- Nov 20, 2010
- 1,487
- 1
- 81
I and a few other colleagues were invited to one of our work mates houses for a few drinks last friday night.
The guy who owned the house had a surround sound speaker sat up on two concrete blocks behind his couch which we were all sitting on. I sat down and bumped the couch into the concrete blocks which made his speaker fall off and hit the ground.
Today (a whole week later) the guy came up to me at work and said, although he hasn't checked, that i broke his speaker and that he purchased them 10 years ago, so he can't buy a replacement. So i have to buy him a whole new surround system which will cost me $1000
Firstly he hasn't checked to see if it works, which seems very bizarre and he also wasn't too keen on me sourcing a replacement on Ebay for him. Secondly considering the age of the system i could buy it off him for maybe $200.
I can't see how he can ask me for $1000 because of a 10 year old broken speaker, i'm not really involved with much 'Law' stuff, but can he really hold me liable for a complete new sound system?
The guy who owned the house had a surround sound speaker sat up on two concrete blocks behind his couch which we were all sitting on. I sat down and bumped the couch into the concrete blocks which made his speaker fall off and hit the ground.
Today (a whole week later) the guy came up to me at work and said, although he hasn't checked, that i broke his speaker and that he purchased them 10 years ago, so he can't buy a replacement. So i have to buy him a whole new surround system which will cost me $1000
Firstly he hasn't checked to see if it works, which seems very bizarre and he also wasn't too keen on me sourcing a replacement on Ebay for him. Secondly considering the age of the system i could buy it off him for maybe $200.
I can't see how he can ask me for $1000 because of a 10 year old broken speaker, i'm not really involved with much 'Law' stuff, but can he really hold me liable for a complete new sound system?