An idiot bakery opened up recently in my poor small town. They had people lined up outside as any new business gets here. But the majority of people were trying to pay cash. The majority of people were walking out empty handed. Then an employee posted a handwritten note on the door. ‘No Cash Accepted.’ Well, it killed the business. It went from being lined up, to being empty the next day. Until closing the next month. If my money isn’t green. We will take it to someone who wants it. And most of us, don’t want to be involved with any business that encourages more government regulation and intrusion in our private lives.
Had a laundry mat that wouldn’t accept cards, cash only. They were raided and shut down, turned out to be a money laundering operation that had been operating for years. Bakeries, laundromats, car wash’s, casinos, any business’s that are primarily cash are great ways to launder money.
You dont think cash is regulated heavily by the government? Also it isn’t government intruding into our lives when we use cards. It’s big corporations. That’s who benefits from our data the most. The government is just paid by big corporations to allow them to invade our privacy. BTW, get pulled over with $15k cash and see how intrusive the government (law enforcement) gets then.
@@WA_S_S_AWThat’s bunk. Yes of course every person or entity that is laundering money will be using cash because you can’t launder computer digits. However there are millions of businesses that accept cash that are not laundering money.
I did a little research and this is what i came up with. Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and New Jersey have state laws that private business must accept cash as payment. New York, business must accept cash as payment unless they have a machine to convert cash to a prepaid card. South Carolina, any business with a retail license must accept cash as payment. Colorado, Retail establishments must accept United States currency, with the exception of security deposits. Keep up the good work Steve, love your channel.
When I was a teenager working in a little neighborhood pet store (not like the big ones that we have today), one of our regular customers came in on a Saturday and bought some feed. It was busy, so I took his twenty and gave him his change. There was something funny about it, so after the rush of customers, about an hour or so later, I went back into the drawer and pulled it out. It had 20s on the corners, but Washington's face. Someone had cleverly and carefully cut off the 1s from the corners and somehow attached twenties from other bills, in their place. I showed it to my boss, who was of course upset, because he would have to take the loss. A while later another employee spotted the customer in the village. My boss took the bill and when to find the customer. He explain the store's predicament, to which the customer replied that he had just received the bill from the bank that morning! We found out later that the customer went back to the bank with the bill and the teller couldn't tell right away what was wrong with it... until he pointed it out. To end the story... the bank took the hit on the counterfeit bill.
All the more reason to do what virtually all other countries do: different denominations have different basic colors, and even sizes can differ. The Euro has different colors for denominations.
I used to work for a dry cleaner who operated out of a central plant and had a chain of several retail stores as drop off/pick up locations. I worked in several locations including ones that only employed a single clerk and occasionally a customer would present a $100 bill as payment for their order and I wouldn't have the change to break it. It was surprising to me how offended some customers would get when they couldn't pay with cash. Even though they could use check or credit card, more than once I would get the old "You can't refuse to accept legal tender!" argument. I got around that by explaining that I would be happy to accept it and they could pick up their change the following business day. Not one ever took me up on that offer.
We have a business in Indianapolis, where the owner refuses to collect personal information on their clientele. In retaliation, the business is audited every year until they get compliance. So far they still take cash. 🇺🇸
Well, that sucks; i know of no federal law that requires collection of infirmation regarding sales of general merchandise, or of any such laws in my home state. If there are such laws in other states they are an over reach. The fact that some agency may be trying to force data collection by tax actions indicates that they have no legal basis to enforce through prosecution.
"all debts public and private" would seem to mean DEBTS. So a purchase that requires advanced payment would not be a debt, but suppose you ate at a restaurant that had a policy of billing afterwards. At that point its not a point of sale, but an actual debt owed. At least that's the way I always understood it, and the rule you cited doesn't seem to directly contradict that. So what would happen if you owed money to a business for services already rendered and they refuse to accept your money and instead required payment in some form that you are not even capable of paying? As I understand, it would depend on if the business in question made clear this requirement prior to services rendered. If it was very clearly displayed that the restaurant only accepts credit card and you incurred the debt it's a contractual matter. You have contractually agreed to pay with a credit card. Otherwise if they either didn't display it or wasn't in a clearly visible location or no one told you then it's a situation where they can't sue you for non-payment because they refuse to accept payment.
I work in a supermarket and we had a $10 bill in motion picture money passed to one of our cashiers. Now I check $10 bills and up with our counterfeit detector machine. Company policy is $50 and $100 bills but being a 90s kid and $20 bills being the most counterfeited in that era I checked $20 bills as well. Now I check $10 bills as well.
I was 14 and my first job was at a gas station, this car with out of state plates pulled in and started to fill up, when done he paid in cash. I remember going to my manager and asking "Do we accept out of state cash?"
I took All of the strips out of a stack of 100$ I had while I was waiting for my husband to get back to our mortal room, he was still in the Navy and was extremely upset over me defacing Government property! I said to him who is even going to know I have money on me no strips to give me away to TSA my money I will do with it as I please
A bussiness can take any kind of payment they want I use to have a land scapeing bussiness and often time would accept tools or other items I needed if someone didn't have cash and then go trade it for something else or sell it Called Bartering
I can imagine the conversation now! A 12-year-old Steve and some random adult. Steve: "What are you, the railroad police?" Adult: "What are you, a damn lawyer?" The rest is history.
I remember in 1970 at U. C. Davis, my friend had exact cash for his tuition and the cashier wanted him to go get a cashiers’ check, for which he did not have the fee money. He argued, and the cashier called University Counsel’s office. They told her that, as a quasi-governmental office, they had to accept the cash.
People use to shave coins. You take a small amount off the outside of the coin. When coins were gold and silver this was a serious issue. So a shaved gold coin would look normal but would be lightened. Shave enough coins and you have a nice little bit of gold, and a lot of underweight coins. Its why coins originally had serrations on the edges.
in my country it was even in the. 90s, and they had all, kind of rules about amount and the like. They also called by phone to get the authorization number 😂
some country stores still refuse credit cards, but my company signs with them to put atm's in their store, allowing them access to cash, and the store does not have to pay the fee.
Colorado does have a law that require businesses to accept cash. It does have three exceptions, but we do have a law against refusing cash payments. It was enacted in 2022.
Steve, I love the "show me the citation." As a cop, I often get told: "I want them arrested." They then describe what happened and when it turns out to not be a crime I explain it to them. Sometimes they dig in and explain how they know it's a crime and I should charge them. I then simply ask, "Can you show me the statute? Then if the elements fit what you are saying I will be happy to charge them." No one has taken me up on it. It's actually amazing what people think is illegal when, in fact, it is not.
@@I_Am_Your_Problem Not presently. I'm 67 years old and college was a long time ago. But, you have the internet, and if it's that important to you......
Hey Steve. I just watched this and don’t understand. Each Federal Reserve note has printed on the face “This note is legal tender for all debits, public and private.” I also thought all U.S. businesses are required to take cash.
@@DanGumm yes, but just because it is legal tender doesn’t mean they have to take it. For that matter, with the possible exception of discriminatory cases, I don’t think anybody has to sell anybody anything. They could just say they aren’t selling it to you. They don’t even need a reason. 🤷🏼♂️🙂
One of my first jobs in the late 70s was at a Baskin Robbins. Lots of loose change coming and going thru the registers. I told my coworkers that any pennies with an Indian head, or any silver change minted before 1964 was counterfeit and the manager told me to take it. I swapped the change out from my money. I still have a few relatively valuable Indian head pennies from then.
There are companies that make prop money, a lot of it is marked as such, in addition to missing some key elements. The marking/altering of bills is also only illegal if it renders them unable to use. I learned this from many discussions at the Where's George website. I have heard that the "legal tender for all debts public or private" only kicks in once a debt is incurred. So the stores that have signs that they don't take certain bills, do so because they gave notice before the debt.
I remember reading a article in Pennsylvania that stopped a business from refusing cash because it discriminated against the poor Pennsylvania’s “Cash Consumer Protection Act” made it illegal for businesses “to refuse to rent or sell property or services” to consumers who don’t have credit cards.
There is a plethora of services available to everyone, in which you can get a valid bank VISA or Mastercard unsecured for the purpose of accepting company paycheck deposits, even VISA and Mastercard has card services expressly for that purpose, so there is no credit check required, but some others are, Netspend, Flex Wage Varo, and even American Express has a service too. All one has to do is look. Besides, if you aren't linked to politics, or Hollywood, we are all poor.
@@dsruddell To what are you referring? "Now" as in this year? My friend, these cards have been around for 10+ years in one form or another. Maybe you mean "now I recently discovered them"?
When I was in college, a friend was the lead cashier for a branch of a very well known luxury department store. She told me that they had a huge run of counterfeit bills passed during the Christmas holidays. One thief would buy something from a busy clerk with a handful of twenties, with a number of double sided (black and white!) counterfeit Xerox copies slipped in the wad. Additionally, an accomplice would distract the cashier as they rang up the transaction.
I just bought a new GE Single Wall Oven from Home Depot on Valentines Day. I told the sales clerk that I had cash and Gift Cards when I went to checkout and would the cash would be a problem. She had to get the Store Manager to ok taking my $100 dollar bills. She had to examine then mark the bills then hand them off to the manager and he did exactly the same thing. The funny thing was I had 9 $100 bills and the store gave me credit for 10 $100 bills. I looked puzzled and did the right thing and said you gave me an extra credit of $100. The manager snapped back and said no they didn’t make a mistake. At that point I shrugged my shoulders and said “sounds good to me”.I walked out to my truck sat down and said Happy Valentines Day to me. Love Your Stories
In Massachusetts, we have G. L. c. 255D §10A, "Discrimination against cash buyers," which prohibits retail establishments from requiring the use of credit.
I work at a gas station/convenience store/deli outside of Baltimore. Our store (and several other district stores in our company) have been receiving fake $100 bills for almost a year. On one Saturday night shift I received two of them, about an hour apart, with identical serial numbers. These bills are ALWAYS old (pre-1990s), faded, wrinkled, worn-out, and feel strange. I'm old enough to have handled bills from before 1980, so I know a bit about them. Each time I refused (and management backed me up) the bill, the customer was very polite and walked away without arguing.
The penny press machines are also at the service plaza on the Florida turnpike. I am reasonably certain that on those machines is the federal statute exempting them from the statutes criminalizing altering, defacing coins. Next time you see a penny press look to see if the statute is posted on the machine.
Excellent advice (as usual). Case in point: I'm a landlord with 16 apartments. In the lease, I clearly state "Under no circumstances will cash be accepted. Check, MO or electronic transfers only." Saved my a@@ in court each time.
You went to court? Why not just point to the lease? You're saying someone said this is cash take it or you don't get your rent and you refused it? Out of the fue times that would happen I find it foolish not to take the cash and go to court. Far more bad checks are passed then bad cash.
@@tomtransport Yes, I did (and will) refuse outright cash. Some tenants will go to court saying they paid me in cash when they didn't thus giving the judge a 50/50 chance of believing them. Some tenants will pay partial rent in cash then complain later that it was full. -By hey, you run your apartments your way, let me run mine my way.
US paper currency does say “This note is legal tender for all debts, public or private.” Of course if I am trying to buy something and the sale is refused I have no debt, the store is simply declining my offer to buy, but if I purchase an item or service on credit I have incurred debt. Can I then insist the creditor accept cash?
The way I understand it, they can't declare a non payment of debt if you put a stack of money on the table. They might refuse to actually take cash, but they can't re-posses your car or house or whatever collateral is at stake. However, some banks nowadays charge handling fees for cash payments.So you might have to pay extra for them to actually accept the payment.
@@peregreena9046 The problem is; It is technically illegal to not accept cash in America, or to charge a handling fee of any kind. That being said, by many of the highest America laws, the entire economic system and the USD itself is technically illegal since August 13, 1971. When Nixon signed the order to abandon the gold standard. So, there is actually an argument that can be made, that America technically has no currently legal form of payment other than gold or silver, and the american government is responsible for the theft of 100,000's tons of gold and silver from It's citizens. Mainly, because they seized all privately owned gold and silver at the time they founded the Federal Reserve. Mainly, because it was and still is required by law that they back ever USD issued by an unchanging amount of gold, silver, or other hard valued resource. So, short answer is; It is very complicated, and the entire situation is both illegal and screwed beyond belief.
@@charlie6629 The thing is that is why it is actually illegal, as well as the entire current system. Which I already noted. The thing is under the highest of American laws banks do not legally have the right to issue valid American currency. This means the credit system and loan systems are both illegal, as they are effectively issuing American currency. Also, based on the highest of laws on this subject, the federal reserve is the only entity that can issue valid American currency. Furthermore, each and every bill issued must be backed by a unchanging amount of gold, silver, or other hard valued resource. Thus, the gold standard existed until, convicted criminal, and Ex-president Nixon illegally put a stop to it. Technically, America has had no legal tender at all since that point, by America's highest laws. This is regrettable but true. This is why I noted it is supposed to be illegal to not accept the USD as payment. Which is why it says usable for all debts public and private on the bill. This was in the founding documents of the federal reserve, it's authorities, and what they were required to abide by. However, by the exact same requirements/documents, America doesn't technically have any legal tender at all since Nixon removed the gold standard. Mainly, due to the requirements to actually back any valid currency issued, with the prior noted unchanging resources. Thus, every USD printed after that point was technically a criminal action. Any valid American currency was and still is, literally required to be as good as gold. The problem is just The American government doesn't seem to care about any of it's own laws. They also, clearly don't care about any treaties, or trade agreements they have/had. This is all the case nearly all of the time excluding when it benefits them. America is a nation which unilaterally breaks it's own laws, violates international treaties, violates trade agreements often with little to no reason. The American government then expects others to abide by the very things they themselves one-sidedly broke/break all of the time. None of this is new mind you, it has been constantly the Case, to varying degrees, for around 100 to 130 years. Not just regarding issuing currency, but countless things, like I just noted. It's kind of interesting, from an informational standpoint. There is actually no nation in the past 400 years of human history, that has been documented, that has ever managed to be as illegal in it's operations, by it's own laws, as America is/has managed. Additionally, there is not one nation that I could find in the past 250 years that has broken as many treaties and trade agreements as America, and as consistently. This is even more striking because after America breaks said treaties and trade agreements, they consistently expect the other party to abide by the treaty and trade agreement they broke. Nearly always without any responsibility and/or compensation, from/by America. It is perhaps useful for a case study in narcissism. As it has and does occur on a national scale.
