Very likely true, actually.Liar Revealed wrote: ↑Mon Feb 13, 2023 9:28 pmtells me she refuses to bring the pizza up to my apartment. Claims that her manager told her she's not allowed to enter the building. Very annoying.
It's shared private property, so technically she may just be prohibited to enter the building.
You've never worked a proper job, so let me clear that confusion up.
She got some fat ream of papers when she took the job of general rules to obey. Especially when shit is concerning private property, those rules are very blanket in nature so the company has maximum deniability.
For anything transport related you can bet your ass that somewhere in there it states that they are not to trespass onto private property, unless the sole owner has expressly said otherwise.
You aren't the sole owner of that apartment complex, thus, technically speaking, you can't give that permit to the premises.
Now, that's in those terms for shit like two houses sharing a yard. You drive onto the yard, turn on a spot, the gravel is disturbed or you slightly drove over a bit of lawn. The owner of the house that ordered the pizza doesn't mind, his anal neighbour minds very much.
Nominal damage has been incurred. Domino's has to pay the damages that are, of course, greatly exaggerated.
So a clause is put into the contract to make it the delivery person's sole fault. Thus Domino's can tell the insurance that regulates damages that they have informed the employee. Just in case any real damage is ever done, like a lantern toppled over of a car hit, so they can deflect the guilt.
Do people in apartments care? No.
Will the dude care? No.
But is she technically correct? Likely.
Did she only care and then ask her manager because she is a fat, lazy bitch? You betcha!
But that manager will very likely tell you that she is entirely correct.
It's not in the rules for that specific case but it is in the rules broadly and she is likely in the right so your complaint will be ineffective.