- Joined
- Oct 23, 2011
- Messages
- 7,390
House Cat|1438200851|3908766 said:How much were you fined?
No, I wouldn't bill the guest. I would be happy that he or she didn't drink and drive home. It was probably stated in the contract somewhere that this was the venue's policy.nala|1438201251|3908770 said:House Cat|1438200851|3908766 said:How much were you fined?
Hi, I wasn't fined. A good friend of mine is in this situation. She was fined $300. Her overall wedding cost $30,000. She has asked me for advice and wants to know if she should bill the guest.
telephone89|1438202461|3908780 said:
However, I think billing the guest is going to be an issue. Did this person know you couldn't leave your car overnight? I really don't see how the venue would rather people drive drunk than leave their car, and fine you for it. I would think this person would feel the same, and not want to pay it. If your friend forces this, it could be a friendship ending move IMO.
Sky56|1438209049|3908803 said:I'd pay the bill and chalk it up as part of the cost of the wedding. $300 is a stiff penalty for the fine and I view it as a lot of money, but it is a tiny percentage of $30,000. Paying it also avoids bad vibes with the guest.
arkieb1|1438264943|3908998 said:I'd argue with the venue because I don't think anything the guest did was a big deal, no one smashed anything no one messed anything up I mean really....
This is what I was thinking. Leaving a car vs Causing a fatal accident that they'd be liable for... No brainer which they should choose.ame|1438260274|3908976 said:I work in this industry and I despise when event sites pull this stuff--so much so that I steer couples away from sites that do it and make a point to negatively review the ones that do it.
If the individual/couple did no physical damage to the facility, charging them for leaving trash (that's what this is, let's be real) behind on the premises, and failing to move the car from the private lot til morning--which they should be happy about if someone is roasted--is just the facility pulling a fast one. Charging the person extra to clean up a freaking bottle that they would've cleaned up anyway. In fact, in many states these stupid loopholes and scams are illegal, private business or not, and they're not enforceable because of liability issues. Example: if someone were to move their car from their private lot when drunk, and cause an accident, they're on the hook for overserving lawsuits and can lose their liquor license because they should have cut the person off and prevented them from leaving in that condition, making them at least partially liable for the accident and the damages.
telephone89|1438270193|3909029 said:This is what I was thinking. Leaving a car vs Causing a fatal accident that they'd be liable for... No brainer which they should choose.ame|1438260274|3908976 said:I work in this industry and I despise when event sites pull this stuff--so much so that I steer couples away from sites that do it and make a point to negatively review the ones that do it.
If the individual/couple did no physical damage to the facility, charging them for leaving trash (that's what this is, let's be real) behind on the premises, and failing to move the car from the private lot til morning--which they should be happy about if someone is roasted--is just the facility pulling a fast one. Charging the person extra to clean up a freaking bottle that they would've cleaned up anyway. In fact, in many states these stupid loopholes and scams are illegal, private business or not, and they're not enforceable because of liability issues. Example: if someone were to move their car from their private lot when drunk, and cause an accident, they're on the hook for overserving lawsuits and can lose their liquor license because they should have cut the person off and prevented them from leaving in that condition, making them at least partially liable for the accident and the damages.
telephone89|1438270193|3909029 said:ame|1438260274|3908976 said:I work in this industry and I despise when event sites pull this stuff--so much so that I steer couples away from sites that do it and make a point to negatively review the ones that do it.
If the individual/couple did no physical damage to the facility, charging them for leaving trash (that's what this is, let's be real) behind on the premises, and failing to move the car from the private lot til morning--which they should be happy about if someone is roasted--is just the facility pulling a fast one. Charging the person extra to clean up a freaking bottle that they would've cleaned up anyway. In fact, in many states these stupid loopholes and scams are illegal, private business or not, and they're not enforceable because of liability issues. Example: if someone were to move their car from their private lot when drunk, and cause an accident, they're on the hook for overserving lawsuits and can lose their liquor license because they should have cut the person off and prevented them from leaving in that condition, making them at least partially liable for the accident and the damages.
