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00:00For whatever strange reason, you decided to give money to a man who told you that he did Bill Gates'
00:05cabinets, you didn't know.
00:06Right.
00:07He never finished the work.
00:09Excuses after excuses. My dog ate my teeth.
00:12How long do you think this project should have taken?
00:15Should have took whatever time it took.
00:16Now, that is the worst answer a contractor could ever give.
00:20It took you months.
00:21But people are waiting.
00:22I'll tell you what, Your Honor, you'd have walked that job if you had to do it.
00:26Did you really work on Bill Gates' cabinets?
00:28Now, on Tribunal Justice.
00:52Today's case was filed in Olympia, Washington.
00:56Your Honor, this is case 3009, Dethridge-Enloe v. Aello.
01:01Thank you, Cassandra.
01:02You're welcome. You may be seated.
01:04Ms. Dethridge and Mr. Enloe, you hired the defendant to build and install cabinets for a kitchen remodel.
01:11You paid him $10,000, and according to your complaint, he never finished the work.
01:16You're suing for the return of your $10,000 and the return of a garage door opener that you had
01:22given to him during the job that he never returned.
01:26Mr. Aello, you claim, according to your answer, that you do not owe the plaintiffs any money, that you did
01:31most of the work,
01:32and the reason the job was not finished was because they never gave you an opportunity to finish.
01:38Yes, sir.
01:38Okay. Let's start off with the plaintiffs. Tell us, how was it that you came to hire the defendant?
01:43Well, we met Donnie approximately a year prior to hiring him out at a local pub slash restaurant,
01:51and he was telling us about that he used to build cabinets and that he did, oh, what's the Microsoft
01:58guy's cabinets?
01:59Bill Gates, that he'd worked on those.
02:03Let's fast forward then to, according to your complaint, February of 2023. What happened?
02:08Just discussed with him about hiring him to build cabinets and the cupboards and the drawers,
02:15and he'd been out to the house and he did some measurements, and then he said, you know, $12,000
02:21at that time.
02:22Let me stop you for a second. When he came out to the house and took measurements, what did you
02:26say to him?
02:26We wanted crown molding. We wanted the cabinets the same way that they were.
02:33He was going to do the cupboards. He was going to put in the large drawers for pots and pans.
02:38And Brady and I discussed if we wanted to do it, went back and forth. It was, you know, a
02:43lot of money for us to do, $12,000, and then...
02:46Well, hold on. Just so we're all clear here, for whatever strange reason, you decided, as the homeowner,
02:52to give money to a man who told you that he did Bill Gates' cabinets, whether you know that to
02:57be true or false.
02:58You didn't know.
02:58Right, right.
02:59But you decided to spend your hard-earned money and not to get a contract, right?
03:03He didn't tell you, listen, I refuse to put anything in writing. He didn't tell that to you, right?
03:07No.
03:08No.
03:08Does that sound about right so far, Mr. Aiello?
03:10Yes.
03:10Okay. So, the payment schedule. Why don't we go through that quicker?
03:14Okay. So, his schedule, he wanted half up front.
03:18$6,000.
03:19$6,000 to buy the materials.
03:21Is that true?
03:22Yes.
03:23Good. Go on.
03:24And then the next payment would be when he was halfway completed.
03:28$3,000.
03:28Correct.
03:29Right.
03:29And then the final payment would be another $3,000.
03:33Well, according to your complaint, it was $3,500.
03:35The price went up because the inside of the panel where the wood is, it wasn't staining correctly.
03:41And so, we decided instead of plywood, we wanted real solid wood because it just wasn't staining.
03:48Okay. Stop.
03:48Mr. Aiello, as far as the payment schedule goes, was that about accurate?
03:52The payment schedule that I agreed in the beginning with them and we agreed was I would take half up
03:57front.
03:57$6,000.
03:58And then it was like right around $12,000 and I said once the boxes are built and in the
04:03shop that I would take another $3,000 and then once I installed them, I'd take the last payment.
04:09That's not true.
04:10Okay.
04:10I want to get to the start date and the end date because clearly in a regular contract, you would
04:14have had all this.
04:15Did he tell you or did you say when you wanted him to start and did he tell you about
04:19how long and when it was going to finish?
04:20Yes.
04:21So, he was going to start approximately a few weeks after we gave him the first $6,000 because he
04:28had some little jobs to complete.
04:30Is that right?
04:30We discussed it.
04:31I had a couple projects I needed to get done before I started.
04:34And this was in April of 2023, correct?
