I'm not 100% sure about that. You can reserve the right to refuse service to any person for any reason. When I was in HS someone tried to pay like a $40 grocery bill at Hy-Vee in change and the manager just told them no.
Refuse service for any reason was what he said.
Well, that pretty much shuts the door on that issue. If a Hy-Vee manager said it, it must be true.
I see a lot of $100 bills at WalMart. I'm sure quite a few people cash their paychecks for cash instead of using an account and thus have cash on them for their weekly gorcery run. I see more there than at Hyvee or Cub by far.
I worked in an auto parts store a few years back. Commonly on Sundays and Holidays, people would come into the store and try to purchase something that cost less than $5 like an air freshener or bottle of coke so that they could break a $100 bill. I sent these people packing every time because I wasn't going to empty out my drawer so that they could have change for $100. If they gave me any lip, I would just tell them that our store is not a bank, and if they really want whatever it is they're purchasing, that they should come back with a smaller bill.
Last edited by Agkistrodon; 04-16-2010 at 12:41 PM.
I see a lot of $100 bills at WalMart. I'm sure quite a few people cash their paychecks for cash instead of using an account and thus have cash on them for their weekly gorcery run. I see more there than at Hyvee or Cub by far.
You sound like you have a lot of jobs.
"Just remember, what you choose to do with each day is very important because you are exchanging a day of your life for it" -ET
"I'm trying not to sweat the small stuff in my life, but there is a definite learning curve." -CE
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