1/5 Kieran 3 years ago on Google
This
particular
location
advertises
prices
on
the
drive-thru
board
but
are
unwilling
to
honor
them.
When
asked
politely
and
calmly
if
they
can
charge
the
advertised
price
they
said
the
could
not.
When
I
showed
them
the
picture
to
confirm
they
said
the
number
with
the
dollar
sign
in
front
of
it
was
the
calories,
not
the
price...
As
far
as
I
can
tell
this
is
not
legal
to
do.
It
would
have
been
nice
to
have
been
accommodated
for
the
approximately
$0.60
since
is
the
legal,
and
morally
right
thing
to
do.
It's
also
just
bad
customer
service.
California
Business
and
Professions
Code
Sections
For
sales:
12024.2.
(a)
It
is
unlawful
for
any
person,
at
the
time
of
sale
of
a
commodity,
to
do
any
of
the
following:
(1)
Charge
an
amount
greater
than
the
price,
or
to
compute
an
amount
greater
than
a
true
extension
of
a
price
per
unit,
that
is
then
advertised,
posted,
marked,
displayed,
or
quoted
for
that
commodity.
(2)
Charge
an
amount
greater
than
the
lowest
price
posted
on
the
commodity
itself
or
on
a
shelf
tag
that
corresponds
to
the
commodity,
notwithstanding
any
limitation
of
the
time
period
for
which
the
posted
price
is
in
effect.
A
violation
of
this
section
is
a
misdemeanor
punishable
by
a
fine
of
not
less
than
twenty-five
dollars
($25)
nor
more
than
one
thousand
dollars
($1,000),
by
imprisonment
in
the
county
jail
for
a
period
not
exceeding
one
year,
or
by
both,
if
the
violation
is
willful
or
grossly
negligent,
or
when
the
overcharge
is
more
than
one
dollar
($1).
(c)
A
violation
of
this
section
is
an
infraction
punishable
by
a
fine
of
not
more
than
one
hundred
dollars
($100)
when
the
overcharge
is
one
dollar
($1)
or
less.
1 person found this review helpful 👍