Some people just wonѻýt take responsibility for their mistakes.
In this case itѻýs the owner of a sign company in Victoria that screwed up and then sued someone over it.
I was perusing through the B.C. Civil Resolution Tribunal decisions and found a head-scratching case from 2022. The tribunal handles a lot of small claims in disputes between people or businesses ѻý from a few hundred to several thousand dollars - and some of the decisions are simply wild in the rancor displayed between parties.
The Victoria dispute started after someone hired a local company to make a lawn sign saying ѻýHappy 80th birthdayѻý for a local senior.
Sounds simple enough, right?
Wrong.
The problem started after the company erected the sign on the wrong lawn ѻý a home adjacent to the actual person celebrating the birthday.
Now if it was me, Iѻýd take the L and just move on from there, but this Victoria company didnѻýt want to do that.
The company claims that the Victoria resident who incorrectly ended up with the sign on her lawn removed it and bagged it up, but damaged it in the process. The company accused the resident of doing so deliberately ѻý saying the homeowner ѻýripped upѻý the large sign.
The company was seeking $2,850 for the damage to the sign and the loss from having to refund the person who hired the company in the first place.
The resident who was being sued ended up countersuing for $3,000, claiming ѻýemotional distress and mental anxietyѻý due to the incident.
Sigh.
Double sigh.
Reading this entire tribunal decision was exhausting. It smells like the company was mad it had to refund the original customer and decided to punish an innocent homeowner who didnѻýt ask for a ginormous sign left on her lawn.
The tribunal adjudicator said they had to decide if the sign was truly damaged, if the homeowner is responsible for paying for that damage and if the homeowner truly suffered ѻýemotional distress.ѻý (They also claimed the company was trespassing on her property, but the decision says this was an unreasonable claim.)
On the first point, the decision says the homeowner ѻýdid not carelessly or recklessly ѻýshoveѻý the signs into a garbage bag.ѻý
In fact, the decision says the sign appears to have been ѻýtidily foldedѻý although it was technically damaged in the process.
The companyѻýs claim was then dismissed and I needed a break at this point to lower my blood pressure at the childishness of the whole thing.
As for the homeownerѻýs ѻýemotional distressѻý claim, the decision says that while she did claim having had ѻýnightmaresѻý from the incident ѻý supposedly requiring medication - there was no compelling evidence that necessitated financial damages.
So both claims were dismissed and that feels reasonable. Itѻýs incredible that people canѻýt find a way to resolve these situations without ending up in court.
Someone made a mistake and then it blows up into this?
Hopefully those involved have learned from the experience.
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Chris Campbell is an editor for Black Press. You can follow him on Twitter @shinebox44.
Do you have a story tip? Email: chris.campbell@blackpress.ca.
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