Misrepresentation of Age. Millennium Club, Inc., operates a tavern in South Bend, Indiana. In January 2003, Pamela

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Misrepresentation of Age. Millennium Club, Inc., operates a tavern in South Bend, Indiana. In January 2003, Pamela Avila and other minors gained admission by misrepresenting that they were at least twenty-one years old. According to Millennium’s representatives, the minors used false driver’s licenses,

“fraudulent transfer of a stamp used to gain admission by another patron or other means of false identifi cation.” To gain access, the minors also signed affi davits falsely attesting to the fact that they were twenty-one or older. When the state fi led criminal charges against the Millennium Club, Millennium fi led a suit in an Indiana state court against Avila and more than two hundred others, seeking damages of $3,000 each for misrepresenting their ages. The minors fi led a motion to dismiss the complaint. Should the court grant the motion? What are the competing policy interests in this case? If the Millennium Club was not careful in checking the minors’ identifi cation, should it be allowed to recover? If the Millennium Club reasonably relied on the minors’ representations, should the minors be allowed to avoid liability? Discuss. [Millennium Club, Inc. v. Avila, 809 N.E.2d 906 (Ind.App. 2004)]

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Business Law Today

ISBN: 9780324786521

9th Edition

Authors: Roger LeRoy Miller, Gaylord A Jentz

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