Being Reimbursed for Personal Property Used for Business [closed]

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So, when I started a new job, I used my personal laptop for work purposes (because the computers there were full of spam and unsecure). Eventually, the work software caused my laptop to crash. My owner agreed to buy me a new one (because my old one was no longer useable). I purchased the machine in a credit line under my name, but paid the credit line through the business. The laptop is also registered to me personally.



My owner is a jerk (surprise, surprise) and is now claiming that he can take my laptop whenever he wants and that I should watch out, because I am a student and I am lucky he lets me use it for school.



Can he legally take this from me, and if so, how can I make this not the case (do I need to pay for it, part of it...?). I would like to not have to pay for it because it was meant to replace my personal property destroyed while being utilized for company purposes.







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closed as off-topic by Jim G., jmac, jcmeloni, Michael Grubey, CincinnatiProgrammer Nov 5 '13 at 12:47


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions seeking legal advice are off-topic as they require answers by legal professionals. See: What is asking for legal advice?" – Jim G., jmac, jcmeloni, Michael Grubey, CincinnatiProgrammer
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 5




    "My owner agreed to buy me a new one" - what form of agreement was this, verbal or written? Was it in the form of "I'll buy you a new laptop", or was it "I'll buy a new laptop"? Unless you have some sort of proof that he was offering to replace your personal property with company funds, then to an unbiased outsider it looks like he purchased a new company laptop that you're using, and when you're done at the company you'll give up the laptop. (The lesson is to never use personal property for company purposes - or vice versa.)
    – Adam V
    Nov 4 '13 at 17:53







  • 13




    Why can't you just reimage your old personal laptop and not put any of the buggy work stuff on it?
    – Amy Blankenship
    Nov 4 '13 at 18:18






  • 4




    Off topic but you could potentially have a claim against the company for the replacement of your laptop. But that does not mean that you are entitled to take company property (the new laptop) as compensation. You would need a lawyer to help with anything like that. Even if you had written documentation that the new laptop was intended to be compensation, should the company demand it back your safest course of action would be to turn over the laptop and seek legal restitution. You could end up facing theft charges, and I seen something similar end in that.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Nov 4 '13 at 18:56











  • @JoeSTrazzere - I think you overestimate the technical competence of the average judge on the small claims circuit. But then again I said "POTENTIALLY" and check with a lawyer. It has not been clarified that the damage was just to the software. It could be physical damage was done. That has never been clarified.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Nov 4 '13 at 21:18







  • 1




    Joe back in the day Oracles forms development tools used to cause blue screen crashes every 10 to 15 min.
    – Neuromancer
    Nov 5 '13 at 12:45
















up vote
5
down vote

favorite












So, when I started a new job, I used my personal laptop for work purposes (because the computers there were full of spam and unsecure). Eventually, the work software caused my laptop to crash. My owner agreed to buy me a new one (because my old one was no longer useable). I purchased the machine in a credit line under my name, but paid the credit line through the business. The laptop is also registered to me personally.



My owner is a jerk (surprise, surprise) and is now claiming that he can take my laptop whenever he wants and that I should watch out, because I am a student and I am lucky he lets me use it for school.



Can he legally take this from me, and if so, how can I make this not the case (do I need to pay for it, part of it...?). I would like to not have to pay for it because it was meant to replace my personal property destroyed while being utilized for company purposes.







share|improve this question














closed as off-topic by Jim G., jmac, jcmeloni, Michael Grubey, CincinnatiProgrammer Nov 5 '13 at 12:47


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions seeking legal advice are off-topic as they require answers by legal professionals. See: What is asking for legal advice?" – Jim G., jmac, jcmeloni, Michael Grubey, CincinnatiProgrammer
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 5




    "My owner agreed to buy me a new one" - what form of agreement was this, verbal or written? Was it in the form of "I'll buy you a new laptop", or was it "I'll buy a new laptop"? Unless you have some sort of proof that he was offering to replace your personal property with company funds, then to an unbiased outsider it looks like he purchased a new company laptop that you're using, and when you're done at the company you'll give up the laptop. (The lesson is to never use personal property for company purposes - or vice versa.)
    – Adam V
    Nov 4 '13 at 17:53







  • 13




    Why can't you just reimage your old personal laptop and not put any of the buggy work stuff on it?
    – Amy Blankenship
    Nov 4 '13 at 18:18






  • 4




    Off topic but you could potentially have a claim against the company for the replacement of your laptop. But that does not mean that you are entitled to take company property (the new laptop) as compensation. You would need a lawyer to help with anything like that. Even if you had written documentation that the new laptop was intended to be compensation, should the company demand it back your safest course of action would be to turn over the laptop and seek legal restitution. You could end up facing theft charges, and I seen something similar end in that.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Nov 4 '13 at 18:56











