per pint before 7.00pm and �2500 per pint thereafter. He can refuse to serve people with brown shoes, he can give the stuff away free to people with black shoes, he can charge people wearing trainers one million pounds per pint and he agree to serve people wearing sandals only on condition that they strip stark naked and stand on their heads while singing the Latvian national anthem.
If you're selling something, you have every right to dictate the conditions under which the sale is made.
I was once working behind the bar in a pub which was jointly run by two half-brothers. About half an hour after we opened on a Sunday lunchtime, brother A was walking past me as I served a round of drinks. On hearing what I charged the customer, he started to lecture me about my inability to charge the correct prices. I pointed out the prices on the shelves and proved that I've added them up correctly. "That's ridiculous", he shouted. "My brother doesn't know what he's doing". There and then, he went round all of the shelves and added about 20% to the prices. Understandably, this caused a few grumbles when customers returned to the bar and found that the price of their round had just shot up!
Half an hour later, brother B appeared and asked why all of the new prices were on the shelves. I told him. He swore about his brother and then changed all of the prices back to what they were before! Half an hour later, brother A reappeared and all of the prices went up again! This was all incredibly confusing for the customers (and embarrassing for me) but it was still perfectly legal!
Chris
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.