Oh **** I just bought it tread

I bought a second Kemper :eek::oops:



I wanted to leave it at practice along with the Kabinet Klone I had made so I wouldn't be constantly transporting/packing/unpacking my rig.
Just in time for my lead player to quit the band.


Did I give you permission to make the same mistake twice??

"He doesn't need your permission, Les. He gets to choose for himself what he wants to play through."

"But..."

"No buts."

"If it blows up, does he get hoisted on his own petard?"

"Probably not."

"OK, but what if they both blow up, right? Right?" Huh? Amiright or what?" :)
 
I told my wife this: I'm swearing off new gear forever.

"How long's forever?"

"I dunno. A very long time."

"Like, a week?"

"Heavens, no."

"Two weeks?"

"More like at least three weeks, maybe even a month."

"When did you tell her this?"

"About three weeks ago."

":rolleyes:"
 
Did I give you permission to make the same mistake twice??

"He doesn't need your permission, Les. He gets to choose for himself what he wants to play through."

"But..."

"No buts."

"If it blows up, does he get hoisted on his own petard?"

"Probably not."

"OK, but what if they both blow up, right? Right?" Huh? Amiright or what?" :)
Fortunately I have yet to load the petard rig into the thing. Now I don't think I will.
Disaster avoided!:p
 
I told my wife this: I'm swearing off new gear forever.

"How long's forever?"

"I dunno. A very long time."

"Like, a week?"

"Heavens, no."

"Two weeks?"

"More like at least three weeks, maybe even a month."

"When did you tell her this?"

"About three weeks ago."

":rolleyes:"
My wife made me sign a post-it note. Do you think that will hold up in court?
 
Drum roll please...

Maybe.

What I want to know is how you fit the terms of a contract on something as small as a pot-it note?
Short, Simple and Signed
QwDa7LY.jpg
 
Short, Simple and Signed
QwDa7LY.jpg

The contract doesn't specify what the consideration was. To be enforceable, a contract should state what the promise was on the other side to uphold the other party's end of the bargain. These mutual promises are called the 'consideration'.

I say you're off the hook.

Then again, it's been 30 years since I litigated a contract. I could be way off. Disclaimer: consult a lawyer who actually knows this stuff. ;)

Free advice:

Never appease an angry spouse by signing a post-it note.
 
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