@@darkpoechi You write a lot for knowing little. As I stated it's just a note from the Federal Reserve. That is not under the Government. It's a useless piece of paper if the system fails. The only bill that is payable on demand as I typed earlier is a Silver Certificate with Silver coins or bars in that amount. The Federal Reserve is a private organization that stores gold as a back-up although there isn't much there anymore. Lest we forget the US in in an over 7 trillion dollar debt. Do some more research if you'd like. Good Day
The key word in the legal tender law is "debt". It means that if you _already_ owe someone money, they have to accept cash to satisfy it. However, if someone proactively refuses to transact with you because you intend to pay with cash, then you don't incur the debt to them in the first place. And they're allowed to discriminate on that basis unless state or local law says otherwise. If you trick a business into providing the good or service first when they've made it clear that they don't accept cash, then legally you can still require them to take your cash to satisfy the debt that you then have to them, but they could ban you from the business going forward or even sue you for any extra expense they incur due to your failure to pay with an accepted form of payment. (Their claim would be on the basis of breach of contract.) You could hand them cash to pay the judgment in that suit, and they couldn't sue you again for that because _that_ payment wasn't part of any contract. 😏
Maybe, but by the time you've paid their legal costs from the breach of contract suit you will have paid an awful lot for the privilege of being a smug twat.
You are probably seeing this more than once, but there's a portion on the upper left hand corner on the front of the note that says this note is legal tender for all debts public and private. The private aspect is the one that says an individual must accept that as a way of remuneration for services rendered for any other legal debt that been incurred from my understanding cuz it's on the front of the note. Is that your take on this? If not then what is a private debt?
As far as the "government" being required to accept legal tender, here is a story. My Wife and I ran into problems with the IRS where we owed money to them. We worked out a payment plan. After running into problems with "processing" checks, money orders, etc, which resulted in ever increasing penalties, we decided to pay in cash. So, with a well concealed envelope of a lot of cash, we showed up at the area IRS office to pay. Representative stepped back and stated "we don't accept cash". Hmmm. Why? Well, it seems they could not guarantee the safety of large amounts of cash at their office. "THAT is NOT my problem if you have thieves in your office". As you can imagine, that was not well received. So we ask for a supervisor. He comes out [standing out of arms reach of the cash] and repeats that they can not accept cash. I explain that each time we pay with alternate methods our debt increases due to their failure to promptly process the transaction. Supervisor says there is nothing he can do about that. "AHA, but there IS..... take this cash and give us a receipt for it dated and time stamped today". Bbbut, we have no way to safeguard it here. Well, that is your problem, not mine. I am paying my debt, and only wish a receipt stating I did so. Much shuffling around. Eventually said we cannot pay in cash. Mind you, this was NOT some sort of protest where I was paying in a barrel full of coins, just a stack of US bills. I pull a bill out of the stack and ask if this appears to be a genuine US piece of currency. He looks, and agrees it is. I point out the printing that says that said bill is "legal for all debts, public and private". Again, I ask how an arm of the US government can refuse to accept IT'S OWN CURRENCY as payment for a debt owed to them. He defaults to security of his office. I then ask that he call someone in authority above him to explain the refusal. I don't know where he went, or what he did, but he accepted the payment, counted it out [fair enuf] and issued the receipt for payment dated and timed. After a few months it became routine.
Technically, According to the constitution the only legally guaranteed tender, in America, is gold or silver. The USD, Credit, and any other form of currency is not legally even classified as money, it is clearly stated in all documents to be "currency". Mainly, because under the highest laws of America the only things that may legally classify as "money" is Gold or Silver. Thus, the only legally assured form of exchange is Gold or Silver in America. If you are paying in gold or silver anyone selling in America would technically be required to accept it so long as the value and amount was clear. Thus, there may need to be proceedings and things such as an appraisal before you could exchange with the gold or silver. As for the government, creditors, and banks. They can not decline the USD, lest the government be required to close the federal reserve, all Banks, and money changers, and be barred moving forward from implementing any method of payment that is not gold or silver. Mainly, as America or "money changers" in or of America can not refuse the USD, Lest they lose the legal right to any form of exchange other than "Money". As per the conditions of the founding of the current economic system. That being said the federal reserve and banks are technically unlawful in their current form already, by other conditions in the founding of such institutions. Here were the main conditions of said system's implementation; 1. There will be some standard, tying Any American legal tender to a set and stable equivalent of money of The United States of America, or other hard valued, and unchanging resource. Money only includes gold or silver legally as is listed and established in the original documents. This means all currency today is unlawful. 2. Banking institutions and all other money changers, may not, lawfully print, or produce, any form of currency of The United States of America, in any amount. Thus, the federal reserve is to be founded. So, the loan, credit system, and fractional lending system is unlawful. 3. Banking institutions and all other money changers, may not have say, sway, or control, in any form, over the issuance, printing, or production of any Currency of The United States of America. Which makes the stock system in the federal reserve unlawful. 4. Banking institutions and all other money changers, may not have say, sway, or control, in any form, over the taxes applied to any Citizen, dealing, or debt created in or by The United States of America. Which makes many things unlawful. So, I won't get entirely into that. 5. All lawfully issued currency of The United States of America, will be accepted as legal tender for all debts public or private. The "All private debts" means this does wholly include any "Private Company" doing business in America. Unless they are giving things away for free thus establishing no "Private debts" at any point. You can not owe anyone any thing of any kind if there was not a agreement of a "Private or Public Debt" established. This is the case beyond refute. Otherwise Legally all banks, money changers, and the federal reserve must be legally abolished, and may not be replaced. Returning us to the trade of gold and silver system. 6. All prior established Debts, public or private, of The United States of America, May still be pursued lawfully, in such manner as prior to the implementation of Federal Reserve Notes of The United States of America. "Federal Reserve Notes of The United States of America" are the current USD. So, technically Private companies can decline the USD. The only thing they are not allowed to decline is gold or silver. However, under the same merit technically the Government is required to shut down the federal reserve, all banks, and all Money changers (Such as creditors.) And issue gold, silver, or some other hard valued and unchanging resource, for every single USD in the nation. This is required to be done at the value of the USD vs gold, and silver, at the time Ex-president Nixon unlawfully abandoned the gold standard So, in short the entire American Economy in it's current form is illegal, and the situation is screwed. Also, the American Government doesn't abide by any laws and doesn't care. Honestly I understand. The one thing most people, especially leaders, and especially in America agree on, no matter their affiliation is as follows; Personal Interest > Greater Good.
@@darkpoechi The Supreme Court would disagree with you over the Constitutionality of federal currency, having upheld the "Legal Tender Act of 1862" multiple times. No offense, but I'll take their word for it over some random posting on RUclips. I believe you're misinterpreting the fact that States are explicitly prohibited in the Constitution (Article I Section 10) from issuing legal tender in any form other than gold or silver. No such prohibition is placed on the federal government.
@@NorthernKitty First you did create a bit of a straw man there. Perhaps, because you just skimmed my post, instead of actually reading it. Seems a common problem given the length and lack of some people's attention spans, and my long winded nature. This being said, this is the one where I didn't already explain in as much depth. Also, you are the second to clearly fail to grasp what you read before replying, so I will give you the benefit of the doubt on that. As such, I will explain again the part you clearly didn't understand. The Constitution states that all depts must be paid in gold or silver, and gold and silver are the only legal forms of "money". However, the federal reserve was founded later, with laws and documents detailing what was and was not allowed by the federal reserve. This was in part due to the difficulty of large gold and silver transactions. They were as such, allowed to issue "Federal Reserve Notes" (What we call the USD today) due to this. They are by extension not classified as "money" and are instead referred to as "currency" in all legal documents that are beholden and drafted to the standards of proper American law. The very documents that allowed the issuance of Federal Reserve Notes, more commonly known as the USD. Also, made the federal reserve a legal entity. However, those same documents, required the federal reserve, be able to legally issue USD, only when it was tied to a set and unchanging standard of gold, silver, or other hard valued resource. Hence the "gold standard". This was, as you noted challenged in the Supreme Court, as to if the gold standard was enough to allow the lawful trade in paper currency. It was ruled to be so in 1862, like you stated. However, this was still with the caveat and requirement of the gold standard, which did exist at the time. If it did not it can not in anyway be called legal. Not by the constitution, or even the legal documents that allowed for the founding of the federal reserve, and issuance of the USD to start with. However later, President Nixon, who was found guilty of high crimes, and successfully impeached as a result. Unlawfully remove the gold standard. This occurred on August 13 1971. Well, after, and in direct opposition to the 1862 supreme court ruling. Thus, by extension rendering the current system of currency, banking, loans, credit, and even the mere existence of the federal reserve, unlawful by the following; The constitution, the 1862 Supreme Court ruling, and a few others, and even the very documents that originally allowed for the founding of the federal reserve, and issuance of the USD as a substitute for gold and silver. Furthermore, those very same documents mandated that the USD would be usable for "All depts both public and private." Thus, requiring any company, private or public who wishes to do business in America, to accept the USD. Additionally, the Government, banks, and all money changers of any kind are also required to accept the USD if they wish to exist and do business in America. Then again The entire thing is illegal as the USD is required to be backed by an unchanging amount of silver, gold, or some other form of hard valued resource. For those who don't understand what a hard valued resource is, Diamonds, platinum, or any precious resource with a similar value to gold or silver can qualify. So long as it is equated to the value of gold or silver at the value of the gold standard. For example; silver is more than gold so less silver is equal to more gold. Gold would be worth more than platinum thus less gold is needed than platinum to back the USD. Also, the amount is to be $35 per ounce of gold or the equivalent resource and is not allowed to change, in accordance with the laws. Mind you, that is very much not the case currently as 1 oz of gold is not $35, but $1619.75. Which means the Government is 46.27 times less than their requirement to be allowed to issue and trade in The USD, and in fact anything not gold or silver. However, by the laws that allow the current economic system of paper currency as a substitute for gold or silver, The Federal Reserve must have on hand 1 oz of gold for every $35 or an equivalent resource, and be able to exchange them if required, at that value. Thus, ensuring the value of the USD as a gold or silver equivalent, as required by legal standards. Not that they are required to exchange it however, they must have it on hand at that value and be able to exchange it, at that value, such as to ensure it is a legal substitute. The USD should be as good as gold, literally, or it is not legal, nor is any of the current economic systems. I also find it important to note that when the federal reserve was founded, as all USD had to be backed by gold or silver. The Federal reserve seized all privately owned gold and silver at the time, and issued the equivalent in USD, or Federal Reserve Notes. As such, not backing it by those merits makes the American government also responsible for the theft of hundreds of thousands of tons of gold and silver from it's citizens. Sorry, but your understanding of both history, law, and the economic systems/economic situation of America fall short.
@@darkpoechi No "straw man" at all, you EXPLICITLY stated "according to the constitution the only legally guaranteed tender, in America, is gold or silver." I EXPLICITLY responded that this is incorrect and there are Supreme Court rulings that say as much. (Knox v. Lee and Parker v. Davis, for example.) I also cited where in the Constitution you may have erred in your interpretation. Pretty direct response to your direct assertion. I don't think "straw man" means what you think it means. (In fact, your response is really the "straw man" here, moving on to entirely different arguments, failing to cite where in the Constitution the fed is limited to gold and silver as legal tender.) Stay on point, son. You assert the Constitution prohibits it, I said it doesn't. Please cite in the Constitution where the feds (not the States) are prohibited from issuing paper currency, or Supreme Court cases where they say as much. No more unrelated ramblings, nor any "what they really meant was" - specific Constitutional clause, Supreme Court rulings or you're just some random guy wildly ranting on the internet about their own convenient personal interpretation of what the Constitution means, and I'm getting tired of that garbage.
@@NorthernKitty Absolutely a Straw a man. You responded to a part of the post, while ignoring the rest of the post. Thus, actively taking it out of context. When further clarified on the part you actively ignored. Which was most of the original post, mind you. You then ignored it a second time. So, 100% strawman. -- If that isn't a straw man by definition. Then it would be Legitimate to say you 100% admit I am right in your last post, by the exact same methods and logic. Mainly, because your last post said, "according to the constitution the only legally guaranteed tender, in America, is gold or silver." If I was to actively ignore all of the context of that statement. In the Exact same manner you did, for my original post, and the post that post is responding to. Then it would be you agree. Only in the context of the rest of the post does it not mean that you agree, and instead contest my points. Do you not see the flaw in your entire logic until now given that is exactly what you have done this entire time? -- Also, I already addressed the only actual point you made in your post that was in any way legitimate, in my reply. Namely, the supreme court rulings. Nixon later ignored them, and acted in direct opposition to them. Thus, making the current system unlawful. He was even found guilty of those crimes, and others as well. He did the same for the documents that allowed for the founding of the Federal Reserve, and issuance of paper currency, and by the constitution as well, in this process. -- But hey, You would already have been aware of all of this if you were not actively ignoring it to make a straw man instead. Mainly, because all of this was already explained and said in the prior 2 posts, in much greater detail. With the only point you made that was in any way legitimate already countered completely. -- When the court rules that me having a bond fire in my yard, isn't lighting your house on fire, as long as it is kept to the firepit in my yard, when you take me to court. That is no longer the case after I take a burning stick out of the bond fire and actually light your house on fire. -- You clearly are either malicious and dishonest, or an idiot who lacks all understanding of legality, History, The Economy, Logic on the level of a 10 year old, and may well be illiterate as well. This is based wholly on your own posts in responses to mine. I would advise you be a more reasonable person if you wish not to look like a complete idiot in the future.
I was on vacation with my family when I was a kid and my parents stopped at the bank to pick up cash to pay for stuff like a fan boat rental and whatever. The bank gave them hundred-dollar bills and all of them turned out to be phony, but the only person who recognized it was the guy at the rental place. He was nice enough about it and realized that my folks weren't trying to scam him, so he didn't call the police. Our next stop on that vacation was to the bank - and then the police got involved. lol
If I go into one of those places with signs saying "no bills bigger than $20 accepted", I will first ASK if my 50s or 100s are acceptable for a purchase approaching that. Say, $45 for gasoline with a 50 or a 100 bill for 85 in groceries or restaurant takeway. If okay, then I shop there. If still "no" I leave. I will NOT force the issue with the counterman because he is just a worker and can get fired by a boss who is strict.
Many years ago i was running a construction jobsite, and told my guys i would buy lunch if we could wrap up that Friday. I took my paycheck to a bank a few doors from the jobsite to cash it. Before everybody had Debit card/machined. Told the lady i wanted nothing larger than a $20. ( another story about trying to pay $146 gas purchase using a$100bill). So i walked out of the bank to a pizza shop in the same parking lot and ordered 8 pizzas. I proceeded to peel off $20 bills to pay for my pizzas. The cashier began running them through a counterfeit detecting machine which proceeded to kick out 8 of 34 . So while waiting on my pizzas i walked back to the bank, explained to the cashier the situation. She brought over the manager who told me " all i can do is turn them over to the FBI to be sure, but i can't give you your money back. I regret to this day that i was a very loyal employee and told her " never mind, i will use them for buying gas". ( still mad over the $100bill incident). Later i thought, who better to pass counterfeit money than that snotty bank manager.