04:37Yeah.
04:37And I'm not sure about dates.
04:39My memory's not all that great on those things.
04:41Mr. Aiello, if you tell me your memory's not that great, then I'm going to rely 100% on what
04:46the plaintiffs are saying.
04:47On the dates and whatever they say, I'll agree with.
04:49You got it. So, let's go through proof of payment, okay?
04:52Mm-hmm.
04:52You had the first $6,000. Did you pay it?
04:55Yes.
04:56And did you receive it?
04:57Yes.
04:58Good. What about the second payment of $3,000?
05:00Did you pay it?
05:01Yes.
05:02Did you receive it?
05:02I did, but can I explain something?
05:04Sure.
05:05I went over and asked her for some more money before everything was built because they were going to paint
05:09everything gray in the beginning.
05:10So, I bought poplar and some other materials and did that.
05:13Then they changed it to this whitewash stain they wanted to do.
05:16So, I had to buy some other material to do that.
05:18So, I went over one day to ask them for like $1,000 just to hold me over and buy
05:22other material.
05:23And she'd already had the cashier's check made out for $3,000, gave it to me with a smile.
05:28And we were all happy and everybody was fine.
05:30Do you have any evidence of when you purchased the material for their project?
05:33I don't have it.
05:34I tried to.
05:36My brother-in-law's got a school furniture business and we buy materials.
05:40And I would have brought it, but it would have been so hard to line itemize what was his, what's
05:45mine.
05:46And I didn't want it to make it look like I'm trying to pull the wool over.
05:49Well, I get it.
05:50But you do understand that by not bringing anything, it looks like you're trying to pull the wool over.
05:53No, I'm just trying to shoot you straight.
05:55I know.
05:56I get it.
05:56I get it.
05:57So, let me ask you this.
05:59Did the defendant perform according to the terms of the contract?
06:03No.
06:04How?
06:04How did he not perform by not just the excuses after excuses of not showing up?
06:11I can't make it.
06:12You know, my dog ate my teeth.
06:14I have to go to the doctor.
06:15My girlfriend's having problems.
06:17We got half, half, half the project to me is half done.
06:20When you get a job that's half done and there's a pile of sticks sitting in the middle and you
06:26can't even put nothing together, and we still gave him the money.
06:29All right.
06:29Let's do this.
06:30Let's take a look at exhibit 01.
06:32Can you tell us what that is?
06:34That's my kitchen before the remodel.
06:36I've been there 20 years.
06:38And he was not changing the structure.
06:40He was just doing what specifically to the cabinets?
06:44All of the cabinets, boxes, everything were going to be torn out.
06:47But there was no change in the layout whatsoever.
06:50The layout stayed the same.
06:51Everything was torn out by my family.
06:53All right.
06:54What am I looking at here?
06:55So here you're looking at where the white melamine boxes.
07:01Underneath the countertop.
07:02Yeah, underneath the countertop.
07:03So I see that the countertops have been changed, correct?
07:05Yes.
07:06Yeah, we had no choice.
07:07He said that everything was going to be done to pick out our countertops, so we did.
07:12And they couldn't wait any longer on Donnie.
07:15I got it.
07:15And let's take a look at 06.
07:17All right.
07:18What am I looking at here?
07:18Like a little galley kitchen.
07:20So if you turn around, that's where our refrigerator and stove is.
07:23But the melamine boxes that are showing, the shelves that are in there, I text Donnie and
07:30asked for a piece of melamine that we already purchased because he was sick.
07:34So Brady could cut it so we could at least get shelves in there to put dishes back.
07:39No response whatsoever.
07:40All right.
07:41Thank you very much, Judge Acker.
07:43Did you really work on Bill Gates' cabinets?
07:47Coming up on Tribunal Justice.
07:50You told Judge Levy that you want to shoot him straight.
07:53I sometimes think while I was reading through this that you should be the leader of the gang
07:57that couldn't shoot straight.
08:03Tony Dethridge and boyfriend Brady Enloe are suing cabinetmaker Donnie Aiello for $10,000.
08:09They claim Donnie did shoddy work and never finished the job.
08:13But Donnie blames the plaintiffs for being difficult.
08:16And any incomplete work is all their fault.
08:19Did you really work on Bill Gates' cabinets?
08:22I actually built his outdoor kitchen in his beach house out in Hood Canal on the Puget Sound.
08:28How did he get in touch with you?
08:30I worked for a company at that time.
08:32Oh, so he actually reached out to the company.