This is what I was thinking. Leaving a car vs Causing a fatal accident that they'd be liable for... No brainer which they should choose.
For a wedding, either the venue or the hosts will need to get a liquor licence. That liquor license comes with a TON of responsibilities, including liability for these sorts of things. You can also buy insurance to protect yourself in these situations, sometimes the venue has their own. It's very scary! Even if you have a Christmas party and someone gets into an accident after drinking (no liquor license required) you can still be held liable.CJ2008|1438272495|3909048 said:telephone89|1438270193|3909029 said:ame|1438260274|3908976 said:I work in this industry and I despise when event sites pull this stuff--so much so that I steer couples away from sites that do it and make a point to negatively review the ones that do it.
If the individual/couple did no physical damage to the facility, charging them for leaving trash (that's what this is, let's be real) behind on the premises, and failing to move the car from the private lot til morning--which they should be happy about if someone is roasted--is just the facility pulling a fast one. Charging the person extra to clean up a freaking bottle that they would've cleaned up anyway. In fact, in many states these stupid loopholes and scams are illegal, private business or not, and they're not enforceable because of liability issues. Example: if someone were to move their car from their private lot when drunk, and cause an accident, they're on the hook for overserving lawsuits and can lose their liquor license because they should have cut the person off and prevented them from leaving in that condition, making them at least partially liable for the accident and the damages.
This is what I was thinking. Leaving a car vs Causing a fatal accident that they'd be liable for... No brainer which they should choose.
I knew about this at bars but for some reason it did not dawn on me that same rules apply to a wedding at a venue.
I would really fight this tooth and nail if it wasn't in the k...and if it was, I would still really try to work this out with the venue...(it's the kind of thing a lot of people would just sign not think it's a big deal because they nothing is going to happen, and then it does...)
telephone89|1438272724|3909051 said:For a wedding, either the venue or the hosts will need to get a liquor licence. That liquor license comes with a TON of responsibilities, including liability for these sorts of things. You can also buy insurance to protect yourself in these situations, sometimes the venue has their own. It's very scary! Even if you have a Christmas party and someone gets into an accident after drinking (no liquor license required) you can still be held liable.CJ2008|1438272495|3909048 said:telephone89|1438270193|3909029 said:ame|1438260274|3908976 said:I work in this industry and I despise when event sites pull this stuff--so much so that I steer couples away from sites that do it and make a point to negatively review the ones that do it.
If the individual/couple did no physical damage to the facility, charging them for leaving trash (that's what this is, let's be real) behind on the premises, and failing to move the car from the private lot til morning--which they should be happy about if someone is roasted--is just the facility pulling a fast one. Charging the person extra to clean up a freaking bottle that they would've cleaned up anyway. In fact, in many states these stupid loopholes and scams are illegal, private business or not, and they're not enforceable because of liability issues. Example: if someone were to move their car from their private lot when drunk, and cause an accident, they're on the hook for overserving lawsuits and can lose their liquor license because they should have cut the person off and prevented them from leaving in that condition, making them at least partially liable for the accident and the damages.
This is what I was thinking. Leaving a car vs Causing a fatal accident that they'd be liable for... No brainer which they should choose.
I knew about this at bars but for some reason it did not dawn on me that same rules apply to a wedding at a venue.
I would really fight this tooth and nail if it wasn't in the k...and if it was, I would still really try to work this out with the venue...(it's the kind of thing a lot of people would just sign not think it's a big deal because they nothing is going to happen, and then it does...)
Niel|1438341771|3909364 said:No I wouldn't charge the guest how in the world is the guest to know this idiotic rule? Was there signs up? An announcement after the ceremony? It's pretty common place to not drive your car home WHEN YOURE DRUNK. God wedding venues do the f*ing worst kind of money grubbing
As for the liquor bottles, I don't know. Was it an open bar? Why did they need that bottle? How do they know it was from that guest?
marymm|1438353206|3909419 said:To me, it is particularly bad form to now threaten a negative review for a vendor who is enforcing a provision of a contract which was signed by all parties, presumably after a period of time sufficient for review and negotiation.