I'm not sure if this is the appropriate section, so mods by all means move if necessary. Also I think only minor suck may be involved, but I am really looking to see how other CS members would handle the situation.
Yesterday I went on an errand with my friend J, who was picking up a Thing that had been in the shop for months. Said shop is located close to several appealing pubs, so I was happy to keep her company. After picking up the Thing we selected a pub and settled down for a nice lunch, with the Thing carefully placed on one of the chairs at our table. However at some point during the meal, and none of the three of us could tell you exactly how it happened, our waitress knocked the chair the Thing was placed on and it fell to the ground. The Thing itself wasn't broken, but one of its attachments was damaged beyond repair. This cast a pall over what would otherwise have been a pleasant lunch
The waitress was very apologetic. and sincerely so, and really nobody saw it coming. There were no rancorous words exchanged.
At the end of the meal J had decided that the pub should pay for her broken attachment, since it was broken by one of their staff members on their property. I told her (drawing, I hope accurately, on what I have learned from reading CS) that she needed to find the manager in that case because it would not be a decision the waitress could make on her own. After we paid the bill I sprinted back to the shop to make sure that they had another attachment, which they did, so the broken part was replaced right away. I met up with J who hadn't spoken with a manager - whether she couldn't locate one or couldn't get a grip on what she had to say, I don't know. She intends to e-mail them about the matter today.
My question is (and I haven't a dog in this fight so I ask out of curiosity), is J entitled to reimbursement, or should she just suck it up? I mean, it was a genuine accident, but an item was irreparably damaged.
If it makes any difference I can add the following:
(1) The attachment cost $30
(2) Our tab before tax & tip was $41
(3) Waitress was tipped 20%, which is the norm around here, service being a completely separate issue
Normally we would have stayed around for a few more beers, but the situation was so awkward that we really didn't feel comfortable doing that. So the pub lost money that way.
Advice, opinions? Anyone? Bueller?
Yesterday I went on an errand with my friend J, who was picking up a Thing that had been in the shop for months. Said shop is located close to several appealing pubs, so I was happy to keep her company. After picking up the Thing we selected a pub and settled down for a nice lunch, with the Thing carefully placed on one of the chairs at our table. However at some point during the meal, and none of the three of us could tell you exactly how it happened, our waitress knocked the chair the Thing was placed on and it fell to the ground. The Thing itself wasn't broken, but one of its attachments was damaged beyond repair. This cast a pall over what would otherwise have been a pleasant lunch
The waitress was very apologetic. and sincerely so, and really nobody saw it coming. There were no rancorous words exchanged.At the end of the meal J had decided that the pub should pay for her broken attachment, since it was broken by one of their staff members on their property. I told her (drawing, I hope accurately, on what I have learned from reading CS) that she needed to find the manager in that case because it would not be a decision the waitress could make on her own. After we paid the bill I sprinted back to the shop to make sure that they had another attachment, which they did, so the broken part was replaced right away. I met up with J who hadn't spoken with a manager - whether she couldn't locate one or couldn't get a grip on what she had to say, I don't know. She intends to e-mail them about the matter today.
My question is (and I haven't a dog in this fight so I ask out of curiosity), is J entitled to reimbursement, or should she just suck it up? I mean, it was a genuine accident, but an item was irreparably damaged.
If it makes any difference I can add the following:
(1) The attachment cost $30
(2) Our tab before tax & tip was $41
(3) Waitress was tipped 20%, which is the norm around here, service being a completely separate issue
Normally we would have stayed around for a few more beers, but the situation was so awkward that we really didn't feel comfortable doing that. So the pub lost money that way.
Advice, opinions? Anyone? Bueller?



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