08:34Yeah, the company.
08:35And you were the person at the company dispatch.
08:37Right, and I went out and worked on his project.
08:38You said some things at the outset, sir, that really make me curious about your defense.
08:42And one of them was that they kept changing their minds.
08:46Once my health got better, they didn't allow me to finish their kitchen.
08:49And then you said something even in a couple of paragraphs before that,
08:52that you didn't feel comfortable finishing the job because Ms. Dethridge was becoming a problem.
08:59You say to her husband, I can't finish it because your wife's becoming a problem.
09:02I said, I don't know if I'm going to get paid or not.
09:05And he came to the shop and I said, I feel like all these changes that I haven't charged you
09:10for
09:11and the other things, and we were being friendly, but it was getting difficult.
09:15And one day when I was putting all those cabinets in there,
09:18you saw those are all brand new cabinets that I built, all those.
09:21The only thing that's missing is the panels that go on them and doors and drawers.
09:24Let me ask you this.
09:25When did he complete that stage of work?
09:28Oh, my gosh, not until like September, October.
09:30You paid him in March, correct?
09:32Mm-hmm.
09:32You didn't start in April.
09:34In fact, in May, you said, sorry, I've got some family issues,
09:37some stuff with my partners come up.
09:40I have to be there.
09:41This is now two months after they made the first payment.
09:45Then in June, you were nursing the sore back.
09:48July, you say she's getting prickly.
09:50I'm not sure who wouldn't be getting prickly by that time.
09:53You had some other issues in August.
09:55She wants to know if you got anything done.
09:57In November, there were some health concerns, some heart problems or something.
10:02And again, I say all that to say that I kind of take issue with your suggestion
10:06that she was just so rude and difficult, and they weren't patient,
10:10and they just didn't give you enough time.
10:11I don't think that's a fair assessment.
10:13That isn't a fair assessment.
10:14That wasn't the only thing that was going on.
10:17See that sink?
10:18I built the base cabinets, was going to install them, but I needed a sink.
10:21I don't build the farm sink one until I get a sink, okay?
10:25Because they're all different shapes.
10:26So they brought me a big box and all that, and then when I took it out to build it,
10:30it was really small.
10:31And he can attest, I thought, man, this has taken a while.
10:34I ought to just build that cabinet so we can get it done and all that.
10:37But my conscience said, no, I don't want to give them a small sink in that big of a space.
10:41So I called and said, hey, you might want to check out your sink size.
10:45Good design choice.
10:45I think that makes sense.
10:46Yeah, and so we did that, and they came out, and then they had to order another one.
10:50It took a week and a half or something to get the other one.
10:52And then if you look on the other side where the refrigerator is,
10:55those drawers and a refrigerator on a wall that's short,
10:59and we changed that a couple of times.
11:01So some things changed.
11:02They did.
11:03How long would you say this project should have taken?
11:05It wasn't that it took months or anything to do that.
11:08It did, though.
11:09So how long do you think this project should have taken?
11:11It should have took whatever time it took.
11:13Now, that is the worst answer a contractor could ever give.
11:16But, Your Honor.
11:17I have to interrupt you because there was some work done.
11:19So why on earth should you get all of your money back?
11:24You want me to ascribe zero dollars to the work that he did do.
11:29Okay, I've got an answer for that.
11:30I'd love to hear it.
11:31I went and got, so I didn't bring it with me.
11:33I priced out, had another guy come and look at the kitchen.
11:36The way it sits, they go, we can't use any of this stuff.
11:39They won't use any of the wood if he has any left.
11:40Because they want you to buy their stuff.
11:42And it don't match.
11:44But we don't have, like, the slides on the drawers and stuff.
11:46He put the insides in, but we don't even have the outsides to put a drawer in it to build
11:50off of.
11:51And that, to me, does not prove that all of his work is a mess.
11:54Sorry.
11:55Dr. Tamanco?
11:56I'm not going to have you get up and stand there, but what is your relationship to the defendant?
12:00Brother-in-law.
12:01You're his brother-in-law.
12:02You actually own the shop that he was doing the work in.
12:05And, sir, Mr. Aiello, I'm sorry to say, though you told Judge Levy that you want to shoot him straight,
12:12I sometimes think, while I was reading through this, that you should be the leader of the gang that couldn't
12:16shoot straight.
12:17Because the reality here is, you are not the owner of a business.
12:22You do this, but it's like a side job for you.
12:25Correct.
12:25You're not an employee of his.
12:26You're out, you're hanging out at the pub.
