ChatterBank12 mins ago
Paying for a meal
28 Answers
Where would we stood in this situation
We stopped for a meal with my daughter and grandson at an OK diner. When GrandadG came to pay for the meal the card reader didn't work. The manager said that there was a hole in the wall across the road at the garage - luckily GG had enough cash on him. Where would we have stood if:
a) we didn't have enough cash
b) We didn't want to go across the road to the garage
c) or there wasn't an hole in the wall
Would we have been within our rights to leave our name and address and post on the money?
We stopped for a meal with my daughter and grandson at an OK diner. When GrandadG came to pay for the meal the card reader didn't work. The manager said that there was a hole in the wall across the road at the garage - luckily GG had enough cash on him. Where would we have stood if:
a) we didn't have enough cash
b) We didn't want to go across the road to the garage
c) or there wasn't an hole in the wall
Would we have been within our rights to leave our name and address and post on the money?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.MrAsk used to have an Asda petrol card, where he paid his petrol bill at the end of the month. One day he went and the machine was broken, so they demanded cash, he said he didn't have enough cash with him. In which case they gave him a receipt and told him that if he didn't pay for the petrol within 24 hours the police would arrest him. He went back to the garage to pay in cash, and gave them the Asda petrol card back, told them to stick it. Asda should have given notice either on the pumps or somewhere prominent and large enough for every card holder to see the card machine was broken, to prevent this embarrassment happening again. He said he felt like a criminal.