@@genegene3348 I knew stores could withhold the counterfeit if given and detected, and retail can’t give money back. But a bank? A bank that didn’t detect counterfeit sounds strange, plus taking your pay, seems like they owed you money. It would be the person who gave counterfeit to the bank would have lost it if detected-- guilty or incompetent victim….,
Back in 2010 I got a fake $20 from an ATM. I called the local Sheriff, and he confirmed it was fake, gave it back and told me to take the $20, the receipt, and the report # to Bank of America, the ATM owner and get my money back. He said that happens all the time, and people pass fake money without knowing it. He said I'd only break the law if I tried to use it, now knowing it was fake.
Diminution - the act, process, or an instance of becoming gradually less (as in size or importance). So when coins were actually made of rare metals (like gold & silver), some people would shave off edges or "thin" the coins
And that's why dimes and quarters have those ridges along the edge of the coin. They used to be made from silver and you could easily tell if someone had tried to shave some silver from the edge
Back when I was a kid, I knew a guy who owed another guy a debt. He tried to pay it off in cash. The debt was on a payment plan and guy #1 was trying to pay it off. Guy#2 refused the cash payoff. A Judge ruled the debt paid because guy #2 had refused cash.
Some 30 years ago I was a retailer, and once in a while a dissatisfied customer would come to our office with a wheel barrel full of pennies. I would show them on a one dollar bill where it says Legal tender for all debts public and private. Then I would ask him to go through his pennies and show me one that had that statement. A little bit of a ruse but It always ended the argument.
I actually looked this up when my wife told me that a Cafe in my area didn't accept cash. I had never heard of that. I figured that any place open to the public was obligated to take legal tender. But nope. I just hate the arbitrary double standards. I agree that a private business should be allowed to do what they want, but obviously, they can't allow smoking. Not even in a bar, which is insane to me. I'm not a smoker, just trying to be consistent. So personally, I believe they should be able to do what they want, even though I don't agree with them not accepting cash. But if that's the case, they should be able to allow smoking if they want and anything else they want as long as the underlying issue is legal.
Good point but a tough issue. Smoke don't stay in your wallet. The public often ends up paying for the cancer that can result from lots of exposure. So not quite the same. And I think businesses should accept cash, too, but I'd be fine just taxing non-cash businesses more. We could call it an "inconvenience tax." At the very least, they should be required to have prominent signage.
@x--. Anytime one creates an analogy, it can never be the same. While it's true they are separate issues, people can choose whether or not they support the business. If someone is worried about cancer, then they don't have to enter/support the establishment. The same as to business that doesn't accept cash. It may not be the best business practice, but they should have the freedom to do it. The point I was trying to make is, either let capitalism police itself. Or be consistent with the freedom that should inherently come with private business ownership.
@timwood225 We don't eat there out of principle. But if I had to guess, they wouldn't give us an opportunity to "owe" them. If we were blindsided by their policy, we would likely pay with it via cc as per usual and simply not return.
Here in Colorado the legislature passed a bill HR1048 that requires businesses to accept cash, unless it's a business that has no physical personal on property. Things such as do it yourself car washes, some laundry mats and a few other exceptions. CHEERS from Colorado
He is correct on this, remember at the end of the day the federal reserve note is " Fiat" currency. It has no backing behind it. A long time ago, during the days of Woodrow Wilson, they gave control of the money supply to a cartel of private bankers. So today instead of gold or silver notes we have Federal reserve notes. Which is a central bank currency.
Back in the late 70s, I worked in a bank in Yakima, WA. National Geographic had an issue which had a full sized $100 Travelers Check on it's back cover. Someone there gathered many copies of that issue, cut out the "checks", pasted white paper on the reverse side and then passed the phoney $100 checks around town to various merchants during a weekend. No, the "checks" didn't "feel like" regular checks, or even "look "right when examined closely. But a large number were accepted by store clerks because National Geographic did not print any disclaimer of actual value on the advertisement. We discovered these "checks" when several of our commercial customers deposited them on Monday.
Massachusetts Part III, Title IV, Chapter 255D, Section 10A: "No retail establishment offering goods and services for sale shall discriminate against a cash buyer by requiring the use of credit by a buyer in order to purchase such goods and services. All such retail establishments must accept legal tender when offered as payment by the buyer."
That is a state law, and is not a federal law. So in the state of Massachusetts then yes all transactions must include cash as an option, but in a state where a similar law does not exist then no cash is not required as the fall back is to federal law.
This law does not strictly require cash be always immediately be accepted at face value, it only prevents a business from only accepting credit. In particular, it doesn't prohibit a business requiring debit cards or cheques or barter or the currency of a different country be used to pay (all of which are not credit). It also doesn't prohibit a business from instituting reasonable policies aimed at reducing risks (like only accepting cash when the sun is out, only accepting small bills, or only accepting the actual money being handed over in a secure location and time of the sellers' choice). It also doesn't prohibit cash handling fees. It was aimed at car dealerships and real estate brokers who had shady arrangements with banks who offered loans, requiring buyers to take out a loan for large purchases from the bank which gave a kickback to the business. In short, the law doesn't require a business to increase the amount of risk it is willing to accept in any way. It only basically imposes the obligation, really, to be willing to come to a compromise with someone who only wants to pay cash. For example, a business would be perfectly within the bounds of the law to say "OK, I'll accept cash, but I'll only hand over the ownership of the product when I receive the cash, and I'll only accept the cash in the local bank or police station between 9am and 10am on Monday morning, after we've both counted it in view of a camera - for my own security. " If the item you are arguing over is a loaf of bread, then it's sort of not worth it.
I thought I remembered from my childhood (back in the 70's) a case where it was ruled that cash could not be refused as payment. From my memory, here in South Carolina, we used to have a grocery store where you could pay your utility bills. Most everyone paid by check. The story as I recall was that someone wanted to pay by cash, but was refused. It went to court, where it was ruled that cash had to be accepted. However, when I tried to look this up, all I found was a bill, H.3694, introduced on 1/12/2023, stating: "Any establishment that holds a retail license to do business in this State must accept cash payments for transactions." This is still a bill, so my memory must have been wrong, but it may be that soon, businesses will not be able to refuse cash payments in SC.
I was working in Calgary, Alberta at a Tim Horton's when a customer came in and paid with an obviously fake $20 Canadian bill. My coworker could immediately tell it was fake, but the customer pulled the one bill out of a stack of at least $1,000 in 20 dollar bills. If he was carrying $1,000 of possibly counterfeit bills, he was probably carrying something else. So, out of safety we accepted the bill, then called the police afterwards. The next day, after our boss met with the police and provided the video to the police, me and my coworker were reamed out for not passing off the bill to the next customer. We were told if we did that again, we were fired. I quit shortly after that. Another note about the security camera and video the Timmies had... it was a $20,000 multi-camera system specifically developed to track money coming into and leaving the store. Down to the point where it kept track of the amounts in each hand, what's in the tills, and whats in the hands. The video of the money was so crisp that you could see the $20 bill in question, and through the video you can tell it was fake... The system was so in tuned with Canadian Currency and tracking money that they police could not obtain a usable image of the guy that passed off the bill. So, basically, the only thing the cameras were good for was to make sure employees didn't steal money.
@@barowt The only problem is that is a felony in Canada. If I know it's a fake and pass it off, I can be found guilty and be imprisoned for up to 5 years... because I knew it was fake... and trust me, you could tell it was fake. But, when the guy pulls out about $1,000 worth of fake bills, you don't confront them... if he's got that much counterfeit, it's also probably carrying something else to protect that cash.
MA, RI and NJ have laws that require businesses to take cash. MA: General Law - Part III, Title IV, Chapter 255D, Section 10A RI Gen L § 6-13.1-30 (2019) N.J. Stat. § 56:8-2.33
Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Idaho, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island all have some form of law requiring that retailers accept cash.
@@I_Am_Your_Problem "We look forward to you getting off your ass and doing your own research." Translation: I'm too f-ing lazy to do the research so just accept my claim without evidence. Let ME introduce you to Hitchen's Law: That which is asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence." So, I_Am_Your_Problem, you are dismissed along with your claim until YOU provide the evidence.
@Steve Lehto I did as you suggested and "poked" around a little. There are qutie a few states that require you to accept cash, such as Idaho, Mississippi, North Dakota, Colorado and Michigan. (but not TN where I live) This was within just a few minutes, so I'm sure I could find more (and of course Professor Google isn't always right either) Thanks for the info, because I was under the impression that it was required everywhere. Good video.
Dimunition of currency was relevant when coins were made of silver. They could shave silver from the coin and still go spend it. That's why dimes, quarters, dollars& half dollars are ridged around the edges...to reveal shaving.
Historically this was called “clipping” after the way the irregularly shaped coins of ancient times had excess metal removed down to the correct weight - by clipping. So, filing and scraping was still called “clipping.”
I had this happen at a restaurant. Nothing was posted at the business. No signs, nothing on the menu etc... I told them CA$H or nothing. They said that they would call the police if I failed to pay. I told them to call, that I would wait for them. They decided to let me leave. When other customers saw this, they did the same too.
This is one instance in which I would side with you in a court of law. If a business doesn't want to accept cash for transactions, that's fine, but they must indicate "no cash accepted" or a similar message on some type of sign that's easily visible to the public. The fact that this business didn't do that means their "right to refuse service" does not apply this time and they must face legal ramifications for deceptive business practices.
As others have pointed out below, there are states that require businesses to accept cash - laws have been passed since this video was published. Oregon and Massachusetts are two.
@@eddarby469 The statement is 'legal tender for all debts...' Tender is an offer of payment. Currency is used to represent money through paper, coin, or other objects).
@@PCFLSZ Well, it seems like you're telling me that English doesn't mean what it says. So what does the statement mean? How should we understand the meaning of the statement?
@@eddarby469When you present cash, you are tendering an offer to pay with paper currency. The recipient is not required to accept your offer (excepting state and local laws that require acceptance).
@@eddarby469 You quoted the words on the bill incorrectly, I didn't change any definitions. When you present cash, you are making an offer to pay (tender) with paper federal reserve notes (currency). No entity or person is required to accept your offer to pay in cash unless it is a government body or a state/local law mandates such.
In the early eighties during a driver's Ed class, we had to cross a toll bridge. Because of how it worked, the kids had to pay the buck fifty. We had five cents with the change when we crossed and the toll attendant had a cow, saying she would not accept pennies. Well, or US Government and Civics teacher was also the driver's Ed teacher. He informed her as a government agent she was required to. We were allowed to go to a mini mart during our training so we could get 15o pennies. We held up traffic as he made her count them all on the way back through. It was a civics lesson I won't soon forget.
What was the lesson, how to induce road rage in others? How to selfishly delay innocent people just trying to go about their day to prove some sort of point?
@@flamingsickle The lesson was, I think, for us. Although businesses can set their own policy, the government must accept currency. Please note, it was a slow traffic day and few people were delayed.
I remember back in the 1960s in GA a man tried to pay a debt with a check. He was cursed at and was told he had to pay the debt in cash. He later returned with a pickup loaded down with coins. The man who insisted on cash accepted the coins as payment as everyone there was under the impression that if legal tender was rejected for payment of a debt it would void the debt. I often wonder if that law ever existed and if so what happened to it.
Very true about using real money on film. I was on location of a rom-com film in the mid 80's and there was a scene where the lead actress hits a big jackpot on a jumbo slot machine. Bells go off and money flies through the air. The production used $45,000 worth of real $5 bills. I know this because at the end of the night I helped the assistant director and pa's count and stack all of it. I couldn't stand to look at another $5 bill for weeks afterwards 😆
I knew a guy when we were young that copied some doller bills and put them through a laundry matt bill changer. I think he got 5 or 10 bucks worth of quarters. He, shortly thereafter, enlisted in the service and left town. The Feds came and found him several years later at his duty station and held him accountable for counterfeiting money.
Conterfit story: I worked in a casino back in the 90’s and my Floor guy was fairly new, nervous and kind of a jerk. It was a really busy weekend night on a crap game. I hand in a $100 bill to the Boxman and lean over and say that they may want to check that bill out. I was completely messing with them, as far as I could tell, it’s a legit bill. The Boxman looks at it and calls the Floor over. I’m chuckling to myself as he’s taking this way too seriously. I forget about it and contiune on, the joke has been played. Sometime later security comes over and has the guy who handed me the bill step away from the game. Turns out it really was a bad bill. The best part was, the guy says he got the bill from the cash cage. They run back the video and sure enough, the casino was passing bad bills to the customers. At this point I just shut up and deal.
If I remember correctly the stuff about altering coins was from the days when most coins were made from a higher percentage of gold and silver. People would shave off some of the metal from the edges of the coins. They would then save up the shavings to sell for the gold or silver. That is also why most coins now have a textured edge so as to make it harder to shave the edges without it being noticeable.
That was one of the reasons. Really useless coin collector trivia: In the 1960s there was a coin shortage (first in the US, then a couple of years later in Canada) as silver coins were pulled from circulation by people who realized that the silver was worth more than the coin's face value. In 1968, the Philadelphia mint used some of its excess capacity to mint some of the 1968 dimes for Canada. You can tell which coins were produced in Philly vs. Ottowa because the reeding on the edge was shaped differently.
The metal used in coins is worthless. Maybe they did that during the Roman empire, but we are not living in the Roman empire. No one would do that in the modern world.
@@Tugela60 Please do some research, early coins in the U.S were made primarily from silver, gold and copper. They even had arrangements were citizens could bring their own gold, silver and copper to the mints to be made into coins. Silver was still being used for coins up into the 1960's. Silver dollars weren't called that just because of their color - they use to actually be made from silver. I use to be into coin collecting and still own a couple of the old silver dollars and silver dimes. While the metal in coins now do not contain much value they still out of tradition retain the ridges along the sides that were put there back when the did, As I stated above the ridges were added back when the coins contain valuable metals to discourage filing the edges down to obtain the metal for selling separately. The US government to further discourage this they even later went as far as making it illegal for the common citizens to own gold except as jewelry. This ban was only removed after gold was no longer used in common coins.
@@rhondaflesher8313 Do some research yourself. Coins in circulation are made from cheap metal, the milling around them is for decorative purposes, NOT because people are filing them. There is no point.
Read my comment. If You purchase something from someone it is a contract contracts require both parties to consent. It’s not a one way street…who cares if you have cash. It’s up to the seller to agree.
@@jamesm.3967 I agree with that premise. Unfortunately, there's the aspect of "enforceability" which the government(s) provide conditions under which they will support a side in a dispute. My understanding is that Legal Tender payment is enforceable.
@@KutWrite If you have a debt then yes, payment in USD is required to be accepted so long as it is reasonable. (you couldn't pay in nitroglycerine soaked pennies in a mason jar for example) Debts are different from a voluntary exchange. If someone doesn't want to accept your cash then no contract is made and no debt is made.
