Oaky
Are you seriously trying to say that you paid 12,000 coins into a bank and you expect them to handle them free of charge?
I presume this is a wind-up?
Come on. What is the punch-line?
Brendan
Increasingly, staff in retail outlets seem anxious to dish out as many coins as possible when making change, and are reluctant to take coins in payment, thus decreasing the burden of counting coins when cashing out the till at the end of a shift.I paid for a few bits and pieces in my local Statoil yesterday with e2 coins that had mounted up at home. The bill was around e12 and the assistant sighed her way through the ordeal of having to count six e2 coins. I'm going to print out the OP's post and bring it down to her
Why did the bank charge the limited company for the service provided to an individual on his personal account?
Why did the bank charge the limited company for the service provided to an individual on his personal account?
I had a bridging loan in my own name which had an outstanding balance of 24k and paid it all off by lodging 24k in 2 euro coins.
but how did you manage to transport this stuff?
...
How can the bank charge my company for me lodging coins to my personal bridging loan account...
say for example i have a current account in bank a and owe 20k of a loan in bank b and pay off the loan with 20k of 2 euro coins who do they charge then or is it tough luck for the bank.
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