Dumb waitress last night

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buck

Lifer
Dec 11, 2000
12,273
4
81
Originally posted by: iFX
Originally posted by: slag
Originally posted by: buck
Originally posted by: A Casual Fitz
Great call my man. Fuck tipping, restaurant owners should be forced to pay waitresses a decent salary.

What about the money he stole before not leaving a tip?

Technically, he didnt steal. She presented him with a bill for the food which he paid in full.

I've been comp'd many times at restaurants for crappy service, slow delivery of food, etc. For all we know, she did this on his bill.


I'm afraid not. He knew the bill was $185 according the prices listed for the items he and his party ordered. He knew that the bill presented was not $185, but $155 - he admitted this to us in his OP. He did not ask for clarification of the bill that he knew to be incorrect - because he was not told that there was a discount for the poor service he had no reason to suspect a discount had been provided. Hence, he knowing paid $30 less than he knew he was obligated to pay and that's stealing. Period.

:thumbsup:
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,967
19
81
Originally posted by: loki8481
Originally posted by: Crusty
Love how the moral police came running with pitchforks and torches when I'm willing to bet most of them have done something similar to you in the past.

If the waitress is too stupid to figure out how much you owe it's her own damn fault. I might have said something to the manager when I walked out about the crappy service and how the waitress needs to be trained on how to properly run the tickets.

can't say I ever have, at least not knowingly.

if I knew that I wasn't charged enough, I would have brought it to their attention (assuming that 1, the waitress would have been fired or had it docked from her pay, or 2, that they'd have my CC and would just charge me for the missing amount later)

It shouldn't be based on if you think the waitress gets screwed or you think they'd hit your CC later, it should be because you'd be STEALING.

I have gotten too much change at a register and the wrong amount at the bank, I let them know about this. A mistake by an employee doesn't permit stealing is ok.
 

mugs

Lifer
Apr 29, 2003
48,924
45
91
Originally posted by: slag
Originally posted by: buck
Originally posted by: A Casual Fitz
Great call my man. Fuck tipping, restaurant owners should be forced to pay waitresses a decent salary.

What about the money he stole before not leaving a tip?

Technically, he didnt steal. She presented him with a bill for the food which he paid in full.

I've been comp'd many times at restaurants for crappy service, slow delivery of food, etc. For all we know, she did this on his bill.

No, she gave him a bill for $185. Your credit card slip is not a bill.
 

compman25

Diamond Member
Jan 12, 2006
3,767
2
81
Originally posted by: puffff
Originally posted by: TheVrolok
Originally posted by: iFX
Originally posted by: puffff
What would you guys have done?

I wouldn't have stolen $30 worth of food.

You should call the place today and let them know you made an error on the bill and pay the remaining $30.

This. Was it busy? Sometimes people fuck up, and yes, sometimes it's inconvenient for you. Shorting her/the restaurant 30 bucks is hardly the solution. At absolute worst, don't tip her, but stealing on top of it? Way to go.

Well, 15% tip on $155 comes out to about $180, which is what we left. If anything, we shorted them $5. Similarly, I think a lot of us wouldn't have a problem taking advantage of a pricing mistake at a store if were in our favor. Isn't it like the same thing?



I wouldn't say the restaurant was busy. Roughly half the tables were occupied when we were there. Would there be any level of service where you feel differently? In addition to the gaffes I mentioned in my OP, she also messed up several other times, like clearing our plates too early, and had a very unprofessional attitude. For example, like when we asked the difference between steamers and steamed clams, her response was "I have no fucking clue" and proceeded to give us an answer that was completely off base. (Steamers are not oysters as she claimed.) At least say you don't know and you'll find out for us, right?

Even after you justify it you still are stealing $5. Way to go.

Do you walk on water?
 

racolvin

Golden Member
Jul 26, 2004
1,257
0
0
Originally posted by: MrChad
I probably would have pointed out the error, received a corrected bill, then deducted a bit from the tip for the inconvenience.

this +1
 

tasmanian

Diamond Member
Dec 22, 2006
3,813
1
0
She charged him $155 not $180. They paid what they were charged with, no stealing there. It is not his responsibility to calculate the bill, nor is it his obligation to correct any mistakes. It rests solely upon the restaurant and the waitress.
 

Beev

Diamond Member
Apr 20, 2006
7,775
0
0
I'm sure most of you righteous fucks in this thread have never pirated ANYTHING in your life?
 

ConstipatedVigilante

Diamond Member
Feb 22, 2006
7,671
1
0
IMO if the waitress can't correctly calculate the bill, that's her problem. The customer shouldn't have to make sure s/he is paying the right amount at all - the only calculation the customer should have to do is adding a tip.
 

hurricanedh34

Member
Nov 7, 2008
58
0
0
Originally posted by: puffff

5 of us rang up a bill of $185. One of the girls had gotten a little short in cash, so we requested $30 to be charged on her debit card, and to put the rest on my credit card.

If 5 of you ring up a $185 bill then I'm pretty sure you have the money to correct the difference and not take an advantage of her mistake. It would have only been $5 more after you left the tip anyways and that way you know you did nothing wrong.
 

JS80

Lifer
Oct 24, 2005
26,271
7
81
What the probability we get an update where the restaurant added to the CC slip to come up to $185 + 20% tip?
 

dainthomas

Lifer
Dec 7, 2004
14,616
3,471
136
Originally posted by: tasmanian
She charged him $155 not $180. They paid what they were charged with, no stealing there. It is not his responsibility to calculate the bill, nor is it his obligation to correct any mistakes. It rests solely upon the restaurant and the waitress.

