So how can your car be repossessed if you miss a payment to the title pawn company? How can the county / city take your property worth tens of thousands of dollars if you avoid paying a tax bill for $100.00? I know I'm no lawyer, but any lawyer can make a case for any situation.
Maybe the excuse "I didn't feel comfortable with the way I installed the sign, so I had to reengineer it!" is the the best way out!!!
I just know I have been very fortunate in the past. Let the customer know 2 or 3 days in advance, I will be there at such and such a time, whatever balance is due. If he / she is not there or a check is not ready I'll reschedule.
I know wholesale vendors I use for cabinets and sandblasted signs require payment in full before they ship the completed signs. That's basically the principal I use.
No plan is 100% perfect. But it they say keep it, explain to them the liability they risk if the sign falls and kills someone. They stand to lose everything they own if they knowingly kept the sign up when they were told it had an engineering flaw in the installation. Fear is a good intimidation tactic.
The only flaw in the plan is if they say "keep it". Then what?
If you have half down and they refuse to pay you have some legal hope of getting the other half. If you repo the sign and say "pay up!" and they say "keep it" you have no such option. You could counter with "or else!" I suppose.....how's that any more of a flaw then every single sign contract allowing a 50% balance payable upon completion?
life is not without risks, and I wouldn't blame the client for being uncomfortable with a 100% pre-pay on a complex & expensive project, which I think is why a lot of us settle for 50%.. equalizing the risk for both parties... but we always run the risk they say "keep it"
Emergency safety repairs....
love it..... everyone should include ESR's in their contracts to cover sign repo's
something like this should satisfy the lawyers~
<signcompany> reserves the right to remove the sign for emergency repairs until balance has been paid in full. Upon full payment the stated warranty will take effect.
Thanks ddarlak. I'm putting that in my signature right now!