This is a simple question. Is there a law against overcharging someone, in a restaurant or store (check out)? Example: someone uses a check card to pay for food at a restaurant. During the transaction, patron ask cashier to add on a soda (carry out). Now, the cashier completes the order prior to adding on the soda and then forgets and re-rings the order with the drink added on. The card declines when the entire order is rang up again but the patron knows the card had $15 on it when it went through the first time, prior to the soda being added on.
Now, if there is a law against overcharging a person, who is told their card was not charged the first time, but they know it was but can't prove it until they get their bank statement, is there a 10-fold repayment due from that restaurant to the patron when it is proved they were actually overcharged by the cashier?
If there is such a law please send me the resource so that I may print it out as documented proof.
Thank you.
St. Augustine defined sin as "a word, deed, or desire in opposition to the eternal law." Thus sin, by definition is against Someone - God.
St. Valentine performed secret marriages for young lovers against the law in ancient Rome, where marriage was forbidden for soldiers. He defied the emperor's orders and continued to conduct these marriages in secret, which led to his arrest and eventual execution.
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St. Mary's Law Journal was created in 1887.
St. Francis School of Law was created in 2011.
St. Augustine first articulated the concept that an unjust law is no law at all. This idea has been further explored by luminaries such as Thomas Aquinas, Martin Luther King Jr., and Thomas Jefferson.
St. Mary's University School of Law was created in 1927.
St. John's University School of Law was created in 1925.
University of St. Thomas School of Law was created in 1999.
St. Augustine is often attributed with the quote "An unjust law is no law at all." However, this idea is more commonly associated with Thomas Aquinas and is often cited in discussions about civil disobedience and the legitimacy of laws.
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