12:28I don't know how much you had that night, but when you agreed to hire him,
12:31he somehow convinced you that he was, you know, this master cabinetmaker.
12:35And the truth is, sir, that's not exactly true here.
12:38You don't have a shop.
12:39You don't have a place you work at.
12:41So that's my first position.
12:43Number two, everybody's touched on a couple of your excuses, but I want to read them out to you.
12:48First, you had oral surgery.
12:51Second, you had a sore back.
12:53Equipment problems.
12:54Material delays.
12:56Transportation issues.
12:57Lung problems.
12:58Weather warped the panel problems.
13:00Defendant in the hospital and your girlfriend forgot to call problems.
13:04That's a lot of stuff to say that it happens when it happens or it's done when it's done.
13:10And then in the end, when you say the only thing missing were the drawers,
13:16the reality is you couldn't use the cabinets.
13:19That's false.
13:20Well, how do you use cabinets that don't have shelves in them?
13:21It says I'm a professional and they were built professionally.
13:24Okay, and therein lies the problem.
13:26Coming up on Tribunal Justice.
13:29Did you get a text from him that he needed you to come down to the pub and give him
13:33money
13:33because he couldn't pay for his bar tab?
13:34Yes, we did.
13:35Yep.
13:35What?
13:41Couple Tawny Detheridge and Brady Enlow are suing Donnie Aiello for $10,000,
13:47claiming Donnie's cabinetry work was shoddy and unfinished.
13:51But Donnie says he was over-accommodating and that they were nightmare clients.
13:55Your position, as I would understand it legally, is that you substantially performed here,
14:02that you did a lot and therefore, as a result, they stopped you from finishing and so therefore,
14:08it's their problem and you know what?
14:10They didn't stop you from finishing?
14:12It's definitely not what I'm saying at all.
14:13Oh, well, it's too bad because that was a good defense.
14:15I had a long way to go still.
14:17The cabinets got installed prematurely because she wanted to get her countertops and they weren't ready
14:23to go yet. So, see, I need these in because the countertop guys are coming.
14:27Countertop guy comes when you call them. That's just how it works.
14:29I know, but the point here is it took you months. I read out the excuses.
14:33I agree it took a lot longer than it should have.
14:35Okay, but people are waiting.
14:37They were changing things over and over.
14:40What did they change?
14:41That wall changed three or four times.
14:44The dishwasher was right behind that sink.
14:46What caused the change in the walls?
14:49The wall was a full box.
14:51Then when we got there, I get home one day, there's a, he's like, well, move the outlet.
14:56Literally, the wall, here's your outlet, your plug-in outlet.
15:00The wall is screwed right to the middle of your outlet.
15:02I'm like, why would you leave a wall like that?
15:05He's like, well, call an electrician maybe and just have them move the box over.
15:08What are you going to do, pull the wire through the wall and up the attic and change it over
15:12this far?
15:12See, I believe that things were not done correctly.
15:14It was moving the outlet over an inch and three quarters.
15:17It's just part of it.
15:18When their kitchen was in there and I measured, we're going to do this and this.
15:21Well, I'm sure that there are things that you can claim are part of the deal, but there's too many
15:24things part of the deal.
15:25Yeah, but those are minor, minor things.
15:25Minor, minor if it's one week, not a year and a half.
15:28I don't have any other questions at this time.
15:30I do.
15:31Just a couple of things.
15:32I'm sorry.
15:32Now, my colleagues went through very clearly what the excuses were that you gave, but they left one and what
15:39I thought was a really important one out, not just based upon an oversight.
15:42And it was in September of 2023.
15:45This then took the cake.
15:47After you've already taken $6,000, a $3,000, and a $1,000, you said that you had to go
15:52to the pawn shop to pick up your saw.
15:54What was that all about?
15:56I might have had to.
15:58I might have pawned it for a week or two.
15:59Time out.
15:59Stop.
16:00So what are you telling them about a saw that you had to go get from the pawn shop if
16:05it had nothing to do with their job?
16:07I don't remember.
16:08But if I did, I did.
16:09Yeah, exactly.
16:10So it would seem to me that the reason why he couldn't do the work this time, because he didn't
16:15have equipment to finish the job, that equipment being a saw, because he pawned it.
16:19Right?
16:20Yeah, he'd say, fire me.
16:21Just fire me then.
16:22I want to speak, please, if I could, to Mr. Wesenberg.
16:25Yes, sir.
16:26Come on, step up, please.
16:27You've been here all day.
