Did I commit a crime in the supermarket today?
I was shopping at EDEKA with a friend from school earlier. We were looking for things suitable for the air fryer in the freezer cabinets (which are like refrigerators, with a glass door that opens). We had to keep turning the packages around to read the back. We accidentally dropped a five-pack of "fried rolls," and the package hit the edge of the freezer, causing three of the five sausages to fly out and land on the floor. We then put them back in the package and put it back in. You can't see it now, but if the next person takes the package, all five sausages will probably fly out because the package is now open on the side.
Anyway, we just had to laugh at the whole thing at home, and also at how we imagine the next person's sausages flying everywhere. My dad heard about it and started screaming, saying it was vandalism and that we might have the police at our door tomorrow. Can that really be true, or is it nonsense? Because it can happen to anyone. Should we have had to pay for the pack afterward???!!!???!!!
Your contribution is a bit older. This is not punishable. Nevertheless, I find your behavior under all conditions. You can at least say that a little misfortune has happened to you. I work in a supermarket myself. I’m so upset. If you decide, on the one hand, no one will travel your head down and on the other hand, most are culant and waive damage.
It would have been better if you had informed the sales staff about it, then the defective package would have been disposed of.
This can happen all the time and that’s not a world fall.
It’s always happening at the supermarket. And there will certainly be no police in front of the door because the value of the sausages is clearly too low.
What you could do where a supermarket is generally pleased to bring the package to an employee and say that you found it in the shelf.
I’d take them off and finish them.
But it depends on the staff. Many are simply uninterested and then ask what to do with what is bullshit. (Is then the same effect as if you leave in).
Some are already persistent (almost from Kiddies;-)) and accuse yourself of having broken it right away.
So, if you know, they’ve got nice interested staff to give it to them. I always find it better if open goods don’t stay on the shelf.
If you know the employees are debes or uninterested then leave it.
There’s GAR NOT happening.
As long as something was not intentional and you go straight to the store and the packs tear up to “prank” others, everything is okay.
On the Kama, you can see who it was and then the parents have to stick and children from 14 years old.
Yeah, but only if the supermarket has a kama. And if the employees even notice that it was a customer.
Normally, this is far too complicated to evaluate Kamas. And for 2;50 is worth the 0.
In principle, you damaged the package and would have to replace the damage. Practically the shops are culant when it was a mistake. I would have addressed the next employee, or, if no one really were tangible, put the pack in the freezer in such a way that it is directly visible that it is broken. Then the next one doesn’t have to get angry with it, and at some point someone sees it from the store and takes it out.
It would have been useful to let the staff in the store know…
Criminal not, but theoretically you have negligently caused damage and the business could expect you to buy the package or pay for a new package. This is of course not happening in reality, as it is friendly to the customers.
Penalty now not,but bad for the one who buys it
End of the day….
you want to make the evening sound….
buys some delicious sausages……
and does not know that the sausages had already known today with the full-stretched floor of the EDEKA around the corner
PS: 😕
LG NN
They’re gonna fried before dinner anyway, so there’s no virus left. And it was on the tiles inside. Worse if something like that would happen outside, or you’d put it in the Po before, then it would be a little more disgusting!!!
Ya aba I hope you understand some crowds I mean.
To laugh it is not really (I don’t understand why you have to turn around every pack to know if they can be made in the airfryer) …
It would have been right to inform the staff about the damaged package.
You should say as far as I know, but once again I put a pastry back on the ground and nothing happened.
Just divorce, I’ve broken so many cucumber glasses, I never had to pay
You should have told a saleswoman to decide that you buy this package
Your daddy’s powerless
You didn’t have to pay the package, because the business is insured for it.
How would the police know where you live?
If you had turned on the brain, you could easily solve the problem. So is the next customer who wants to buy the item tricked into the ass.