On Fri, 04 Apr 2014 18:28:26 -0500, Paul Miner wrote:
I'm not clear on what you're upset about.
Basically, I would never have bought the phone had I known
there were only 600 MB of "usable" memory on it.
When I called T-Mobile, they insisted it had 4GB of
internal storage, and that you could add a 32 GB card.
It turns out that it has about 600 MB of "usable" internal
memory, and, the SD card slot is virtually worthless (for
moving applications onto or installing onto).
Had T-Mobile not lied in my many (well documented) calls,
I never would have bought the phone. So, all five elements
of fraud are (arguably) evident:
http://quizlet.com/19041431/5-elemen...d-flash-cards/
1. a false representation of fact
2. knowledge of the falsity by party making false representation
3. intent to deceive the party by making false representation
4. reasonable reliance by the innocent party
5. actual loss suffered by the innocent party