But how do you know that the 35e worth of oil was actually put in? there are chancers out there, and was alluded to, how do you not know that the driver took the 35e worth of oil himself. very hard to tell from looking at a tank how much oil is in it.Lads, get a grip. We have turned into a nation of scalpers, and it is not nice when you are being scalped. The guy made a mistake, offer him €20, not because he might get pissed off & come after you, but because you got €35 worth of oil. Try being a more decent human being, you will sleep better for it
Lads, get a grip. We have turned into a nation of scalpers, and it is not nice when you are being scalped. The guy made a mistake, offer him €20, not because he might get pissed off & come after you, but because you got €35 worth of oil. Try being a more decent human being, you will sleep better for it.
Bluespud, if I drove up to your house, painted the front of it and asked for €500, saying it was an accident, I got the wrong road, would you give me €400, being the decent human being you are??
The sum is so paltry that the company are incredibly taking the p**s asking for it. And the principle is the same for the situation described above. Would you pay for a dinner in a restaurant that you didn't order?
Don't pay them a cent...I'd even be annoyed at having the hassle of ringing these people to get it sorted out.
I am curious as to where you would draw the line?
If the bank accidently put €35 in your account, would you tell them & then return it.
If the bank accidently put €3500 in your account, would you tell them & then return it.
In your opinion, would it be stealing?
In my opinion it's a poor state of affairs when some poor unfortunate driver makes a simple mistake and the company is expected (or maybe he is) to take the loss. To suggest they take their own oil back is plain silly but I assume that's some sort of joke. What if the shoe was on the other foot, if you were the driver, how would you feel? I agree entirely that if the wrong oil was added then that changes the situation entirely and I'd expect the company to sort the issue out but otherwise why not just pay for the oil anyway? You'd have been buying more sooner or later....
Given the amounts these companies deal with, invoicing the OP for €35 is laughable. The whole incident should be forgotten and no action taken.
Syphoning the oil out, negotiating a settlement figure or paying the €35 would be ruled out by most rational people.
An oil truck pulled up outside our house and proceeded to fill our tank with oil. There was none ordered. By the time the mistake was realised and stopped the driver, he had €35 of oil added to the tank.
The oil company have now sent a bill for this €35.
Is it fair to expect payment for this?
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