I once had a store owner refuse to take 4 Sacagawea dollars that I had for a $4 item. He said: "I don't take that sh**, go get me something better." I had a lot of Sacagawea dollars because the vending machine at work gave them as change. That said, I stopped shopping at that store.
Around 1979 they issued the Susan B. Anthony dollar which was about the same size and appearance as a quarter. When we used to go to the board walk to play games at AstroWorld you could occasionally put a dollar in the change machine and get four Susan B. Anthonys as change. Eventually, vending machine tolerances caught up and could tell the difference between a Susan B and a quarter but I think one of the reasons they stopped making them is that people were mistaking them for quarters too. I also think it is the reason that the Sacagawea dollar was gold in color. I believe its dimensions are the same as the Susan B. Anthony dollar.
@@Brirend It was golden colored when new but turned dull like an old cent after circulating for a while. Canada found that dollar coins would not circulate while “paper” “dollars” were in circulation. Britain found the same. £1 coins would not circulate until £1 bills were gone.
If that's true that they don't have to accept it then they should be forced to do a credit payment and not be allowed to charge you fees for using credit because they're forcing you to use credit You don't have to shop there but if you are and they won't take your cash but yet they charge you like $8 to use a credit card or $4 or $3 what is there something that says that they can't do that if they do not accept cash?
General Laws of Massachusetts, Part III, Title IV, Chapter 255D, Section 10A. No retail establishment offering goods and services for sale shall discriminate against a cash buyer by requiring the use of credit by a buyer in order to purchase such goods and services. All such retail establishments must accept legal tender when offered as payment by the buyer.
They are doing this at sport's venues and concerts now. I think the reason for this is the venue gets 10% of total sales. The venue is afraid that they will not get their 10% if people pay with cash. At the soccer stadium across the street Geodis Stadium a hotdog, cup of fries, and a bottle of water is $30 plus tax. 10% ads up quick. They want to make sure they get it.
That creates a potentially abusive situation, a cycle of "You owe me" "Here is what I owe you." "I don't accept cash." "wtf it's money" "I don't care, now pay me for real" "This is all I've got" "well you owe me"
The code he sited states that its legal tender for debts, a shop doesn't have to accept your legal tender if its selling you something but it must accept it if its being used to pay a debt. If you got caught up in a situation where someone is trying to use this as a loop hole to make you owe more because you owe someone a debt and they won't take cash for it you may be within your legal right to take them to court and force them into taking cash as repayment of the debt thought I would check with a local lawyer before filling this type of case.
@@Willcol100 Actually you be within your legal rights ignore him if he doesn't accept because it is a form of payment for debts and he clearly refuses to be paid I would call the cops which people forget that way you can get it on record that he doesn't want to be paid
I think the guy that challenged you in your childhood, indicating you just committed a felony by smashing coins on the train track, was the same guy that indicated you committed a felony by holding currency in front of the camera. All these years later, and he is still tormenting you.
The "felony" you risked committing was wrecking the train or accidentally hurting someone with flying debris. It's similar to a guy hunting and firing over a hill and hitting someone/something out of sight even if the bullet passed through an animal to be harvested. There was also the small matter of trespassing. Some laws are so conditional that they are rarely applicable or not well known. It is also questionable how a law will be applied. Truly an "accident"? Or "negligence" by someone "we" want to "punish/harrass"? The law can be a type of weapon. Use caution. English doesn't help matters. "My three favorite things are eating my family and not using commas". Good day. Enjoy your videos.
the federal reserve is not an arbiter of law. citing it when referencing what is "legal" is a logical fallacy. the federal reserve is also not a public institution but a private bank. it also is illegitimate and anti-constitutional.
There are many places that feel if they accept cash they could be robbed. For example, if you rent a storage unit, it's safer for them to accept other payments. If you're a senior living in a senior community such as a mobile home part, it is much safer to accept electronic payments. Since this is America I believe the business owner has full authority as to what they will accept as payment.
Not exactly, I never carry cash and I don't go to places that don't accept debit cards (very few and far between). It's a lot more convenient to simply swipe or insert my card than to fumble over a bunch of loose change and ragged old bills that have probably been in a strippers butt crack.
At certain stores, at certain times of day (like NIGHT), that have limited tills, you should know better than to leave yourself a hundred as your only option. It's akin to running your gas-tank down to fumes and getting in a pinch. You need a plan B, even a C. It doesn't matter if the small store has cashed it for you before. It could've just been shift change. "Sorry, where were you 5 minutes ago? I just dropped all the money". You can't imagine how much that happens like Murphy's Law. You wait and wait for that last-minute hundred, then make your drop and there they are! It's downright spooky. You buy a pack of Backwoods with a hundred (and that's a huge red flag to look real hard at that bill), what you need to understand, is that when I give you $95 & something back, my $200 drawer is $95 lighter. There's nothing I can do with that hundred but admire it or drop it. It's Schroedinger's hundred - it's there, yet it isn't there. Can't trade it back for anything unless someone comes in and says "I need to get rid of all these twenties". I don't have a magic machine that can dispense more bills. I have a finite till. No you won't take smaller bills. That's the entire point. When I run out of smaller bills, I'm out of business until morning. People like to try & hang it on you and make a fuss over "customer service". What do you want me to do? You should've known better.
I have an opposite story. Decades ago it was common for businesses to not take credit or debit cards. We've still got one leftover business in my area that refuses credit or debit cards. I only found out because I had to go in to the Michigan SOS office to renew my driver's license, and there was about an hour and a half wait. I decided to go to the hair salon in the same strip mall where the SOS is located, and get my hair washed and cut. After it was sunny done, I pulled out my debit card to pay, and was told they only take cash or check. I don't think I had my checkbook on me, because I had moved and couldn't find the box with my refill checks (still haven't found them -- ended up ordering a whole nother batch). Or maybe I had one check left and it was already written out to the SOS. The hairstylist told me that the Kroger at the other end of the strip mall has an ATM, so I ran down there to get the cash to pay for my haircut. And after all that, I still had another half hour wait before I was called to get my license and tabs taken care of.
A few years ago I went to a restaurant with my wife for dinner (go figure). At the end of the meal I go to pay and I'm told the policy is to not accept cash. I asked where that is posted in the restaurant. He said it's not posted anywhere as "Everybody" knows that's his policy. I explained I was not carrying credit cards. He called the police. I explained that the restaurant has not posted anywhere that they do not accept cash for meals so there is no way for somebody to know their policy before they eat there. Police looked at the owner and told him he was out of luck. Food wasn't that good anyway, free or not.
8:00 that applies to the old days where people would shave off the edge of the coins in order to cash in the silver shavings and then also cash in the coin. (noe the coins have ridges on them to help prevent that) Also, you can't rip bills in half and then try to turn in one have of the bill at a time in an attempt to double their money.
The thing that gets me is that the DMVs near me will not accept cash, but only cheque or money orders. Yes, a government agency accepting something from a private company as payment, but _not_ its own currency.
This girl was at the school in the cafeteria and after getting her food she gave the attendant a 2 dollars bill, and the attendant called the Secret Service. She thought the 2 dollar was counterfeit but was wrong.
@@arribaficationwineho32 you can still get all you want at most any bank. Brand new ones, never circulated. I have a customer, an older man, who will buy a bundle at a time (I think they come in bundles of 50 = $100), and give them out to little kids and other people he interacts with purely as a friendly, grandfatherly gesture. I carried the one he gave me in my wallet for a long time, but when my grandson was born I put it in his piggy bank. Now when I come across them I buy them for that purpose. Probably until about five years or so ago, the brand new ones I would see were all printed in 1976. The newest I've seen are from the '90's. Have a great Sunday!
I thought there was some concept that went something like, if a business is trying to bill you for services after the fact but are not accepting your offer of cash that the results are really not your problem. Like, you have a meal at a restaurant and at the end of that meal you get a bill, attempt to pay with cash, they refuse the cash, and then you go, "Oh well, I tried" and walk out. Situations like that. Might be some random state thing somewhere though, IDK. I can't really think of how that would be translated into legalese.
Once, I filled my tank up with fuel, then went inside to pay, with cash, and they refused to accept it. I had bought over $40 in fuel and was trying to pay for it with a $50 bill. There was no sign on the pump, and this was a time when you could pump before paying. In the end, I had to phone a police officer who told the clerk to either accept my legal tender, or I was free to leave without paying. Miraculously, my money was accepted.
@@markvail2147 no, they are allowed to refuse large bills, if they have proper signage. Actually, they can refuse any type of payment, if they have the proper signage. Laws in every state differ, but this store had every right to limit payment types, but they did not inform me before hand (proper signage), which is why they had to accept.
@@charlieodom9107 if you have a debt.they must accept your legal tender. If not come back next day with a smaller bill. ATMs give out $20 bills anyway. You need to go out of your way yo get a $100 anyway
@@markvail2147 so, two points here: 1st, Where did soda come from? I bought fuel, which was already pumped into my vehicle. Kinda hard to put that back. 2nd, I did not have an ATM card at the time, nor did the station have an ATM machine. I was also paying with a $50 bill, not a $100. I didn't see the issue with paying for >$40 worth of anything with a $50 bill. It is much easier to carry larger bills than smaller ones in a wallet. I really don't want to sit on my wallet full of $20 Bill's, when a few $100 bills would make more sense.
How about writing on or defacing currency? Fun Fact? Most cash is outside the country, upwards of 75%. Only a small amount is in the US. The US government has been pushing for decades to go 100% digital. As of now I believe both the one cent coin and nickels cost more to produce then their marked value. Always wondered if the recycling value is higher than spending them.
Didn't even know about "motion picture money" until I had some friends with a small business have had a big increase in people trying to pay for goods at conventions with it. They ended up getting a fancy bill counting machine to more quickly test ALL bills they're given vs having to examine and test with a pen every individual bill in a large stack of them. That was after they missed a couple and didn't know about it until the bank found it. They've lost enough money in un-caught fakes that it was worthwhile to buy a fairly high end counting machine that is very picky about testing bills.
I got passed a fake $100 - at a wells fargo not long ago. If it wernt for the fact I was a cop, I'd have been stuck with it. Got a fake 20 out of a bank atm before too. What's even more strange is that they were fairly obvious, they should have been able to spot the difference of the one bill that was just slightly off from the rest.
Back in the 80's I saw a statement from the Treasury Department saying that currency bills must be accepted for debts but sales are not debts, rather they are transactions. If there is no agreement to pay in the future, there is no debt. Cash money on the barrelhead is not a debt payment.
Well if you eat at a restaurant you are billed so they have to accept it. Unless clearly stated cash not accepted, which is why you see no credit cards or accept certain cards.
A little off topic but, I've always wanted to get one of those markers used to determine fake money, buy something from Wal-Mart for $0.99, and pay with a $100 bill, and when they mark it, watch me hold up the line while I mark $99 in change they give back, haha. That irritates me so bad, since those pens can only detect if the paper is counterfeit, not the denomination. A bleached $10, as you mention in your video, will pass this test.
As someone whose wife opened a retail business in 2021, I can tell you that Pennsylvania requires accepting cash. PA 73 P.S. § 204-1 "Cash Consumer Protection Act." (06/JUL/1984) requires all businesses accept cash. Our lawyer said she could have provided a "gift card" vending machine where customers could convert cash to gift-cards as a way to avoid having her staff (who have Intellectual or Developmental Disability), have to learn to handle cash. We ended up just working hard with the cashiers to properly handle cash...
Reminds me of a favorite Steven Wright joke (granted, they are all favorites, but still...) When they asked George Washington for his i.d. did he just take out a quarter?
in Massachusetts requiring businesses to accept cash is based on Chapter 151B, Section 3 of the Massachusetts General Laws. This law states that it is illegal for retail establishments to refuse to accept legal tender, including cash, as a form of payment. The Massachusetts Attorney General's Office has also emphasized that businesses must accept all forms of legal tender to ensure consumer protection and economic justice. New Jersey and Rhode Island have similar laws. San Fran and Philly have a law but not sure those laws are legal per your description.
An idiot bakery opened up recently in my poor small town. They had people lined up outside as any new business gets here. But the majority of people were trying to pay cash. The majority of people were walking out empty handed. Then an employee posted a handwritten note on the door. ‘No Cash Accepted.’ Well, it killed the business. It went from being lined up, to being empty the next day. Until closing the next month. If my money isn’t green. We will take it to someone who wants it. And most of us, don’t want to be involved with any business that encourages more government regulation and intrusion in our private lives.
Had a laundry mat that wouldn’t accept cards, cash only. They were raided and shut down, turned out to be a money laundering operation that had been operating for years. Bakeries, laundromats, car wash’s, casinos, any business’s that are primarily cash are great ways to launder money.
You dont think cash is regulated heavily by the government? Also it isn’t government intruding into our lives when we use cards. It’s big corporations. That’s who benefits from our data the most. The government is just paid by big corporations to allow them to invade our privacy. BTW, get pulled over with $15k cash and see how intrusive the government (law enforcement) gets then.
@@nrgrlsd9931the government buys data from the corporations.
Awesome!!
@@WA_S_S_AWThat’s bunk. Yes of course every person or entity that is laundering money will be using cash because you can’t launder computer digits. However there are millions of businesses that accept cash that are not laundering money.
I did a little research and this is what i came up with. Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and New Jersey have state laws that private business must accept cash as payment. New York, business must accept cash as payment unless they have a machine to convert cash to a prepaid card. South Carolina, any business with a retail license must accept cash as payment. Colorado, Retail establishments must accept United States currency, with the exception of security deposits. Keep up the good work Steve, love your channel.
When I was a teenager working in a little neighborhood pet store (not like the big ones that we have today), one of our regular customers came in on a Saturday and bought some feed. It was busy, so I took his twenty and gave him his change. There was something funny about it, so after the rush of customers, about an hour or so later, I went back into the drawer and pulled it out. It had 20s on the corners, but Washington's face. Someone had cleverly and carefully cut off the 1s from the corners and somehow attached twenties from other bills, in their place. I showed it to my boss, who was of course upset, because he would have to take the loss. A while later another employee spotted the customer in the village. My boss took the bill and when to find the customer. He explain the store's predicament, to which the customer replied that he had just received the bill from the bank that morning! We found out later that the customer went back to the bank with the bill and the teller couldn't tell right away what was wrong with it... until he pointed it out. To end the story... the bank took the hit on the counterfeit bill.
All the more reason to do what virtually all other countries do: different denominations have different basic colors, and even sizes can differ. The Euro has different colors for denominations.
I used to work for a dry cleaner who operated out of a central plant and had a chain of several retail stores as drop off/pick up locations. I worked in several locations including ones that only employed a single clerk and occasionally a customer would present a $100 bill as payment for their order and I wouldn't have the change to break it. It was surprising to me how offended some customers would get when they couldn't pay with cash. Even though they could use check or credit card, more than once I would get the old "You can't refuse to accept legal tender!" argument. I got around that by explaining that I would be happy to accept it and they could pick up their change the following business day. Not one ever took me up on that offer.
