"BTR1701" <BTR1702@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:BTR1702-6C07AC.16300812022004@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> In article <c0ev1d0b48@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>, "Richard"
> <anonymous@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
> > Arthur L. Rubin wrote:
> >
> > > (Removed totally unrelated groups.)
> >
> > > Alexander Cain wrote:
> > >>
> > >> Putting a person's address on a webpage with the malicious intent
of
> > >> denying them service because of not receiving a gratuitity after
> > >>delivering a pizza to the home of the individual?
> >
> > > Isn't truth a defense to "malicious intent"?
> >
> >
> > No it's not illegal. What could get you into court is what is said.
> > Denial of service based on a lousy tip can also get your butt into
court.
>
> Cite the law that makes it illegal for a business to deny service based
> on a customer's refusal to tip.
A *business* isn't doing that, a *pizza boy* is. Big difference. The
business can fire the pizza boy, and no business in their right mind would
blacklist someone for not giving a tip upon delivery. You got a problem
with that, put the surcharge price on and deal with it that way. You
blacklist someone for not tipping and your ass is in a sling.