Revdex.com: On November 21, we went to Mr. [redacted]'s residence to make a repair and found he had a cracked section in his garage door. When there Mr. [redacted] advised he would like a new door, we quoted and he gave us small deposit of $400.00 to order door. ...
Tri County Door ordered the door and a receipt for his deposit was mailed to him on November 22, 2016. Mr. [redacted] called our office after the Thanksgiving Holiday, November 28th and advised he had another company replace his garage door and wanted to break his contract and received a refund of his deposit. As a courtesy, on Wednesday, November 30, 2016 we gave him a $400.00 credit on his debit card (original form of payment) instead of the cash he request. Mr. [redacted] should probably check with his financial intuition before accusing a company of a wrong doing and allowing a reasonable amount of time to perform the necessary transaction.
Revdex.com: On November 21, we went to Mr. [redacted]'s residence to make a repair and found he had a cracked section in his garage door. When there Mr. [redacted] advised he would like a new door, we quoted and he gave us small deposit of $400.00 to order door. ...
Tri County Door ordered the door and a receipt for his deposit was mailed to him on November 22, 2016. Mr. [redacted] called our office after the Thanksgiving Holiday, November 28th and advised he had another company replace his garage door and wanted to break his contract and received a refund of his deposit. As a courtesy, on Wednesday, November 30, 2016 we gave him a $400.00 credit on his debit card (original form of payment) instead of the cash he request. Mr. [redacted] should probably check with his financial intuition before accusing a company of a wrong doing and allowing a reasonable amount of time to perform the necessary transaction.