We have a business in Indianapolis, where the owner refuses to collect personal information on their clientele. In retaliation, the business is audited every year until they get compliance. So far they still take cash. 🇺🇸
Well, that sucks; i know of no federal law that requires collection of infirmation regarding sales of general merchandise, or of any such laws in my home state. If there are such laws in other states they are an over reach. The fact that some agency may be trying to force data collection by tax actions indicates that they have no legal basis to enforce through prosecution.
@@joelee2371 as if the current administration doesn’t have the feds routinely violating the law
"all debts public and private" would seem to mean DEBTS. So a purchase that requires advanced payment would not be a debt, but suppose you ate at a restaurant that had a policy of billing afterwards. At that point its not a point of sale, but an actual debt owed. At least that's the way I always understood it, and the rule you cited doesn't seem to directly contradict that. So what would happen if you owed money to a business for services already rendered and they refuse to accept your money and instead required payment in some form that you are not even capable of paying?
As I understand, it would depend on if the business in question made clear this requirement prior to services rendered. If it was very clearly displayed that the restaurant only accepts credit card and you incurred the debt it's a contractual matter. You have contractually agreed to pay with a credit card. Otherwise if they either didn't display it or wasn't in a clearly visible location or no one told you then it's a situation where they can't sue you for non-payment because they refuse to accept payment.
You're reading way, way too much into that little phrase.
I love how you actually answered the question within the first 30 sec. and not drag it out into a five minute intro! You’re a rare RUclipsr!
I work in a supermarket and we had a $10 bill in motion picture money passed to one of our cashiers. Now I check $10 bills and up with our counterfeit detector machine. Company policy is $50 and $100 bills but being a 90s kid and $20 bills being the most counterfeited in that era I checked $20 bills as well. Now I check $10 bills as well.
Smart guy.
I was 14 and my first job was at a gas station, this car with out of state plates pulled in and started to fill up, when done he paid in cash. I remember going to my manager and asking "Do we accept out of state cash?"
Lol. Was it confederate money?
Never trust a buck that says "New York Reserve Note"
Lmao out of state cash lmao
I took All of the strips out of a stack of 100$ I had while I was waiting for my husband to get back to our mortal room, he was still in the Navy and was extremely upset over me defacing Government property! I said to him who is even going to know I have money on me no strips to give me away to TSA my money I will do with it as I please
There was a point when states had there own money, wish I had some of that, homeless d be rich.
A bussiness can take any kind of payment they want
I use to have a land scapeing bussiness and often time would accept tools or other items I needed if someone didn't have cash and then go trade it for something else or sell it
Called Bartering
Agreed. However the question was must a business accept cash if offered. Or can they REQUIRE you to pay by other means such as card or barter.
"use to" vs. "used to" ... there's a difference. You had a 50/50 chance, but chose the wrong one.
@@indianpaintbrush6122 Weewoo weewoo weewoo! Grammar police!
I can imagine the conversation now! A 12-year-old Steve and some random adult.
Steve: "What are you, the railroad police?"
Adult: "What are you, a damn lawyer?"
The rest is history.
Arinerm....ROTFLMAO! I was thinking the same thing!
The law can be very confusing so I am grateful for lawyers like you that take time out to help the average person understand. Stay cool!😊
I remember in 1970 at U. C. Davis, my friend had exact cash for his tuition and the cashier wanted him to go get a cashiers’ check, for which he did not have the fee money. He argued, and the cashier called University Counsel’s office. They told her that, as a quasi-governmental office, they had to accept the cash.
People use to shave coins. You take a small amount off the outside of the coin. When coins were gold and silver this was a serious issue. So a shaved gold coin would look normal but would be lightened. Shave enough coins and you have a nice little bit of gold, and a lot of underweight coins. Its why coins originally had serrations on the edges.
Déjà vu! Back in the 1970s it was the opposite way around, people refused credit cards.
in my country it was even in the. 90s, and they had all, kind of rules about amount and the like. They also called by phone to get the authorization number 😂
Stores and restaurants had those carbon paper slider things.
some country stores still refuse credit cards, but my company signs with them to put atm's in their store, allowing them access to cash, and the store does not have to pay the fee.
Colorado does have a law that require businesses to accept cash. It does have three exceptions, but we do have a law against refusing cash payments. It was enacted in 2022.
Well at least something is going right on Colorado!
Citation needed.
@ HB21-1048
There is a cure for this problem do not patronize these businesses and stay with it no compromise
Steve, I love the "show me the citation." As a cop, I often get told: "I want them arrested." They then describe what happened and when it turns out to not be a crime I explain it to them. Sometimes they dig in and explain how they know it's a crime and I should charge them. I then simply ask, "Can you show me the statute? Then if the elements fit what you are saying I will be happy to charge them." No one has taken me up on it.
It's actually amazing what people think is illegal when, in fact, it is not.
Somewhere in the UCC, it says a debt is canceled if legal tender is offered and refused.
And yet you can't provide the statute...
@@I_Am_Your_Problem Not presently. I'm 67 years old and college was a long time ago. But, you have the internet, and if it's that important to you......
Hey Steve. I just watched this and don’t understand. Each Federal Reserve note has printed on the face “This note is legal tender for all debits, public and private.”
I also thought all U.S. businesses are required to take cash.
@@DanGumm yes, but just because it is legal tender doesn’t mean they have to take it. For that matter, with the possible exception of discriminatory cases, I don’t think anybody has to sell anybody anything. They could just say they aren’t selling it to you. They don’t even need a reason. 🤷🏼♂️🙂
Buying something in a store is not debt.
One of my first jobs in the late 70s was at a Baskin Robbins. Lots of loose change coming and going thru the registers. I told my coworkers that any pennies with an Indian head, or any silver change minted before 1964 was counterfeit and the manager told me to take it. I swapped the change out from my money. I still have a few relatively valuable Indian head pennies from then.
There are companies that make prop money, a lot of it is marked as such, in addition to missing some key elements.
The marking/altering of bills is also only illegal if it renders them unable to use. I learned this from many discussions at the Where's George website.
I have heard that the "legal tender for all debts public or private" only kicks in once a debt is incurred. So the stores that have signs that they don't take certain bills, do so because they gave notice before the debt.
I remember reading a article in Pennsylvania that stopped a business from refusing cash because it discriminated against the poor
Pennsylvania’s “Cash Consumer Protection Act” made it illegal for businesses “to refuse to rent or sell property or services” to consumers who don’t have credit cards.
There is a plethora of services available to everyone, in which you can get a valid bank VISA or Mastercard unsecured for the purpose of accepting company paycheck deposits, even VISA and Mastercard has card services expressly for that purpose, so there is no credit check required, but some others are, Netspend, Flex Wage Varo, and even American Express has a service too. All one has to do is look. Besides, if you aren't linked to politics, or Hollywood, we are all poor.
@@derekwalker4622 now there is
@@derekwalker4622 - That's true Derek, but have you checked out the charges for using those cards? Most are in excess of ATM fees per transaction....
@@dsruddell To what are you referring? "Now" as in this year? My friend, these cards have been around for 10+ years in one form or another. Maybe you mean "now I recently discovered them"?
I think that is the story I was thinking about.
If i read it right. Michigan's SB 283 (2023) makes it illegal for retail businesses to refuse cash, making no distinction between sectors.
When I was in college, a friend was the lead cashier for a branch of a very well known luxury department store. She told me that they had a huge run of counterfeit bills passed during the Christmas holidays. One thief would buy something from a busy clerk with a handful of twenties, with a number of double sided (black and white!) counterfeit Xerox copies slipped in the wad. Additionally, an accomplice would distract the cashier as they rang up the transaction.
I just bought a new GE Single Wall Oven from Home Depot on Valentines Day. I told the sales clerk that I had cash and Gift Cards when I went to checkout and would the cash would be a problem. She had to get the Store Manager to ok taking my $100 dollar bills. She had to examine then mark the bills then hand them off to the manager and he did exactly the same thing. The funny thing was I had 9 $100 bills and the store gave me credit for 10 $100 bills. I looked puzzled and did the right thing and said you gave me an extra credit of $100. The manager snapped back and said no they didn’t make a mistake. At that point I shrugged my shoulders and said “sounds good to me”.I walked out to my truck sat down and said Happy Valentines Day to me. Love Your Stories
In Massachusetts, we have G. L. c. 255D §10A, "Discrimination against cash buyers," which prohibits retail establishments from requiring the use of credit.
Debit card
I work at a gas station/convenience store/deli outside of Baltimore. Our store (and several other district stores in our company) have been receiving fake $100 bills for almost a year.
On one Saturday night shift I received two of them, about an hour apart, with identical serial numbers. These bills are ALWAYS old (pre-1990s), faded, wrinkled, worn-out, and feel strange. I'm old enough to have handled bills from before 1980, so I know a bit about them. Each time I refused (and management backed me up) the bill, the customer was very polite and walked away without arguing.
The penny press machines are also at the service plaza on the Florida turnpike. I am reasonably certain that on those machines is the federal statute exempting them from the statutes criminalizing altering, defacing coins. Next time you see a penny press look to see if the statute is posted on the machine.
Excellent advice (as usual). Case in point:
I'm a landlord with 16 apartments. In the lease, I clearly state "Under no circumstances will cash be accepted. Check, MO or electronic transfers only." Saved my a@@ in court each time.
You went to court? Why not just point to the lease? You're saying someone said this is cash take it or you don't get your rent and you refused it? Out of the fue times that would happen I find it foolish not to take the cash and go to court. Far more bad checks are passed then bad cash.
@@tomtransport Yes, I did (and will) refuse outright cash. Some tenants will go to court saying they paid me in cash when they didn't thus giving the judge a 50/50 chance of believing them.
Some tenants will pay partial rent in cash then complain later that it was full.
-By hey, you run your apartments your way, let me run mine my way.
@@mathewm7136 Good luck.
@@tomtransport for every problem there is a remedy.
US paper currency does say “This note is legal tender for all debts, public or private.” Of course if I am trying to buy something and the sale is refused I have no debt, the store is simply declining my offer to buy, but if I purchase an item or service on credit I have incurred debt. Can I then insist the creditor accept cash?
The way I understand it, they can't declare a non payment of debt if you put a stack of money on the table. They might refuse to actually take cash, but they can't re-posses your car or house or whatever collateral is at stake. However, some banks nowadays charge handling fees for cash payments.So you might have to pay extra for them to actually accept the payment.
@@peregreena9046 The problem is;
It is technically illegal to not accept cash in America, or to charge a handling fee of any kind.
That being said, by many of the highest America laws, the entire economic system and the USD itself is technically illegal since August 13, 1971.
When Nixon signed the order to abandon the gold standard.
So, there is actually an argument that can be made, that America technically has no currently legal form of payment other than gold or silver, and the american government is responsible for the theft of 100,000's tons of gold and silver from It's citizens.
Mainly, because they seized all privately owned gold and silver at the time they founded the Federal Reserve.
Mainly, because it was and still is required by law that they back ever USD issued by an unchanging amount of gold, silver, or other hard valued resource.
So, short answer is;
It is very complicated, and the entire situation is both illegal and screwed beyond belief.
Paper currency is only a note just as it reads. It is not payable on demand. Only silver certificates are.
@@charlie6629 The thing is that is why it is actually illegal, as well as the entire current system.
Which I already noted.
The thing is under the highest of American laws banks do not legally have the right to issue valid American currency.
This means the credit system and loan systems are both illegal, as they are effectively issuing American currency.
Also, based on the highest of laws on this subject, the federal reserve is the only entity that can issue valid American currency.
Furthermore, each and every bill issued must be backed by a unchanging amount of gold, silver, or other hard valued resource.
Thus, the gold standard existed until, convicted criminal, and Ex-president Nixon illegally put a stop to it.
Technically, America has had no legal tender at all since that point, by America's highest laws.
This is regrettable but true.
This is why I noted it is supposed to be illegal to not accept the USD as payment.
Which is why it says usable for all debts public and private on the bill.
This was in the founding documents of the federal reserve, it's authorities, and what they were required to abide by.
However, by the exact same requirements/documents, America doesn't technically have any legal tender at all since Nixon removed the gold standard.
Mainly, due to the requirements to actually back any valid currency issued, with the prior noted unchanging resources.
Thus, every USD printed after that point was technically a criminal action.
Any valid American currency was and still is, literally required to be as good as gold.
The problem is just The American government doesn't seem to care about any of it's own laws.
They also, clearly don't care about any treaties, or trade agreements they have/had.
This is all the case nearly all of the time excluding when it benefits them.
America is a nation which unilaterally breaks it's own laws, violates international treaties, violates trade agreements often with little to no reason.
The American government then expects others to abide by the very things they themselves one-sidedly broke/break all of the time.
None of this is new mind you, it has been constantly the Case, to varying degrees, for around 100 to 130 years.
Not just regarding issuing currency, but countless things, like I just noted.
It's kind of interesting, from an informational standpoint.
There is actually no nation in the past 400 years of human history, that has been documented, that has ever managed to be as illegal in it's operations, by it's own laws, as America is/has managed.
Additionally, there is not one nation that I could find in the past 250 years that has broken as many treaties and trade agreements as America, and as consistently.
This is even more striking because after America breaks said treaties and trade agreements, they consistently expect the other party to abide by the treaty and trade agreement they broke.
Nearly always without any responsibility and/or compensation, from/by America.
It is perhaps useful for a case study in narcissism.
As it has and does occur on a national scale.
@@darkpoechi You write a lot for knowing little. As I stated it's just a note from the Federal Reserve. That is not under the Government. It's a useless piece of paper if the system fails. The only bill that is payable on demand as I typed earlier is a Silver Certificate with Silver coins or bars in that amount. The Federal Reserve is a private organization that stores gold as a back-up although there isn't much there anymore. Lest we forget the US in in an over 7 trillion dollar debt. Do some more research if you'd like. Good Day
The key word in the legal tender law is "debt". It means that if you _already_ owe someone money, they have to accept cash to satisfy it. However, if someone proactively refuses to transact with you because you intend to pay with cash, then you don't incur the debt to them in the first place. And they're allowed to discriminate on that basis unless state or local law says otherwise. If you trick a business into providing the good or service first when they've made it clear that they don't accept cash, then legally you can still require them to take your cash to satisfy the debt that you then have to them, but they could ban you from the business going forward or even sue you for any extra expense they incur due to your failure to pay with an accepted form of payment. (Their claim would be on the basis of breach of contract.) You could hand them cash to pay the judgment in that suit, and they couldn't sue you again for that because _that_ payment wasn't part of any contract. 😏
Maybe, but by the time you've paid their legal costs from the breach of contract suit you will have paid an awful lot for the privilege of being a smug twat.