  • @JoeSTrazzere - I think you overestimate the technical competence of the average judge on the small claims circuit. But then again I said "POTENTIALLY" and check with a lawyer. It has not been clarified that the damage was just to the software. It could be physical damage was done. That has never been clarified.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Nov 4 '13 at 21:18







  • 1




    Joe back in the day Oracles forms development tools used to cause blue screen crashes every 10 to 15 min.
    – Neuromancer
    Nov 5 '13 at 12:45












up vote
5
down vote

favorite









up vote
5
down vote

favorite











So, when I started a new job, I used my personal laptop for work purposes (because the computers there were full of spam and unsecure). Eventually, the work software caused my laptop to crash. My owner agreed to buy me a new one (because my old one was no longer useable). I purchased the machine in a credit line under my name, but paid the credit line through the business. The laptop is also registered to me personally.



My owner is a jerk (surprise, surprise) and is now claiming that he can take my laptop whenever he wants and that I should watch out, because I am a student and I am lucky he lets me use it for school.



Can he legally take this from me, and if so, how can I make this not the case (do I need to pay for it, part of it...?). I would like to not have to pay for it because it was meant to replace my personal property destroyed while being utilized for company purposes.







share|improve this question














So, when I started a new job, I used my personal laptop for work purposes (because the computers there were full of spam and unsecure). Eventually, the work software caused my laptop to crash. My owner agreed to buy me a new one (because my old one was no longer useable). I purchased the machine in a credit line under my name, but paid the credit line through the business. The laptop is also registered to me personally.



My owner is a jerk (surprise, surprise) and is now claiming that he can take my laptop whenever he wants and that I should watch out, because I am a student and I am lucky he lets me use it for school.



Can he legally take this from me, and if so, how can I make this not the case (do I need to pay for it, part of it...?). I would like to not have to pay for it because it was meant to replace my personal property destroyed while being utilized for company purposes.









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 5 '14 at 21:09









Rhys

5,73623558




5,73623558










asked Nov 4 '13 at 17:26









Liz

3512




3512




closed as off-topic by Jim G., jmac, jcmeloni, Michael Grubey, CincinnatiProgrammer Nov 5 '13 at 12:47


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions seeking legal advice are off-topic as they require answers by legal professionals. See: What is asking for legal advice?" – Jim G., jmac, jcmeloni, Michael Grubey, CincinnatiProgrammer
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.




closed as off-topic by Jim G., jmac, jcmeloni, Michael Grubey, CincinnatiProgrammer Nov 5 '13 at 12:47


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions seeking legal advice are off-topic as they require answers by legal professionals. See: What is asking for legal advice?" – Jim G., jmac, jcmeloni, Michael Grubey, CincinnatiProgrammer
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.







  • 5




    "My owner agreed to buy me a new one" - what form of agreement was this, verbal or written? Was it in the form of "I'll buy you a new laptop", or was it "I'll buy a new laptop"? Unless you have some sort of proof that he was offering to replace your personal property with company funds, then to an unbiased outsider it looks like he purchased a new company laptop that you're using, and when you're done at the company you'll give up the laptop. (The lesson is to never use personal property for company purposes - or vice versa.)
    – Adam V
    Nov 4 '13 at 17:53







  • 13




    Why can't you just reimage your old personal laptop and not put any of the buggy work stuff on it?
    – Amy Blankenship
    Nov 4 '13 at 18:18






  • 4




    Off topic but you could potentially have a claim against the company for the replacement of your laptop. But that does not mean that you are entitled to take company property (the new laptop) as compensation. You would need a lawyer to help with anything like that. Even if you had written documentation that the new laptop was intended to be compensation, should the company demand it back your safest course of action would be to turn over the laptop and seek legal restitution. You could end up facing theft charges, and I seen something similar end in that.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Nov 4 '13 at 18:56











  • @JoeSTrazzere - I think you overestimate the technical competence of the average judge on the small claims circuit. But then again I said "POTENTIALLY" and check with a lawyer. It has not been clarified that the damage was just to the software. It could be physical damage was done. That has never been clarified.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Nov 4 '13 at 21:18







  • 1




    Joe back in the day Oracles forms development tools used to cause blue screen crashes every 10 to 15 min.
    – Neuromancer
    Nov 5 '13 at 12:45












