I am pretty sure that the store has to honor the price well at least that's what i heard. sorry if i am wrong.
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It actually depends on your countries laws of sale. In the majority if a price is advertises as X then it begin a contact process. In the UK it is a criminal offense to advertise an item incorrectly. However, if it can be shown that the prices was printed in error i.e. by the news paper the seller has not committed any offense. It is also widely understood that a seller does NOT have to sell you the item at the prices stated - They can legally refuse to sell any item to any person. In most cases the seller will for one off occasion sell the item to keep the customer happy. If the advert is wide spread they will take the item off sale so as to stop the financial loss.
its never the wrong time to honor our military heroes.. we should always have respect for them..ALWAYS HONOR THEM!! :)
Store clerks and companies make mistakes sometimes. Also, sometimes signs and tags will get mixed up customers. Usually if the company is at fault for a pricing error, they will print a retraction. If the clerk is at fault, sometimes they can override the price and sometimes thy can not. It all depends on the company rules and the clerk's position (manager, etc.). Often a store will agree to override a price if it is marked incorrectly, but this is usually done for customer satisfaction as they are under no legal obligation to change the price.
The barcode does not give the price. The price is maintained in a database in the main store computer, so the incidence of the wrong price being reported depends on if this database has been correctly updated. This will happen at a much lower rate than having an incorrect price tag used to happen.
You edit a paper when you get something wrong.
All law is ambiguous, and varies from state to state. One common interpretation is whether a buyer could reasonably believe the seller was really selling the item for the advertised price. For example, if the real and ordinary asking price of a new car is $20,000 and the seller inadvertently advertises $19,000 he is expected to honor that price. But, if he advertises $2000, a reasonable buyer should realize that is an unreasonably low price and thus the seller is not expected to honor it.
See who wrote it...send summons back to sender with telling them you will not honor the summons due to wrong spelling...but make sure you write them with return reciept from Post Office.
Yes, the sentence 'What paper did you have?' is correct. There is nothing wrong with it.
it depends on whats wrong with it, but generally, YOU PRESS THE POWER BUTTON, maybe that will make it power on, but if there is something wrong, you may be screwed, cuz i dont think any video game store will service it without a heavy price
No
It defeats the honor system upon which monetary recognizance relies.
You go to the clone store and ask the guy for a penguin clone and haggle the price down to 50 cents :) It's not worth anything more. (This is wrong and stupid)
u soelled some time wrong, i think, and i really dont knoow. im just bored. TYPO :)