16:27You're sitting quiet.
16:28I got some questions for you.
16:30I know you said that the defendant is your brother-in-law.
16:32You're married to his sister, right?
16:34Yep.
16:34How long have you been in business?
16:3644 years.
16:37As what?
16:37As a cabinetmaker?
16:39Basically, yeah.
16:40And in the state of Washington, in Olympia specifically, is it true cabinetmakers are considered specialty contractors and must be
16:48licensed, registered, bonded, and insured?
16:51Yes.
16:52You would agree that the application process, they do a background check, right, to make sure that there's nothing in
16:57a person's background that would be somewhat of a concern to a homeowner, because you gave the defendant a garage
17:05door opener for your home, so that he can come into your home when you weren't there.
17:09Yeah.
17:09And you are not a licensed contractor in the state of Washington.
17:12No.
17:13You are not.
17:13I know.
17:14And that, by the way, is something that you did not disclose when you agreed to take that $12,500,
17:20did you?
17:20No.
17:21They knew I was retired and-
17:23I didn't ask whether you were retired.
17:24You convinced them to give you $12,500 for a job that you know you were not licensed and bonded
17:31and registered to do.
17:32But qualified.
17:33No.
17:33Hold on.
17:34I don't care whether or not you're qualified.
17:35If you perform home improvements without a license, you are entitled to absolutely zero consideration for work performed.
17:43The reason why you have to be licensed and bonded is if there is an issue, like the one that
17:47came up here, that the job that you did is substandard, that it wasn't finished, there is a way for
17:53them to be made whole.
17:54I'll tell you what, Your Honor, you'd have walked that job if you had to do it, okay?
17:58I was talked into walking it by a lot of licensed contractor home builders that I know when I talked
18:04to them at the pub that you think I hang out in all the time that said,
18:08I wouldn't put up with that either, and I tried real hard.
18:11And so they're paying it out as I'm the bad guy here.
18:14That's fine.
18:14That's fine.
18:15Yeah.
18:15I got a question, by the way.
18:16Did you get a text from him that he needed you to come down to the pub and give him
18:20money because he couldn't pay for his bar tab?
18:22Yes.
18:22Yes, we did.
18:23What?
18:24Yes, we did.
18:25When?
18:25August 25th, 2023, sir.
18:28Your text to them.
18:29I will be at the pub.
18:31Let me know when you can get here.
18:32Now you have me worried.
18:33By not getting back to me, I can't afford my bar tab.
18:36Oh, well, that wasn't...
18:39Listen, it's a text that you sent.
18:41He said he was going to come pay me, and I was waiting for him to come pay me, and
18:44I was at the pub.
18:44Okay.
18:45Yeah, I can't regret your money.
18:46Brady brought you $650 cash.
18:48Please don't talk.
18:49Can I have a follow-up before you go?
18:51Sure.
18:51When you hired him, did he tell you he was licensed?
18:54No.
18:55No.
18:55And you wanted a good price.
18:57We know we made that mistake on him not being licensed and bonded, and believe me, I've learned in my
19:01life that it will never happen.
19:03My question to you is going to be, did you get any other estimates before you agreed with him?
19:08Just looking at cabinets and stores.
19:10And those were substantially higher than the price he gave you.
19:14So when you did agree to do the work with him, though you might not have asked him the direct
19:19question, are you licensed, you knew that he was like a handyman kind of person, and you agreed with him
19:26at a lower price.
19:27Yeah.
19:27So in the long run, you did get what you paid for.
19:29Mm-hmm.
19:30All right.
19:31We're going to retire to deliberate at this time.
19:33Thank you both, sir.
19:33You can take your seat.
19:34Court is now in recess.
19:36Parties will be recalled.
19:45All right.
19:46Well, I think that we can all agree that hiring your contractors or your subcontractors at local pubs, not a
19:52super good idea, even when they tell you that they've done work for people like Bill Gates.
19:57The issue is whether or not plaintiffs have met their burden.
20:01I believe they have.
20:02One excuse after another, we went through them all the way up to he pawned his equipment, and therefore he
20:08couldn't complete the job in a timely manner.
20:11Ordinarily, if we had a situation where we had a licensed contractor and he did some work, yeah, we can
20:16go and figure out whether or not there was substantial performance, how much, and we can split the baby, so
20:21to speak.
20:21I won't do that in a case like this where we have someone who, like the defendant, was not licensed.
20:27He kept that information from the plaintiffs because he knew that it was not going to benefit him if they—
20:33Can I interrupt you?
