Comment by perl4ever

8 years ago

...you never know these days if you are talking to someone on the Internet who believes "code is law".

Judges, taken as a whole, tend to believe that law is law.

  • I had a similar situation where it was proven that law is law while contracting at nab, a bank in Australia, years ago.

    - When I first started, it took months to get me added to the project phase to bill my time.

    - When I was finally added, I couldn't bill it because that project phase was over

    - Then a few months to find a solution, then I was asked to bill to the new project phase

    - I couldn't bill my old time to the new project phase as it wasn't running in the time I first started.

    The bank kept promising they'd work out a way for me together compensated for the time. They continued to do this after I ended the contract.

    I kept chasing them, and they went quiet. Then they said they weren't paying me for the time I worked because I hadn't entered my time correctly, then blamed me for walking out the door before I'd been paid the money they owed.

    I called a lawyer. nab responded as above. The lawyer told nab that Australian law doesn't care about their billing system - mentioning the specific law helped.

    They paid all the money a week later. I should have asked for costs and interest too, but oh well.