You are probably seeing this more than once, but there's a portion on the upper left hand corner on the front of the note that says this note is legal tender for all debts public and private. The private aspect is the one that says an individual must accept that as a way of remuneration for services rendered for any other legal debt that been incurred from my understanding cuz it's on the front of the note. Is that your take on this? If not then what is a private debt?
As far as the "government" being required to accept legal tender, here is a story. My Wife and I ran into problems with the IRS where we owed money to them. We worked out a payment plan. After running into problems with "processing" checks, money orders, etc, which resulted in ever increasing penalties, we decided to pay in cash. So, with a well concealed envelope of a lot of cash, we showed up at the area IRS office to pay. Representative stepped back and stated "we don't accept cash". Hmmm. Why? Well, it seems they could not guarantee the safety of large amounts of cash at their office. "THAT is NOT my problem if you have thieves in your office". As you can imagine, that was not well received. So we ask for a supervisor. He comes out [standing out of arms reach of the cash] and repeats that they can not accept cash. I explain that each time we pay with alternate methods our debt increases due to their failure to promptly process the transaction. Supervisor says there is nothing he can do about that. "AHA, but there IS..... take this cash and give us a receipt for it dated and time stamped today". Bbbut, we have no way to safeguard it here. Well, that is your problem, not mine. I am paying my debt, and only wish a receipt stating I did so. Much shuffling around. Eventually said we cannot pay in cash. Mind you, this was NOT some sort of protest where I was paying in a barrel full of coins, just a stack of US bills. I pull a bill out of the stack and ask if this appears to be a genuine US piece of currency. He looks, and agrees it is. I point out the printing that says that said bill is "legal for all debts, public and private". Again, I ask how an arm of the US government can refuse to accept IT'S OWN CURRENCY as payment for a debt owed to them. He defaults to security of his office. I then ask that he call someone in authority above him to explain the refusal. I don't know where he went, or what he did, but he accepted the payment, counted it out [fair enuf] and issued the receipt for payment dated and timed. After a few months it became routine.
Technically, According to the constitution the only legally guaranteed tender, in America, is gold or silver.
The USD, Credit, and any other form of currency is not legally even classified as money, it is clearly stated in all documents to be "currency".
Mainly, because under the highest laws of America the only things that may legally classify as "money" is Gold or Silver.
Thus, the only legally assured form of exchange is Gold or Silver in America.
If you are paying in gold or silver anyone selling in America would technically be required to accept it so long as the value and amount was clear.
Thus, there may need to be proceedings and things such as an appraisal before you could exchange with the gold or silver.
As for the government, creditors, and banks.
They can not decline the USD, lest the government be required to close the federal reserve, all Banks, and money changers, and be barred moving forward from implementing any method of payment that is not gold or silver.
Mainly, as America or "money changers" in or of America can not refuse the USD, Lest they lose the legal right to any form of exchange other than "Money".
As per the conditions of the founding of the current economic system.
That being said the federal reserve and banks are technically unlawful in their current form already, by other conditions in the founding of such institutions.
Here were the main conditions of said system's implementation;
1. There will be some standard, tying Any American legal tender to a set and stable equivalent of money of The United States of America, or other hard valued, and unchanging resource.
Money only includes gold or silver legally as is listed and established in the original documents.
This means all currency today is unlawful.
2. Banking institutions and all other money changers, may not, lawfully print, or produce, any form of currency of The United States of America, in any amount. Thus, the federal reserve is to be founded.
So, the loan, credit system, and fractional lending system is unlawful.
3. Banking institutions and all other money changers, may not have say, sway, or control, in any form, over the issuance, printing, or production of any Currency of The United States of America.
Which makes the stock system in the federal reserve unlawful.
4. Banking institutions and all other money changers, may not have say, sway, or control, in any form, over the taxes applied to any Citizen, dealing, or debt created in or by The United States of America.
Which makes many things unlawful. So, I won't get entirely into that.
5. All lawfully issued currency of The United States of America, will be accepted as legal tender for all debts public or private.
The "All private debts" means this does wholly include any "Private Company" doing business in America.
Unless they are giving things away for free thus establishing no "Private debts" at any point.
You can not owe anyone any thing of any kind if there was not a agreement of a "Private or Public Debt" established.
This is the case beyond refute.
Otherwise Legally all banks, money changers, and the federal reserve must be legally abolished, and may not be replaced.
Returning us to the trade of gold and silver system.
6. All prior established Debts, public or private, of The United States of America, May still be pursued lawfully, in such manner as prior to the implementation of Federal Reserve Notes of The United States of America.
"Federal Reserve Notes of The United States of America" are the current USD.
So, technically Private companies can decline the USD. The only thing they are not allowed to decline is gold or silver.
However, under the same merit technically the Government is required to shut down the federal reserve, all banks, and all Money changers (Such as creditors.)
And issue gold, silver, or some other hard valued and unchanging resource, for every single USD in the nation.
This is required to be done at the value of the USD vs gold, and silver, at the time Ex-president Nixon unlawfully abandoned the gold standard
So, in short the entire American Economy in it's current form is illegal, and the situation is screwed.
Also, the American Government doesn't abide by any laws and doesn't care.
Honestly I understand.
The one thing most people, especially leaders, and especially in America agree on, no matter their affiliation is as follows;
Personal Interest > Greater Good.
@@darkpoechi The Supreme Court would disagree with you over the Constitutionality of federal currency, having upheld the "Legal Tender Act of 1862" multiple times. No offense, but I'll take their word for it over some random posting on RUclips. I believe you're misinterpreting the fact that States are explicitly prohibited in the Constitution (Article I Section 10) from issuing legal tender in any form other than gold or silver. No such prohibition is placed on the federal government.
@@NorthernKitty First you did create a bit of a straw man there.
Perhaps, because you just skimmed my post, instead of actually reading it.
Seems a common problem given the length and lack of some people's attention spans, and my long winded nature.
This being said, this is the one where I didn't already explain in as much depth.
Also, you are the second to clearly fail to grasp what you read before replying, so I will give you the benefit of the doubt on that.
As such, I will explain again the part you clearly didn't understand.
The Constitution states that all depts must be paid in gold or silver, and gold and silver are the only legal forms of "money".
However, the federal reserve was founded later, with laws and documents detailing what was and was not allowed by the federal reserve.
This was in part due to the difficulty of large gold and silver transactions.
They were as such, allowed to issue "Federal Reserve Notes" (What we call the USD today) due to this.
They are by extension not classified as "money" and are instead referred to as "currency" in all legal documents that are beholden and drafted to the standards of proper American law.
The very documents that allowed the issuance of Federal Reserve Notes, more commonly known as the USD.
Also, made the federal reserve a legal entity.
However, those same documents, required the federal reserve, be able to legally issue USD, only when it was tied to a set and unchanging standard of gold, silver, or other hard valued resource.
Hence the "gold standard".
This was, as you noted challenged in the Supreme Court, as to if the gold standard was enough to allow the lawful trade in paper currency.
It was ruled to be so in 1862, like you stated.
However, this was still with the caveat and requirement of the gold standard, which did exist at the time.
If it did not it can not in anyway be called legal.
Not by the constitution, or even the legal documents that allowed for the founding of the federal reserve, and issuance of the USD to start with.
However later, President Nixon, who was found guilty of high crimes, and successfully impeached as a result.
Unlawfully remove the gold standard.
This occurred on August 13 1971.
Well, after, and in direct opposition to the 1862 supreme court ruling.
Thus, by extension rendering the current system of currency, banking, loans, credit, and even the mere existence of the federal reserve, unlawful by the following;
The constitution, the 1862 Supreme Court ruling, and a few others, and even the very documents that originally allowed for the founding of the federal reserve, and issuance of the USD as a substitute for gold and silver.
Furthermore, those very same documents mandated that the USD would be usable for "All depts both public and private."
Thus, requiring any company, private or public who wishes to do business in America, to accept the USD.
Additionally, the Government, banks, and all money changers of any kind are also required to accept the USD if they wish to exist and do business in America.
Then again The entire thing is illegal as the USD is required to be backed by an unchanging amount of silver, gold, or some other form of hard valued resource.
For those who don't understand what a hard valued resource is, Diamonds, platinum, or any precious resource with a similar value to gold or silver can qualify.
So long as it is equated to the value of gold or silver at the value of the gold standard.
For example; silver is more than gold so less silver is equal to more gold.
Gold would be worth more than platinum thus less gold is needed than platinum to back the USD.
Also, the amount is to be $35 per ounce of gold or the equivalent resource and is not allowed to change, in accordance with the laws.
Mind you, that is very much not the case currently as 1 oz of gold is not $35, but $1619.75.
Which means the Government is 46.27 times less than their requirement to be allowed to issue and trade in The USD, and in fact anything not gold or silver.
However, by the laws that allow the current economic system of paper currency as a substitute for gold or silver, The Federal Reserve must have on hand 1 oz of gold for every $35 or an equivalent resource, and be able to exchange them if required, at that value.
Thus, ensuring the value of the USD as a gold or silver equivalent, as required by legal standards.
Not that they are required to exchange it however, they must have it on hand at that value and be able to exchange it, at that value, such as to ensure it is a legal substitute.
The USD should be as good as gold, literally, or it is not legal, nor is any of the current economic systems.
I also find it important to note that when the federal reserve was founded, as all USD had to be backed by gold or silver.
The Federal reserve seized all privately owned gold and silver at the time, and issued the equivalent in USD, or Federal Reserve Notes.
As such, not backing it by those merits makes the American government also responsible for the theft of hundreds of thousands of tons of gold and silver from it's citizens.
Sorry, but your understanding of both history, law, and the economic systems/economic situation of America fall short.
@@darkpoechi No "straw man" at all, you EXPLICITLY stated "according to the constitution the only legally guaranteed tender, in America, is gold or silver." I EXPLICITLY responded that this is incorrect and there are Supreme Court rulings that say as much. (Knox v. Lee and Parker v. Davis, for example.) I also cited where in the Constitution you may have erred in your interpretation.
Pretty direct response to your direct assertion. I don't think "straw man" means what you think it means. (In fact, your response is really the "straw man" here, moving on to entirely different arguments, failing to cite where in the Constitution the fed is limited to gold and silver as legal tender.)
Stay on point, son. You assert the Constitution prohibits it, I said it doesn't. Please cite in the Constitution where the feds (not the States) are prohibited from issuing paper currency, or Supreme Court cases where they say as much. No more unrelated ramblings, nor any "what they really meant was" - specific Constitutional clause, Supreme Court rulings or you're just some random guy wildly ranting on the internet about their own convenient personal interpretation of what the Constitution means, and I'm getting tired of that garbage.
@@NorthernKitty Absolutely a Straw a man.
You responded to a part of the post, while ignoring the rest of the post.
Thus, actively taking it out of context.
When further clarified on the part you actively ignored.
Which was most of the original post, mind you.
You then ignored it a second time.
So, 100% strawman.
--
If that isn't a straw man by definition.
Then it would be Legitimate to say you 100% admit I am right in your last post, by the exact same methods and logic.
Mainly, because your last post said,
"according to the constitution the only legally guaranteed tender, in America, is gold or silver."
If I was to actively ignore all of the context of that statement.
In the Exact same manner you did, for my original post, and the post that post is responding to.
Then it would be you agree.
Only in the context of the rest of the post does it not mean that you agree, and instead contest my points.
Do you not see the flaw in your entire logic until now given that is exactly what you have done this entire time?
--
Also, I already addressed the only actual point you made in your post that was in any way legitimate, in my reply.
Namely, the supreme court rulings.
Nixon later ignored them, and acted in direct opposition to them.
Thus, making the current system unlawful.
He was even found guilty of those crimes, and others as well.
He did the same for the documents that allowed for the founding of the Federal Reserve, and issuance of paper currency, and by the constitution as well, in this process.
--
But hey, You would already have been aware of all of this if you were not actively ignoring it to make a straw man instead.
Mainly, because all of this was already explained and said in the prior 2 posts, in much greater detail.
With the only point you made that was in any way legitimate already countered completely.
--
When the court rules that me having a bond fire in my yard, isn't lighting your house on fire, as long as it is kept to the firepit in my yard, when you take me to court.
That is no longer the case after I take a burning stick out of the bond fire and actually light your house on fire.
--
You clearly are either malicious and dishonest, or an idiot who lacks all understanding of legality, History, The Economy, Logic on the level of a 10 year old, and may well be illiterate as well.
This is based wholly on your own posts in responses to mine.
I would advise you be a more reasonable person if you wish not to look like a complete idiot in the future.
I was on vacation with my family when I was a kid and my parents stopped at the bank to pick up cash to pay for stuff like a fan boat rental and whatever. The bank gave them hundred-dollar bills and all of them turned out to be phony, but the only person who recognized it was the guy at the rental place. He was nice enough about it and realized that my folks weren't trying to scam him, so he didn't call the police. Our next stop on that vacation was to the bank - and then the police got involved. lol
If I go into one of those places with signs saying "no bills bigger than $20 accepted", I will first ASK if my 50s or 100s are acceptable for a purchase approaching that. Say, $45 for gasoline with a 50 or a 100 bill for 85 in groceries or restaurant takeway. If okay, then I shop there. If still "no" I leave. I will NOT force the issue with the counterman because he is just a worker and can get fired by a boss who is strict.
Many years ago i was running a construction jobsite, and told my guys i would buy lunch if we could wrap up that Friday. I took my paycheck to a bank a few doors from the jobsite to cash it. Before everybody had Debit card/machined. Told the lady i wanted nothing larger than a $20. ( another story about trying to pay $146 gas purchase using a$100bill). So i walked out of the bank to a pizza shop in the same parking lot and ordered 8 pizzas. I proceeded to peel off $20 bills to pay for my pizzas. The cashier began running them through a counterfeit detecting machine which proceeded to kick out 8 of 34 . So while waiting on my pizzas i walked back to the bank, explained to the cashier the situation. She brought over the manager who told me " all i can do is turn them over to the FBI to be sure, but i can't give you your money back. I regret to this day that i was a very loyal employee and told her " never mind, i will use them for buying gas". ( still mad over the $100bill incident). Later i thought, who better to pass counterfeit money than that snotty bank manager.
@@genegene3348 I knew stores could withhold the counterfeit if given and detected, and retail can’t give money back. But a bank? A bank that didn’t detect counterfeit sounds strange, plus taking your pay, seems like they owed you money. It would be the person who gave counterfeit to the bank would have lost it if detected-- guilty or incompetent victim….,
Back in 2010 I got a fake $20 from an ATM. I called the local Sheriff, and he confirmed it was fake, gave it back and told me to take the $20, the receipt, and the report # to Bank of America, the ATM owner and get my money back. He said that happens all the time, and people pass fake money without knowing it. He said I'd only break the law if I tried to use it, now knowing it was fake.
