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I was buying batteries at a store. The store owner asked my name so I told him. Then he asked me what I would name my future kids? He also asked me do I like cats. I was a bit shocked and then told him. He was in his late 50's. I'm sorry do men ask this to a lady they never even seen or met before?

Now, i am suing him in small claims for a $60 battery which was new, that died the next day. Found out it was a defective battery, and that my phone only accepted a brand name one. He refused credit to my account or a refund. He knowingly sold an incorrect battery. He also has many outstanding negative remarks about his business-this I found out later. Can this personal stuff that he was asking me be a ploy, creepy, or what? Should I bring this up in court as well?

2007-10-30 07:58:28 · 5 answers · asked by Born Valentine's Day 5 in Politics & Government Law Enforcement & Police

5 answers

No, I would not bring that up in court.

2007-10-30 08:09:09 · answer #1 · answered by Eve 7 · 1 0

First paragraph : small talk.
Second paragraph: Some batteries in a batch will be defective, the science isn't perfect. Not knowing what your phone requirements are is not his job.
Did he offer a swap on the defective battery ? You might have the right to hold back payment through your credit card company.

2007-10-30 19:01:09 · answer #2 · answered by sirbobby98121 7 · 0 0

I would leave the creepy remarks and other comments that have nothing to do with you case alone. It is best not to annoy a judge with trival things. Let the store owner do that.
Cheers

2007-10-30 15:09:26 · answer #3 · answered by james b 3 · 1 2

Go ahead. It'll just get a laugh out of the judge.

2007-10-30 15:04:00 · answer #4 · answered by California Street Cop 6 · 1 1

id brign it up

2007-10-30 15:06:42 · answer #5 · answered by ~*.`Lil Sweety`.*~ 2 · 1 0

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