Man caught in Burger King Toilet for an hour Suing to get free Whopper meals for life
An Oregon man caught inside the toilet in a Burger King Burger King plaintiff claiming to have a free Whopper meal each week for the rest of his life.
Curtis Brooner, 50, filed a package Tuesday at Multnomah County Circuit Court in the amount of $ 9,026, or the amount of a Whopper meal per week for the next 22 years would cost.
Brooner was trapped inside the limited, single-user-locked toilet at 2555 NE 238. driving on December 15, 2018, for more than an hour. Brooner said he was knocking on the door for help, and that he could hear what sounded like employees laughing on the other side of the door, while a locksmith tried to open the door and release him.
Broburn said the most annoying, was the smell of the toilet.
"It's a place where you hold your breath: Go in and get out as fast as you can," Brooner told The Oregonian / OregonLive. "It wasn't an option for me."
Brooner had apparently already worked a deal inside the store before leaving. On-site manager told Brooner that he could have free burgers for the rest of his life as an excuse.
For the next 1[ads1]3 days, Broons ate every day, sometimes twice a day. Until the district manager ended this suddenly, the case urged.
Broon's lawyer, Michael Fuller, said the client would either have the original meal agreement again, or have the burger chain pay Brooner's cost for a Whopper meal a week for life.
Fuller's calculation was simple. He took the life of a man, who is 77, and pulled five years because of which weekly burgers could possibly make into a man in the 70's. With a life expectancy of 72, it comes to a Whopper Meal ($ 7.89) a week ($ 7.89 x 52 = $ 410.28) over 22 years ($ 410.28 x 22 = $ 9.026.16).
"There are fun elements in the case, but where Fuller told KATU, according to this report from Sacramento Bee .
Fuller continued to compare the situation to a sitcom about nothing.
" This may seem like a story straight out of an episode of & # 39; Seinfeld, & # 39; Fuller said in Willamette Week . "But we have evidence to support our claim. And an agreement is an agreement."