A
33 year old Minnesota mother of two who missed a relative’s wedding because she
and her husband could not find child a baby sitter to watch their
babies says she was “shocked” when she opened the mailbox this week and
found a $75 bill from the bride and groom.
The
total bill, a precise $75.90, came to the cost of two $30 “Herb Crusted
Walleye” entrees plus a “Service & Tax Charge.”
“I
just was shocked,” Jessica Baker said of receiving the bill, which included a
note that, “This cost reflects the amount paid by the bride and groom for meals
that were RSVPed for, reimbursement and explanation for no show, card, call or
text would be appreciated.”
Baker
said she had planned to attend the Aug. 29 nuptials of a relative on her
husband’s side of the family when Baker's mother, the couple's planned
babysitter for their 2-year-old daughter and 5-year-old son, called in sick.
“We
were excited to have a night out and we got a call from my mom saying that my
brother’s daughter was sick with hand-foot-and-mouth disease and my mom had
been exposed and and didn’t want to expose my kids,” Baker recalled. “She
needed to be with her and she wouldn’t be able to make it.”
The
invitation for the wedding of the relative, whom Baker declined to identify,
explicitly said “no children” so Baker and her husband decided to forgo the
wedding. She however noted that the invite asked people who RSVPed to call
if they couldn't make it to the wedding.
“We
had discussed if we should contact anyone and decided against it because,
coincidentally enough, we’d had people RSVP and no-show to our wedding and I
knew when I got married I didn’t want to be bothered with phone calls on the
day of my wedding,” Baker said. “I just assumed, I guess, that we’d let them
know the situation later on.”
Baker
says she had no contact with anyone from the wedding until a few days later
when the brother of the bride called.
“He
said, ‘We missed you at the wedding,’ and it was at that point that we
explained what Baker's husband's conversation with the bride's brother was the
last communication Baker says they had about the missed wedding until the bill
arrived in the mail this week.
“I
laughed a little bit and just kind of thought about it, that maybe there was
something I could have done differently,” Baker said. “Obviously, they were
hurt if they sent us an invoice, but I just didn’t feel there was a whole lot I
could do to rectify the situation.”
Baker
says she threw the bill away but took a photo of it first and posted the photo
on her Facebook page. When her friends’ comments flooded in, Baker posted it on
the Facebook page of a Minneapolis-St. Paul news station, where it quickly went
viral.
“I
posted it on the Facebook page of KARE 11 just because I had gotten so many
responses from my own Facebook friends who were appalled that we would get
something like that,” Baker said. “I thought maybe this qualifies as weird news
and I had no idea it would strike a chord with so many people.”


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