subject
Business, 22.07.2019 17:40 depinedainstcom

For 20 years, art’s flower shop relied almost exclusively on advertising in the yellow pages to bring business to its shop in a small west virginia town. one year, the yellow pages printer accidentally did not print art’s ad, and art’s suffered an enormous drop in business. art’s sued for negligence and won a judgment of $50,000 from the jury, but the printing company appealed, claiming that under an exculpatory clause in the contract, the company could not be liable to art’s for more than the cost of the ad, about $910. art’s claimed that the exculpatory clause was unconscionable. rule.

ansver
Answers: 2

Other questions on the subject: Business

image
Business, 22.06.2019 10:30, cocoapop
You meet that special person and get married. amazingly your spouse has exactly the same income you do 47,810. if your tax status is now married filing jointly what is your tax liability
Answers: 2
image
Business, 22.06.2019 13:00, shayneseaton
Reliability and validity reliability and validity are two important considerations that must be made with any type of data collection. reliability refers to the ability to consistently produce a given result. in the context of psychological research, this would mean that any instruments or tools used to collect data do so in consistent, reproducible ways. unfortunately, being consistent in measurement does not necessarily mean that you have measured something correctly. to illustrate this concept, consider a kitchen scale that would be used to measure the weight of cereal that you eat in the morning. if the scale is not properly calibrated, it may consistently under- or overestimate the amount of cereal that’s being measured. while the scale is highly reliable in producing consistent results (e. g., the same amount of cereal poured onto the scale produces the same reading each time), those results are incorrect. this is where validity comes into play. validity refers to the extent to which a given instrument or tool accurately measures what it’s supposed to measure. while any valid measure is by necessity reliable, the reverse is not necessarily true. researchers strive to use instruments that are both highly reliable and valid.
Answers: 1
image
Business, 22.06.2019 15:10, emilee30
You want to have $80,000 in your savings account 11 years from now, and you’re prepared to make equal annual deposits into the account at the end of each year. if the account pays 6.30 percent interest, what amount must you deposit each year? (do not round intermediate calculations and round your answer to 2 decimal places, e. g., 32.16.)
Answers: 1
image
Business, 22.06.2019 19:00, jediDR
Tri fecta, a partnership, had revenues of $369,000 in its first year of operations. the partnership has not collected on $45,000 of its sales and still owes $39,500 on $155,000 of merchandise it purchased. there was no inventory on hand at the end of the year. the partnership paid $27,000 in salaries. the partners invested $48,000 in the business and $23,000 was borrowed on a five-year note. the partnership paid $2,070 in interest that was the amount owed for the year and paid $9,500 for a two-year insurance policy on the first day of business. compute net income for the first year for tri fecta.
Answers: 2
You know the right answer?
For 20 years, art’s flower shop relied almost exclusively on advertising in the yellow pages to brin...

Questions in other subjects:

Konu
Biology, 23.08.2019 20:30