Diminution - the act, process, or an instance of becoming gradually less (as in size or importance). So when coins were actually made of rare metals (like gold & silver), some people would shave off edges or "thin" the coins
And that's why dimes and quarters have those ridges along the edge of the coin. They used to be made from silver and you could easily tell if someone had tried to shave some silver from the edge
Back when I was a kid, I knew a guy who owed another guy a debt. He tried to pay it off in cash. The debt was on a payment plan and guy #1 was trying to pay it off. Guy#2 refused the cash payoff. A Judge ruled the debt paid because guy #2 had refused cash.
Lots of people tell that story. Nobody ever has a citation.
Some 30 years ago I was a retailer, and once in a while a dissatisfied customer would come to our office with a wheel barrel full of pennies. I would show them on a one dollar bill where it says Legal tender for all debts public and private. Then I would ask him to go through his pennies and show me one that had that statement. A little bit of a ruse but It always ended the argument.
Or you could have just told them to get the fuck out of your store before you called the cops.
I actually looked this up when my wife told me that a Cafe in my area didn't accept cash.
I had never heard of that. I figured that any place open to the public was obligated to take legal tender.
But nope.
I just hate the arbitrary double standards.
I agree that a private business should be allowed to do what they want, but obviously, they can't allow smoking. Not even in a bar, which is insane to me. I'm not a smoker, just trying to be consistent.
So personally, I believe they should be able to do what they want, even though I don't agree with them not accepting cash. But if that's the case, they should be able to allow smoking if they want and anything else they want as long as the underlying issue is legal.
Good point but a tough issue. Smoke don't stay in your wallet. The public often ends up paying for the cancer that can result from lots of exposure. So not quite the same.
And I think businesses should accept cash, too, but I'd be fine just taxing non-cash businesses more. We could call it an "inconvenience tax." At the very least, they should be required to have prominent signage.
The question, did she owe the cafe?
@x--. Anytime one creates an analogy, it can never be the same.
While it's true they are separate issues, people can choose whether or not they support the business.
If someone is worried about cancer, then they don't have to enter/support the establishment. The same as to business that doesn't accept cash. It may not be the best business practice, but they should have the freedom to do it.
The point I was trying to make is, either let capitalism police itself.
Or be consistent with the freedom that should inherently come with private business ownership.
@timwood225 We don't eat there out of principle. But if I had to guess, they wouldn't give us an opportunity to "owe" them.
If we were blindsided by their policy, we would likely pay with it via cc as per usual and simply not return.
@@x--.All second hand smoke research has been debunked.
Here in Colorado the legislature passed a bill HR1048 that requires businesses to accept cash, unless it's a business that has no physical personal on property. Things such as do it yourself car washes, some laundry mats and a few other exceptions.
CHEERS from Colorado
He is correct on this, remember at the end of the day the federal reserve note is " Fiat" currency. It has no backing behind it. A long time ago, during the days of Woodrow Wilson, they gave control of the money supply to a cartel of private bankers. So today instead of gold or silver notes we have Federal reserve notes. Which is a central bank currency.
Back in the late 70s, I worked in a bank in Yakima, WA. National Geographic had an issue which had a full sized $100 Travelers Check on it's back cover. Someone there gathered many copies of that issue, cut out the "checks", pasted white paper on the reverse side and then passed the phoney $100 checks around town to various merchants during a weekend. No, the "checks" didn't "feel like" regular checks, or even "look "right when examined closely. But a large number were accepted by store clerks because National Geographic did not print any disclaimer of actual value on the advertisement. We discovered these "checks" when several of our commercial customers deposited them on Monday.
I bet that was an utter crap show on Monday. lol
Dude, I like a lawyer with common sense....hard to find these days.
Good job
No money in it.
Massachusetts Part III, Title IV, Chapter 255D, Section 10A: "No retail establishment offering goods and services for sale shall discriminate against a cash buyer by requiring the use of credit by a buyer in order to purchase such goods and services. All such retail establishments must accept legal tender when offered as payment by the buyer."
That is a state law, and is not a federal law. So in the state of Massachusetts then yes all transactions must include cash as an option, but in a state where a similar law does not exist then no cash is not required as the fall back is to federal law.
Does this also apply in Virginia?
This law does not strictly require cash be always immediately be accepted at face value, it only prevents a business from only accepting credit. In particular, it doesn't prohibit a business requiring debit cards or cheques or barter or the currency of a different country be used to pay (all of which are not credit). It also doesn't prohibit a business from instituting reasonable policies aimed at reducing risks (like only accepting cash when the sun is out, only accepting small bills, or only accepting the actual money being handed over in a secure location and time of the sellers' choice). It also doesn't prohibit cash handling fees.
It was aimed at car dealerships and real estate brokers who had shady arrangements with banks who offered loans, requiring buyers to take out a loan for large purchases from the bank which gave a kickback to the business.
In short, the law doesn't require a business to increase the amount of risk it is willing to accept in any way. It only basically imposes the obligation, really, to be willing to come to a compromise with someone who only wants to pay cash.
For example, a business would be perfectly within the bounds of the law to say "OK, I'll accept cash, but I'll only hand over the ownership of the product when I receive the cash, and I'll only accept the cash in the local bank or police station between 9am and 10am on Monday morning, after we've both counted it in view of a camera - for my own security. "
If the item you are arguing over is a loaf of bread, then it's sort of not worth it.
I thought I remembered from my childhood (back in the 70's) a case where it was ruled that cash could not be refused as payment. From my memory, here in South Carolina, we used to have a grocery store where you could pay your utility bills. Most everyone paid by check. The story as I recall was that someone wanted to pay by cash, but was refused. It went to court, where it was ruled that cash had to be accepted. However, when I tried to look this up, all I found was a bill, H.3694, introduced on 1/12/2023, stating:
"Any establishment that holds a retail license to do business in this State must accept cash payments for transactions."
This is still a bill, so my memory must have been wrong, but it may be that soon, businesses will not be able to refuse cash payments in SC.
I was working in Calgary, Alberta at a Tim Horton's when a customer came in and paid with an obviously fake $20 Canadian bill. My coworker could immediately tell it was fake, but the customer pulled the one bill out of a stack of at least $1,000 in 20 dollar bills. If he was carrying $1,000 of possibly counterfeit bills, he was probably carrying something else. So, out of safety we accepted the bill, then called the police afterwards. The next day, after our boss met with the police and provided the video to the police, me and my coworker were reamed out for not passing off the bill to the next customer. We were told if we did that again, we were fired. I quit shortly after that.
Another note about the security camera and video the Timmies had... it was a $20,000 multi-camera system specifically developed to track money coming into and leaving the store. Down to the point where it kept track of the amounts in each hand, what's in the tills, and whats in the hands. The video of the money was so crisp that you could see the $20 bill in question, and through the video you can tell it was fake... The system was so in tuned with Canadian Currency and tracking money that they police could not obtain a usable image of the guy that passed off the bill. So, basically, the only thing the cameras were good for was to make sure employees didn't steal money.
I'm a manager of a fast food place, my boss also told me to pass along fake bills that come in.. he loses money when I turn the fakes in, so. ☹️
@@barowt The only problem is that is a felony in Canada. If I know it's a fake and pass it off, I can be found guilty and be imprisoned for up to 5 years... because I knew it was fake... and trust me, you could tell it was fake. But, when the guy pulls out about $1,000 worth of fake bills, you don't confront them... if he's got that much counterfeit, it's also probably carrying something else to protect that cash.
@@RealCyclops Except that it isn't cash. Only the official counterfeit is cash.
MA, RI and NJ have laws that require businesses to take cash.
MA: General Law - Part III, Title IV, Chapter 255D, Section 10A
RI Gen L § 6-13.1-30 (2019)
N.J. Stat. § 56:8-2.33
Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Idaho, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island all have some form of law requiring that retailers accept cash.
Very cool. I'd like to see where that is written. Thanks.
@@bicyclist2 Very cool. We look forward to you getting off your ass and doing your own research. After all the hard part is done....
@@I_Am_Your_Problem "We look forward to you getting off your ass and doing your own research." Translation: I'm too f-ing lazy to do the research so just accept my claim without evidence. Let ME introduce you to Hitchen's Law: That which is asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence." So, I_Am_Your_Problem, you are dismissed along with your claim until YOU provide the evidence.
@Steve Lehto I did as you suggested and "poked" around a little. There are qutie a few states that require you to accept cash, such as Idaho, Mississippi, North Dakota, Colorado and Michigan. (but not TN where I live) This was within just a few minutes, so I'm sure I could find more (and of course Professor Google isn't always right either) Thanks for the info, because I was under the impression that it was required everywhere. Good video.
Dimunition of currency was relevant when coins were made of silver. They could shave silver from the coin and still go spend it. That's why dimes, quarters, dollars& half dollars are ridged around the edges...to reveal shaving.
Historically this was called “clipping” after the way the irregularly shaped coins of ancient times had excess metal removed down to the correct weight - by clipping. So, filing and scraping was still called “clipping.”
I had this happen at a restaurant. Nothing was posted at the business. No signs, nothing on the menu etc... I told them CA$H or nothing. They said that they would call the police if I failed to pay. I told them to call, that I would wait for them. They decided to let me leave. When other customers saw this, they did the same too.
_They didn't take your cash?_ That's some crazy talk.
This is one instance in which I would side with you in a court of law. If a business doesn't want to accept cash for transactions, that's fine, but they must indicate "no cash accepted" or a similar message on some type of sign that's easily visible to the public. The fact that this business didn't do that means their "right to refuse service" does not apply this time and they must face legal ramifications for deceptive business practices.
I have a car wash in my area will only take cards, I drove out to another car wash.
As others have pointed out below, there are states that require businesses to accept cash - laws have been passed since this video was published. Oregon and Massachusetts are two.
So the statement written on paper currency "This note is legal currency for all debts public and private" is not worth the paper it's written on.
It doesn't mean what you think it means.
@@eddarby469 The statement is 'legal tender for all debts...'
Tender is an offer of payment.
Currency is used to represent money through paper, coin, or other objects).
@@PCFLSZ Well, it seems like you're telling me that English doesn't mean what it says.
So what does the statement mean? How should we understand the meaning of the statement?
@@eddarby469When you present cash, you are tendering an offer to pay with paper currency. The recipient is not required to accept your offer (excepting state and local laws that require acceptance).
@@eddarby469 You quoted the words on the bill incorrectly, I didn't change any definitions.
When you present cash, you are making an offer to pay (tender) with paper federal reserve notes (currency). No entity or person is required to accept your offer to pay in cash unless it is a government body or a state/local law mandates such.
In the early eighties during a driver's Ed class, we had to cross a toll bridge. Because of how it worked, the kids had to pay the buck fifty. We had five cents with the change when we crossed and the toll attendant had a cow, saying she would not accept pennies. Well, or US Government and Civics teacher was also the driver's Ed teacher. He informed her as a government agent she was required to. We were allowed to go to a mini mart during our training so we could get 15o pennies. We held up traffic as he made her count them all on the way back through. It was a civics lesson I won't soon forget.
What was the lesson, how to induce road rage in others? How to selfishly delay innocent people just trying to go about their day to prove some sort of point?
@@flamingsickle The lesson was, I think, for us. Although businesses can set their own policy, the government must accept currency. Please note, it was a slow traffic day and few people were delayed.
Not in Philly. They banned the Cashless transactions.
A lot of food shops at the mall don’t even have cashiers, just a tablet and car reader.. ring yourself up, makes it easier to skip the tip..
I went to a C-Store and when l tried to pay with a $50. They said that they had to copy my photo I.D. I told them keep their goods and left.
I remember back in the 1960s in GA a man tried to pay a debt with a check. He was cursed at and was told he had to pay the debt in cash. He later returned with a pickup loaded down with coins. The man who insisted on cash accepted the coins as payment as everyone there was under the impression that if legal tender was rejected for payment of a debt it would void the debt. I often wonder if that law ever existed and if so what happened to it.
Very true about using real money on film. I was on location of a rom-com film in the mid 80's and there was a scene where the lead actress hits a big jackpot on a jumbo slot machine. Bells go off and money flies through the air.
The production used $45,000 worth of real $5 bills. I know this because at the end of the night I helped the assistant director and pa's count and stack all of it.
I couldn't stand to look at another $5 bill for weeks afterwards 😆
I knew a guy when we were young that copied some doller bills and put them through a laundry matt bill changer. I think he got 5 or 10 bucks worth of quarters. He, shortly thereafter, enlisted in the service and left town. The Feds came and found him several years later at his duty station and held him accountable for counterfeiting money.
Conterfit story: I worked in a casino back in the 90’s and my Floor guy was fairly new, nervous and kind of a jerk. It was a really busy weekend night on a crap game. I hand in a $100 bill to the Boxman and lean over and say that they may want to check that bill out. I was completely messing with them, as far as I could tell, it’s a legit bill. The Boxman looks at it and calls the Floor over. I’m chuckling to myself as he’s taking this way too seriously. I forget about it and contiune on, the joke has been played. Sometime later security comes over and has the guy who handed me the bill step away from the game. Turns out it really was a bad bill. The best part was, the guy says he got the bill from the cash cage. They run back the video and sure enough, the casino was passing bad bills to the customers. At this point I just shut up and deal.
😂😂😂😂
If I remember correctly the stuff about altering coins was from the days when most coins were made from a higher percentage of gold and silver. People would shave off some of the metal from the edges of the coins. They would then save up the shavings to sell for the gold or silver. That is also why most coins now have a textured edge so as to make it harder to shave the edges without it being noticeable.
That was one of the reasons. Really useless coin collector trivia: In the 1960s there was a coin shortage (first in the US, then a couple of years later in Canada) as silver coins were pulled from circulation by people who realized that the silver was worth more than the coin's face value. In 1968, the Philadelphia mint used some of its excess capacity to mint some of the 1968 dimes for Canada. You can tell which coins were produced in Philly vs. Ottowa because the reeding on the edge was shaped differently.
The metal used in coins is worthless. Maybe they did that during the Roman empire, but we are not living in the Roman empire. No one would do that in the modern world.
@@Tugela60 True, but it's still done partly for tradition, and partly to help the blind distinguish between things like a cent and a dime.
@@Tugela60 Please do some research, early coins in the U.S were made primarily from silver, gold and copper. They even had arrangements were citizens could bring their own gold, silver and copper to the mints to be made into coins. Silver was still being used for coins up into the 1960's. Silver dollars weren't called that just because of their color - they use to actually be made from silver. I use to be into coin collecting and still own a couple of the old silver dollars and silver dimes. While the metal in coins now do not contain much value they still out of tradition retain the ridges along the sides that were put there back when the did, As I stated above the ridges were added back when the coins contain valuable metals to discourage filing the edges down to obtain the metal for selling separately. The US government to further discourage this they even later went as far as making it illegal for the common citizens to own gold except as jewelry. This ban was only removed after gold was no longer used in common coins.