20:34Because they knew they were getting a deal.
20:35How do you feel about that?
20:36I asked them.
20:37No, and it was important.
20:39I think they knew they were getting a deal, but they did not know that he wasn't licensed.
20:42I don't think they cared he was licensed or not because they knew they were getting a better deal than
20:46they asked for.
20:47They gave him access to their home when they weren't there because they trusted him.
20:52Well, that's what you do in all these cases until you find out you can't trust them, basically.
20:56I mean, because he didn't tell them they were licensed or not, I don't think that makes him untrustworthy.
21:00Because I've had people come to work, unless I've specifically said to them, so are you licensed?
21:04They don't volunteer.
21:06By the way, I'm unlicensed.
21:07Well, it's a crime.
21:09It's a crime in the state of Washington, in Olympia, Washington.
21:12It's punishable—what is it?
21:14Up to a year in jail.
21:15It's a serious offense.
21:16Oh, sure it is.
21:17I don't doubt that it is, but it doesn't—
21:19And I cannot see my way clear in a case like this to allow the defendant to benefit from his
21:26criminal conduct.
21:27The plaintiffs have paid $10,000, and I believe that they should get that back.
21:32I agree with you.
21:34It's a crime.
21:34I think that all crimes aren't created equal.
21:37You want me to be candid?
21:39I like that.
21:40But I tell you why I'm with you on the verdict.
21:44It's because of his own testimony.
21:46I was actually, if you remember, asking him, sort of trying to set him up for a substantial completion defense.
21:52And he, in his own words, he said, I had a long way to go.
21:55Yeah.
21:56And I also found them credible with respect to the defects.
21:59So I would, for a different reason, rule in their favor.
22:02Oh, I'm going to rule in their favor, too.
22:04By his own testimony, he demolished his own potential defense.
22:08I don't like the idea that he worked without a license at all.
22:11I agree with you.
22:12I think it should be punishable.
22:14And I thought the best witness here was the brother-in-law, who was like, no, I don't do that.
22:18No, I do this.
22:19No, I don't.
22:19In any event, so, yes, I am on board with both of you in that I think they should get
22:24their money back from this retired cabinetmaker.
22:27Super.
22:32Court is back in session.
22:34All parties are reminded that you're still under oath.
22:36All right, so what did we learn?
22:37We learned that perhaps finding your contractor or subcontractor in a local pub is not the best way to do
22:45it.
22:45Correct.
22:46If you do find such a person in the pub, check whether or not they're licensed and bonded and insured.
22:52All that information, public.
22:54It's online.
22:56Do your due diligence.
22:57Otherwise, bad things could happen.
22:59We have a unanimous verdict, but for different reasons.
23:02Myself, I believe that you should succeed in your lawsuit.
23:06And in large part, because I don't believe that you should reward bad behavior.
23:10And that someone who does work in your home, who's not licensed, who's not bonded, and who's committing, therefore, a
23:16crime by doing it, should get absolutely no credit for any substantial work that they do.
23:21My colleagues also agree that you succeed in your lawsuit against the defendant for a slightly different reason.
23:27And that reason, Mr. Aiello, is because you made it clear that you had a long way to go to
23:32finish the job.
23:33The countertop people had to do additional work, and there was additional work that needed to be done.
23:37And it's for all of those reasons, Mr. Aiello, that you are to return a garage door opener, and that
23:43Ms. Detheridge and Mr. Enloe, you are entitled to $10,000 from the defendant.
23:49This case is closed.
23:51All parties are excused.
23:56As far as licensing, you don't need a license to screw a box on a wall.
23:59I usually do a lot of my own work, but I can't move anymore myself, so that's how we ended
24:04up in this way.
24:05I dealt with Brady.
24:06He's a good guy.
24:07His heart was in the right place.
24:08He knew what I was about.
24:10I'm not the bad character.
24:12He's scared to death of her.
24:14Donnie just kept calling and asking for more money.
24:16And when I put my foot down about that, then that's when I became the bad guy.
24:23Hey, they won.
24:24Hats off.
24:25Happy.
24:26I'm happy for them.
24:27Have you been scammed?
24:28Let the majority rule in your favor on Tribunal Justice.
24:33Find us on social media.
24:51Have you been scammed?
25:01Have you been scammed?
25:03Have you been scammed?
25:03Have you been scammed?
25:03Have you been scammed?
25:04Have you been scammed?
25:06Have you been scammed?
25:11Have you been scammed?
25:12You
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