Don't stress about it but take the steps to move the matter to Small Claims Court. You'll get your money eventually.I'm seeking advice here on what is common practice. We have produced and installed a sign for a client to the specifications that they requested and collected a 50% deposit on the order up front. Now that the job is complete and the sign has been installed, the client is reluctant to pay the remaining balance on the invoice. What is my best course of action? Have you dealt with this issue? Can we remove the sign since it technically has not been paid for? Thank you in advance for your response.
we have garage keepers and everything is locked inside a gated area and the keys are locked inside the office. I still won't leave a vehicle outside for someone to pickup after hours. Same with dropoff. We get people asking if they can drop stuff off in front of our gate a night, no go. Too many thieves in this area for that. Our insurance stipulates that it has to be parked in a locked area and the keys kept locked inside. Every year, the insurance inspector comes here and takes a picture of where we store the keys.Around here, you may not leave a customer's vehicle outside for them to pick up after hours. Totally against insurance policies. You are 100% responsible for anything left outside and the insurance company will not back you if you leave it outside unless you have, I think it's called 'Lot Insurance'. I can house up to 5 vehicles in our bay areas, so they either get here before I leave or after I get in, in the morning..... and no exceptions.
A tough as it seems . Depending on the amount , if it's something you can live with by cutting your loses . It is just not worth the court battles , and some of these companies know this . In one of the cities we in ( Canada ) the sign becomes part of the structure ie building . Therefore you not allowed to remove the sign , unless you have a court order . This applies to the tenant as well . They cannot remove the sign .I'm no lawyer but if you remove it you are in for big trouble. Don't do it.
We live in a country of laws. If they don't pay, based on the amount of the claim, take them to court.
First send them a demand letter, certified. The judge will ask if you did that. Keep the certified receipt.
If it's small claims, usually less than $2000 (depends a lot on your state and county) then you can file the claim yourself
and meet them before the judge. Get pictures, bring emails, agreements, anything you can. If you have a case and the judge is fair,
you can easily win. If they don't show up, you the plaintiff win the case by default.
If they still refuse to pay after you win, you can go to a sheriff with a copy of their last check.
If they have money in that account, he can get the bank to withdraw your judgement and give you the check.
It's a long process, it doesn't always go the way you think it should, but man, it's the education your parents couldn't afford to buy you.
You'll learn to read people and future customers real fast. "People, the toughest business in the world".
BTW, how much do they owe you? How big was the sign? Give us some deets.
I agree but if you need to take credit cards, a rock solid return and refund policy is key. I've won a bunch of charge backs simply because we are very clear about what our policy is.
I don't think that people who don't pay their bills really care much about the fine print.One of the lines we hand bold letters in our is " TITLE TO GOODS SPECIFIED REMAINS BLANK SIGNS LTD. UNTIL FULL AND FINAL PAYMENT HAS BEEN RECEIVED . Then another line to make matters clear that additional charges will apply " Interest on overous account charged at 2% per month " . These few lines sure get their attention .
Hope this helps you .
H.
I'll be getting my $2000 check Friday for the trailer I did 2 weeks ago because my guy needs a new truck lettered. He's the only one I let slide because he's been my biggest customer and has referred many others to me. Both my sons also worked for him and he treated them excellent.I like the customer who is always slow to pay until he needs another job - anyone ever run across this?