Negative, Ghostrider.

In all, we still paid less than the $185 we actually owed

It's not his responsibility to check the bill, but if he happens to notice it's in error then the non-douchey thing to do would to bring it to the restaurant's attention. At that point the poor service could also be brought up. Stealing food from the restaurant owner because of perceived lousy service from a waitress is an amazingly jerk move.

:thumbsdown:
 

mxyzptlk

Golden Member
Apr 18, 2008
1,893
0
0
Originally posted by: silverpig
I'd have left $200.

This. I'm really too lazy/bad at math to be arsed to figure out tips based on percentages. On top of that, I really don't consider service at an expensive place to be worth more than service at denny's so I try to tip all servers about the same.. 5-10 bucks. Yes, you bringing me food is worth about 5-10 bucks. less if you fuck it up a bunch, more if you do a wonderful job or something.


 

mxyzptlk

Golden Member
Apr 18, 2008
1,893
0
0
oh yea, is a steamer some kind of scat fetish? I'd have thrown you the fuck out of my restaurant for asking for that shit (pun intended).
 
Apr 17, 2003
37,622
0
76
Originally posted by: ConstipatedVigilante
IMO if the waitress can't correctly calculate the bill, that's her problem. The customer shouldn't have to make sure s/he is paying the right amount at all - the only calculation the customer should have to do is adding a tip.

Dude, people make mistakes all the time, especially on the 3rd day of the job. The difference is that in the food services field, the mistakes come out of the waiter's pocket. If my mistakes came out of my pocket, I would hope that people would show some honesty when they catch the error (and perhaps take it out of the tip for their own inconvenience).
 

waggy

No Lifer
Dec 14, 2000
68,145
10
81
Im torn between it. On one had there IS NO way they would mention it to him if they over charged him adn the waitress really needs to pay attention to what she is doing. BUT it is still thieft and immoral. he knew it was wrong didnt care. hell he came here to brag about it.

 

moshquerade

No Lifer
Nov 1, 2001
61,713
12
56
what would i have done? first off, i don't see what the bfd is, you got a deal. so either you diet and dash or else you tell her she didn't charge you enough. secondly, if a waiter/waitress makes a mistake, i just poignantly remind them of what they are forgetting. most of them will bend over backwards to please you.
 

GrumpyMan

Diamond Member
May 14, 2001
5,778
262
136
I was eating at Denny's a couple of weeks ago and the waiter who was a little slow mentally was kind of slow service wise but not too bad. Anyway the bill was about $13.50 or something like that and I gave him a $20.00. He brought me back change for a $100.00. Needless to say I called him over an pointed out the mistake. Boy was he grateful to me and he got real emotional saying that he would of gotten fired and all.
I wouldn't knowingly screw someone around these days, but that's just me. I can't really judge you on your actions, because in my younger days I might have taken the money and run. But not now.
 

Old Hippie

Diamond Member
Oct 8, 2005
6,361
1
0
I can't believe some of you think what the OP did is acceptable behaviour.

He noticed the mistake and stiffed the waitperson. :thumbsdown:

 

buck

Lifer
Dec 11, 2000
12,273
4
81
Originally posted by: tasmanian
She charged him $155 not $180. They paid what they were charged with, no stealing there. It is not his responsibility to calculate the bill, nor is it his obligation to correct any mistakes. It rests solely upon the restaurant and the waitress.

So if you get the wrong change at the grocery store, you notice it, decide to keep it instead of return it, you see no problem?
 

tasmanian

Diamond Member
Dec 22, 2006
3,813
1
0
Originally posted by: buck
Originally posted by: tasmanian
She charged him $155 not $180. They paid what they were charged with, no stealing there. It is not his responsibility to calculate the bill, nor is it his obligation to correct any mistakes. It rests solely upon the restaurant and the waitress.

So if you get the wrong change at the grocery store, you notice it, decide to keep it instead of return it, you see no problem?

Nope it is their mistake not mine. I paid that grocery bill, not my fault if they fail to count out the change. That is their job not mine.
 

moshquerade

No Lifer
Nov 1, 2001
61,713
12
56
Originally posted by: tasmanian
Originally posted by: buck
Originally posted by: tasmanian
She charged him $155 not $180. They paid what they were charged with, no stealing there. It is not his responsibility to calculate the bill, nor is it his obligation to correct any mistakes. It rests solely upon the restaurant and the waitress.

So if you get the wrong change at the grocery store, you notice it, decide to keep it instead of return it, you see no problem?

Nope it is their mistake not mine. I paid that grocery bill, not my fault if they fail to count out the change. That is their job not mine.

What if you hand them a 20 for a ten dollar item and think you handed them a 10. They should just keep the change?
 

buck

Lifer
Dec 11, 2000
12,273
4
81
Originally posted by: tasmanian
Originally posted by: buck
Originally posted by: tasmanian
She charged him $155 not $180. They paid what they were charged with, no stealing there. It is not his responsibility to calculate the bill, nor is it his obligation to correct any mistakes. It rests solely upon the restaurant and the waitress.

So if you get the wrong change at the grocery store, you notice it, decide to keep it instead of return it, you see no problem?

Nope it is their mistake not mine. I paid that grocery bill, not my fault if they fail to count out the change. That is their job not mine.

Ok just checking.
 
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