On Sun, 2012-07-08 at 01:07 +0200, Carlos E. R. wrote:
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On 2012-07-08 00:45, Dirk Gently wrote:
I don't know how it is in Spain, but a bill in e-mail is only a convenience. It's not a legally enforceable demand for payment until it's delivered on paper.
Not here. A signed PDF is legally binding, the post simply announces or transports it.
As it is in Australia and most places in Europe, in fact, I do services with U.K. and U.S. companies that send me invoices in PDF, and even some companies that send invoices as HTML in email, in this country, that's legally binding.
And under our consumer protection laws, they have to send you a paper-mail account statement every month no matter how you pay (cash, check, credit card, online payment or electronic transfer).
Not here.
Nor here, nor in U.K or U.S. going by my above statement, or is the rule in U.S. only applicable for U.S. to U.S. residents? Who knows...