mike_s
Contributor
I can see the shop owners point of view in not honoring previous gift certificates and classes. I might not agree with it but the old owner already took the money, new customers are showing up expecting to cash in on some goods/services. If the old owner was a poor record keeper, as many small business are, he might not have had any real way of letting the new owner know about liabilities and so they could not be considered in the purchase.
I can see if it's operated as a new business under a new name, etc....
but if it closed one day and opened the next with the same business name on the sign, it's implied that it's the same shop, just "under new management".
If they are implying they are the same shop, they should honor gift cards with their name on it.
In the perfect world, they should honor the stuff but technically what happened does not sound much different then if a Target purchased an old Walmart building. Target simply isn't going to honor the old gift cards.
Yeah.. but Target doesn't operate the old shop as a Walmart. They close it down, remodel and re-open with a new Target sign up front. It's pretty clear to everyone that the store is a different store with different product lines.
Another recent example of issues with this is Sharper Image, which recently filed bankruptcy. They won't honor gift cards with their own name on it anymore and consider anyone holding one of those cards to be a "debt creditor" in their bankruptcy filing. In order to get your money back you have to file a claim with the bankruptcy court....
Yet Sharper Image is still in business and still taking peoples money. So... just wrong that they do that.
Circuit City is going out of business and all their gift cards are about to be worthless also.... but they are at least allowing people to redeem them during their going out of business sale.