@@rhondaflesher8313 Do some research yourself. Coins in circulation are made from cheap metal, the milling around them is for decorative purposes, NOT because people are filing them. There is no point.
What about the statement ON the currency that says "This note is legal tender for all debts PUBLIC and PRIVATE."
Read my comment. If You purchase something from someone it is a contract contracts require both parties to consent. It’s not a one way street…who cares if you have cash. It’s up to the seller to agree.
@@jamesm.3967 I agree with that premise. Unfortunately, there's the aspect of "enforceability" which the government(s) provide conditions under which they will support a side in a dispute. My understanding is that Legal Tender payment is enforceable.
@@KutWrite If you have a debt then yes, payment in USD is required to be accepted so long as it is reasonable. (you couldn't pay in nitroglycerine soaked pennies in a mason jar for example) Debts are different from a voluntary exchange. If someone doesn't want to accept your cash then no contract is made and no debt is made.
Wow, I certainly learned several things from this one. Thank you for clearing that up.
I once had a store owner refuse to take 4 Sacagawea dollars that I had for a $4 item. He said: "I don't take that sh**, go get me something better." I had a lot of Sacagawea dollars because the vending machine at work gave them as change. That said, I stopped shopping at that store.
I've never even seen one of those before.
Around 1979 they issued the Susan B. Anthony dollar which was about the same size and appearance as a quarter. When we used to go to the board walk to play games at AstroWorld you could occasionally put a dollar in the change machine and get four Susan B. Anthonys as change. Eventually, vending machine tolerances caught up and could tell the difference between a Susan B and a quarter but I think one of the reasons they stopped making them is that people were mistaking them for quarters too. I also think it is the reason that the Sacagawea dollar was gold in color. I believe its dimensions are the same as the Susan B. Anthony dollar.
@@Brirend It was golden colored when new but turned dull like an old cent after circulating for a while.
Canada found that dollar coins would not circulate while “paper” “dollars” were in circulation. Britain found the same. £1 coins would not circulate until £1 bills were gone.
If that's true that they don't have to accept it then they should be forced to do a credit payment and not be allowed to charge you fees for using credit because they're forcing you to use credit You don't have to shop there but if you are and they won't take your cash but yet they charge you like $8 to use a credit card or $4 or $3 what is there something that says that they can't do that if they do not accept cash?
General Laws of Massachusetts, Part III, Title IV, Chapter 255D, Section 10A. No retail establishment offering goods and services for sale shall discriminate against a cash buyer by requiring the use of credit by a buyer in order to purchase such goods and services. All such retail establishments must accept legal tender when offered as payment by the buyer.
They are doing this at sport's venues and concerts now. I think the reason for this is the venue gets 10% of total sales. The venue is afraid that they will not get their 10% if people pay with cash. At the soccer stadium across the street Geodis Stadium a hotdog, cup of fries, and a bottle of water is $30 plus tax. 10% ads up quick. They want to make sure they get it.
That creates a potentially abusive situation, a cycle of "You owe me" "Here is what I owe you." "I don't accept cash." "wtf it's money" "I don't care, now pay me for real" "This is all I've got" "well you owe me"
The code he sited states that its legal tender for debts, a shop doesn't have to accept your legal tender if its selling you something but it must accept it if its being used to pay a debt. If you got caught up in a situation where someone is trying to use this as a loop hole to make you owe more because you owe someone a debt and they won't take cash for it you may be within your legal right to take them to court and force them into taking cash as repayment of the debt thought I would check with a local lawyer before filling this type of case.
@@Willcol100 Actually you be within your legal rights ignore him if he doesn't accept because it is a form of payment for debts and he clearly refuses to be paid I would call the cops which people forget that way you can get it on record that he doesn't want to be paid
I think the guy that challenged you in your childhood, indicating you just committed a felony by smashing coins on the train track, was the same guy that indicated you committed a felony by holding currency in front of the camera. All these years later, and he is still tormenting you.
His M.O. is obviously the same!
The "felony" you risked committing was wrecking the train or accidentally hurting someone with flying debris. It's similar to a guy hunting and firing over a hill and hitting someone/something out of sight even if the bullet passed through an animal to be harvested. There was also the small matter of trespassing. Some laws are so conditional that they are rarely applicable or not well known. It is also questionable how a law will be applied. Truly an "accident"? Or "negligence" by someone "we" want to "punish/harrass"? The law can be a type of weapon. Use caution. English doesn't help matters. "My three favorite things are eating my family and not using commas". Good day. Enjoy your videos.
the federal reserve is not an arbiter of law. citing it when referencing what is "legal" is a logical fallacy. the federal reserve is also not a public institution but a private bank. it also is illegitimate and anti-constitutional.
100% Nonsense & pure ignorance
@@richarddecredico6098You just described yourself and your own comment.
There are many places that feel if they accept cash they could be robbed. For example, if you rent a storage unit, it's safer for them to accept other payments. If you're a senior living in a senior community such as a mobile home part, it is much safer to accept electronic payments. Since this is America I believe the business owner has full authority as to what they will accept as payment.
Cash is king. a business that don't accept cash is a business that don't want to make money as much.
Not exactly, I never carry cash and I don't go to places that don't accept debit cards (very few and far between). It's a lot more convenient to simply swipe or insert my card than to fumble over a bunch of loose change and ragged old bills that have probably been in a strippers butt crack.
At certain stores, at certain times of day (like NIGHT), that have limited tills, you should know better than to leave yourself a hundred as your only option. It's akin to running your gas-tank down to fumes and getting in a pinch. You need a plan B, even a C. It doesn't matter if the small store has cashed it for you before. It could've just been shift change.
"Sorry, where were you 5 minutes ago? I just dropped all the money". You can't imagine how much that happens like Murphy's Law. You wait and wait for that last-minute hundred, then make your drop and there they are! It's downright spooky.
You buy a pack of Backwoods with a hundred (and that's a huge red flag to look real hard at that bill), what you need to understand, is that when I give you $95 & something back, my $200 drawer is $95 lighter. There's nothing I can do with that hundred but admire it or drop it. It's Schroedinger's hundred - it's there, yet it isn't there. Can't trade it back for anything unless someone comes in and says "I need to get rid of all these twenties". I don't have a magic machine that can dispense more bills. I have a finite till. No you won't take smaller bills. That's the entire point. When I run out of smaller bills, I'm out of business until morning.
People like to try & hang it on you and make a fuss over "customer service". What do you want me to do? You should've known better.
It is known as Legal tender, if a business won't take my paper money, I'm going else where!
You tell 'em, little buddy!
I have an opposite story. Decades ago it was common for businesses to not take credit or debit cards. We've still got one leftover business in my area that refuses credit or debit cards. I only found out because I had to go in to the Michigan SOS office to renew my driver's license, and there was about an hour and a half wait. I decided to go to the hair salon in the same strip mall where the SOS is located, and get my hair washed and cut. After it was sunny done, I pulled out my debit card to pay, and was told they only take cash or check. I don't think I had my checkbook on me, because I had moved and couldn't find the box with my refill checks (still haven't found them -- ended up ordering a whole nother batch). Or maybe I had one check left and it was already written out to the SOS. The hairstylist told me that the Kroger at the other end of the strip mall has an ATM, so I ran down there to get the cash to pay for my haircut. And after all that, I still had another half hour wait before I was called to get my license and tabs taken care of.
Steve! I found that SCOTA ruling making it OK to drive w/o a license! But...sorry! I don't accept cash. JUST KIDDING!
A few years ago I went to a restaurant with my wife for dinner (go figure). At the end of the meal I go to pay and I'm told the policy is to not accept cash. I asked where that is posted in the restaurant. He said it's not posted anywhere as "Everybody" knows that's his policy. I explained I was not carrying credit cards. He called the police. I explained that the restaurant has not posted anywhere that they do not accept cash for meals so there is no way for somebody to know their policy before they eat there. Police looked at the owner and told him he was out of luck. Food wasn't that good anyway, free or not.
Thank God the police had some sense in this case.
8:00 that applies to the old days where people would shave off the edge of the coins in order to cash in the silver shavings and then also cash in the coin. (noe the coins have ridges on them to help prevent that) Also, you can't rip bills in half and then try to turn in one have of the bill at a time in an attempt to double their money.
The thing that gets me is that the DMVs near me will not accept cash, but only cheque or money orders. Yes, a government agency accepting something from a private company as payment, but _not_ its own currency.
The Federal Reserve is not a governmental institution, but a private one.
That way the 'honest' underpaid DMV employees can't steal any cash.
This girl was at the school in the cafeteria and after getting her food she gave the attendant a 2 dollars bill, and the attendant called the Secret Service. She thought the 2 dollar was counterfeit but was wrong.
I remember when they were issued. We kept one just to have it.
@@arribaficationwineho32 you can still get all you want at most any bank. Brand new ones, never circulated. I have a customer, an older man, who will buy a bundle at a time (I think they come in bundles of 50 = $100), and give them out to little kids and other people he interacts with purely as a friendly, grandfatherly gesture. I carried the one he gave me in my wallet for a long time, but when my grandson was born I put it in his piggy bank. Now when I come across them I buy them for that purpose.
Probably until about five years or so ago, the brand new ones I would see were all printed in 1976. The newest I've seen are from the '90's. Have a great Sunday!
A friend of mine used to get them from the bank to give out as change as a gimmick. He would get customers who came in just to get the $2 bill.
I have lots of $2.00 bills. I use them as "tips for service" and give one to any birthday child as a possible keepsake
Credit/Debit Card companies charge the stores a1.5 to 5% charge, which the stores are passing to the customer now.
I thought there was some concept that went something like, if a business is trying to bill you for services after the fact but are not accepting your offer of cash that the results are really not your problem.
Like, you have a meal at a restaurant and at the end of that meal you get a bill, attempt to pay with cash, they refuse the cash, and then you go, "Oh well, I tried" and walk out. Situations like that.
Might be some random state thing somewhere though, IDK. I can't really think of how that would be translated into legalese.
Wouldn't refusing cash constitute refusal of payment?
Once, I filled my tank up with fuel, then went inside to pay, with cash, and they refused to accept it. I had bought over $40 in fuel and was trying to pay for it with a $50 bill. There was no sign on the pump, and this was a time when you could pump before paying.
In the end, I had to phone a police officer who told the clerk to either accept my legal tender, or I was free to leave without paying. Miraculously, my money was accepted.
It's legal tender for "all debts public or private " you were in debt to the gas station.
@@markvail2147 no, they are allowed to refuse large bills, if they have proper signage. Actually, they can refuse any type of payment, if they have the proper signage.
Laws in every state differ, but this store had every right to limit payment types, but they did not inform me before hand (proper signage), which is why they had to accept.
@@charlieodom9107 if you have a debt.they must accept your legal tender. If not come back next day with a smaller bill. ATMs give out $20 bills anyway. You need to go out of your way yo get a $100 anyway
@@charlieodom9107 just trying to buy a soda is not a debt,the soda can be put away and you can leave the store.
@@markvail2147 so, two points here: 1st, Where did soda come from? I bought fuel, which was already pumped into my vehicle. Kinda hard to put that back. 2nd, I did not have an ATM card at the time, nor did the station have an ATM machine. I was also paying with a $50 bill, not a $100. I didn't see the issue with paying for >$40 worth of anything with a $50 bill.
It is much easier to carry larger bills than smaller ones in a wallet. I really don't want to sit on my wallet full of $20 Bill's, when a few $100 bills would make more sense.
How about writing on or defacing currency? Fun Fact? Most cash is outside the country, upwards of 75%. Only a small amount is in the US. The US government has been pushing for decades to go 100% digital. As of now I believe both the one cent coin and nickels cost more to produce then their marked value. Always wondered if the recycling value is higher than spending them.
Research _'short snorters'_ of World War Two.
Didn't even know about "motion picture money" until I had some friends with a small business have had a big increase in people trying to pay for goods at conventions with it. They ended up getting a fancy bill counting machine to more quickly test ALL bills they're given vs having to examine and test with a pen every individual bill in a large stack of them. That was after they missed a couple and didn't know about it until the bank found it. They've lost enough money in un-caught fakes that it was worthwhile to buy a fairly high end counting machine that is very picky about testing bills.
I got passed a fake $100 - at a wells fargo not long ago.
If it wernt for the fact I was a cop, I'd have been stuck with it.
Got a fake 20 out of a bank atm before too.
What's even more strange is that they were fairly obvious, they should have been able to spot the difference of the one bill that was just slightly off from the rest.
When did they remove the phrase "...public and private" from the debts statement.
Back in the 80's I saw a statement from the Treasury Department saying that currency bills must be accepted for debts but sales are not debts, rather they are transactions. If there is no agreement to pay in the future, there is no debt. Cash money on the barrelhead is not a debt payment.
Well if you eat at a restaurant you are billed so they have to accept it. Unless clearly stated cash not accepted, which is why you see no credit cards or accept certain cards.
A little off topic but, I've always wanted to get one of those markers used to determine fake money, buy something from Wal-Mart for $0.99, and pay with a $100 bill, and when they mark it, watch me hold up the line while I mark $99 in change they give back, haha. That irritates me so bad, since those pens can only detect if the paper is counterfeit, not the denomination. A bleached $10, as you mention in your video, will pass this test.
I thought it was the ink being tested
@@johnrice1943 Nope. The pen reacts to starch, which is in most paper, but *not* in money. Look it up if you don't believe me.
As someone whose wife opened a retail business in 2021, I can tell you that Pennsylvania requires accepting cash. PA 73 P.S. § 204-1 "Cash Consumer Protection Act." (06/JUL/1984) requires all businesses accept cash. Our lawyer said she could have provided a "gift card" vending machine where customers could convert cash to gift-cards as a way to avoid having her staff (who have Intellectual or Developmental Disability), have to learn to handle cash. We ended up just working hard with the cashiers to properly handle cash...
Probably had to hire someone over 50 that could count out the change..
I drive a tour bus and go to many national parks. They do not except cash for the entrance fees. You must have a credit or debit card.
I was just thinking this myself, and that doesn't seem consistent with this video's information.
I use cash as a regular thing. When asked, "No-one ever stole my identity from a $5!"
Reminds me of a favorite Steven Wright joke (granted, they are all favorites, but still...)
When they asked George Washington for his i.d. did he just take out a quarter?
If a business refuses cash from me it will be the last time I enter that business.
in Massachusetts requiring businesses to accept cash is based on Chapter 151B, Section 3 of the Massachusetts General Laws. This law states that it is illegal for retail establishments to refuse to accept legal tender, including cash, as a form of payment. The Massachusetts Attorney General's Office has also emphasized that businesses must accept all forms of legal tender to ensure consumer protection and economic justice. New Jersey and Rhode Island have similar laws. San Fran and Philly have a law but not sure those laws are legal per your description.