TwoPenniesEarned wrote:In Canada no-one is obligated to accept more than twenty-five pennies or forty nickels in payment. It's written clear as day in our currency act. (The one that denotes these now worthless tokens as legal tender).
SGT_Slaughter wrote:http://www.snopes.com/business/money/pennies.asp
im still on the fence for this one. So can anyone prove that pennies have to be accepted or can they be denied as a form of payment.
oktyabyr wrote:I believe too, that they can refuse to accept payment in exchange. However, because it is a debt(medical bill for service), they must accept ANY legal tender payment unless previously excluded. He was kinda a jacka$$ for just dumping them, and them going everywhere. The disorderly conduct I'm sure came from the way he handled the situation. If he had been calm and just placed them there, there would not have been cause for a disorderly conduct ticket.
scrapper2010 wrote:Seems kind of dumb to get THAT rude over 25 bucks. There are people struggling with far higher medical bills.
Number21 wrote:I rent a small commercial building for my business, the landlord is an idiot and a jerk. I seriously am considering dropping off $900 in zincs for rent. I can see her face now as I bring the hand truck back to her door 58 times.....
My rent is a debt owed, my lease specifies payment in cash or check to a specific address. Pennies are "legal tender for all debts public and private". I'm so nice I'll even deliver in person to save the mail man the trouble!
OtusLotus wrote:Unfortunately, in our world, everything is a business... We sort coins, own a business, manage our lives in a way that we maximize what we take in, and minimize the costs of that existence....
For everyone outside of "our world", pennies are a nuissance, a worthless form of security, and a money losing proposition!
So for someone to expect someone else to accept the Penny as payment for anything, is almost ludicrous... Just as I was upset that the gas station didn't accept my debit card and gave the guy $12 in halves, it was an obnoxious way to tell the service station, company, gov't agency- to go screw!
The lowly penny will never be accepted today, or in the future, as it was before I was alive.
The question is, if the bill was paid for all in nickels or dimes, do you think it would have landed the guy in jail or gotten the headlines?
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