What's Your "Thank God I LOOKED At The CONTRACT" Moment?
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- Опубліковано 6 кві 2024
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The clerk at the jewelry store was almost certainly following company policy to try to get out of the refund.
My wife and I were getting married and the planner worked with us on the contract. When it got closer to the wedding (a week before) the planner started to say we wouldn't get certain things and couldn't do stuff like keep the space till 12am and we had to be out by 11pm. Wouldn't provide utensils and the like and wouldn't provide a bartender and tried to charge us more. We referred her back to the signed contract and she threaten to refuse to do the wedding and refused to refund. We threatened a lawsuit and contacted a lawyer as it was such short notice. Long story short we got what we wanted and she had to follow the 4 corners of the signed paper. She was also released from the people that used her services at this place. It was a fire house that a good friend of ours worked.
That first one...
Just remember. If a thing in the contract violates state or federal law. It doesn't matter if you sign the contract and agreed to it. Since it's still violates the law you still have grounds to sue.
Not a read the contract moment, but a fact about consumer goods contracts many people don’t know.
That shady game company sounds like one that rhymes with Wactivision-Wizard
Applied for a job at a mobile phone company going door to door years ago (turns out I would have been selling phones to people in areas not covered by there mobile towers at the time). Did a group interview with a dozen other youngsters. Towards the end they dropped the contract in front of us and gave us 5 minutes to read it. It was 2 inches thick, not many people can read that fast. I quickly skimmed over it until I found the pay section. When I read that it said they could withhold my pay for up to 45 days, for no reason, I asked if I could take the contract home and read it over fully. They refused, I got up and walked out on the spot, much to the chagrin of the interviewers. Got a couple strange looks from the other people being interviewed and only one other person walked out after me. (I guess he thought me asking to take it home and being refused was enough to walk as well.)
The car dealership story is classic bait-and-switch. If a business offers a product at a certain price, amd then tries to sucker their customer into a higher cost replacement, they have to give the other priduct at the same price.
Ah, yes, memories. Had a foreign firm looking to hire IT contractors, and there was some sketchiness about them. I told the (local) recruiter that I didn't want to sign a non-compete; he replied that the company didn't have one. The contract arrives; it's longer and denser than expected, with basically no paragraph breaks, and, yep, sure enough, a one-year industry-encompassing non-compete is buried deep within a tangentially related section. I wanted to tell them where and how far to stick it, but I did really need the money at the time - and then I realized that mine was the first signature. Two can play this game. I used PDF editing software, changed the "one year" to "one day", put in an extra space elsewhere in the section so the character count was the same...then signed it and sent it back to them. When the copy with both signatures showed up, I checked, and it was my revision.
Story 5, I find to be next to impossible to believe.
That game looks fun
Thank you so much for your video.
What's the game in the background?
whats the game your playing?
Pay these extra fees every 6 months so you can pay less in monthly fees.
What's the game?
What is the game your playing ?
Never sign a LOI.
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Wrong (higher) interest rate on a car finance contract. Would have cost me a pretty penny if it hadn't been caught