  • 5




    "My owner agreed to buy me a new one" - what form of agreement was this, verbal or written? Was it in the form of "I'll buy you a new laptop", or was it "I'll buy a new laptop"? Unless you have some sort of proof that he was offering to replace your personal property with company funds, then to an unbiased outsider it looks like he purchased a new company laptop that you're using, and when you're done at the company you'll give up the laptop. (The lesson is to never use personal property for company purposes - or vice versa.)
    – Adam V
    Nov 4 '13 at 17:53







  • 13




    Why can't you just reimage your old personal laptop and not put any of the buggy work stuff on it?
    – Amy Blankenship
    Nov 4 '13 at 18:18






  • 4




    Off topic but you could potentially have a claim against the company for the replacement of your laptop. But that does not mean that you are entitled to take company property (the new laptop) as compensation. You would need a lawyer to help with anything like that. Even if you had written documentation that the new laptop was intended to be compensation, should the company demand it back your safest course of action would be to turn over the laptop and seek legal restitution. You could end up facing theft charges, and I seen something similar end in that.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Nov 4 '13 at 18:56











  • @JoeSTrazzere - I think you overestimate the technical competence of the average judge on the small claims circuit. But then again I said "POTENTIALLY" and check with a lawyer. It has not been clarified that the damage was just to the software. It could be physical damage was done. That has never been clarified.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Nov 4 '13 at 21:18







  • 1




    Joe back in the day Oracles forms development tools used to cause blue screen crashes every 10 to 15 min.
    – Neuromancer
    Nov 5 '13 at 12:45







5




5




"My owner agreed to buy me a new one" - what form of agreement was this, verbal or written? Was it in the form of "I'll buy you a new laptop", or was it "I'll buy a new laptop"? Unless you have some sort of proof that he was offering to replace your personal property with company funds, then to an unbiased outsider it looks like he purchased a new company laptop that you're using, and when you're done at the company you'll give up the laptop. (The lesson is to never use personal property for company purposes - or vice versa.)
– Adam V
Nov 4 '13 at 17:53





"My owner agreed to buy me a new one" - what form of agreement was this, verbal or written? Was it in the form of "I'll buy you a new laptop", or was it "I'll buy a new laptop"? Unless you have some sort of proof that he was offering to replace your personal property with company funds, then to an unbiased outsider it looks like he purchased a new company laptop that you're using, and when you're done at the company you'll give up the laptop. (The lesson is to never use personal property for company purposes - or vice versa.)
– Adam V
Nov 4 '13 at 17:53





13




13




Why can't you just reimage your old personal laptop and not put any of the buggy work stuff on it?
– Amy Blankenship
Nov 4 '13 at 18:18




Why can't you just reimage your old personal laptop and not put any of the buggy work stuff on it?
– Amy Blankenship
Nov 4 '13 at 18:18




4




4




Off topic but you could potentially have a claim against the company for the replacement of your laptop. But that does not mean that you are entitled to take company property (the new laptop) as compensation. You would need a lawyer to help with anything like that. Even if you had written documentation that the new laptop was intended to be compensation, should the company demand it back your safest course of action would be to turn over the laptop and seek legal restitution. You could end up facing theft charges, and I seen something similar end in that.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Nov 4 '13 at 18:56





Off topic but you could potentially have a claim against the company for the replacement of your laptop. But that does not mean that you are entitled to take company property (the new laptop) as compensation. You would need a lawyer to help with anything like that. Even if you had written documentation that the new laptop was intended to be compensation, should the company demand it back your safest course of action would be to turn over the laptop and seek legal restitution. You could end up facing theft charges, and I seen something similar end in that.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Nov 4 '13 at 18:56













@JoeSTrazzere - I think you overestimate the technical competence of the average judge on the small claims circuit. But then again I said "POTENTIALLY" and check with a lawyer. It has not been clarified that the damage was just to the software. It could be physical damage was done. That has never been clarified.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Nov 4 '13 at 21:18





@JoeSTrazzere - I think you overestimate the technical competence of the average judge on the small claims circuit. But then again I said "POTENTIALLY" and check with a lawyer. It has not been clarified that the damage was just to the software. It could be physical damage was done. That has never been clarified.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Nov 4 '13 at 21:18





1




1




Joe back in the day Oracles forms development tools used to cause blue screen crashes every 10 to 15 min.
– Neuromancer
Nov 5 '13 at 12:45




Joe back in the day Oracles forms development tools used to cause blue screen crashes every 10 to 15 min.
– Neuromancer
Nov 5 '13 at 12:45










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
15
down vote













This is the problem with verbal agreements: everybody involved understands it differently and there's no record to consult.



In this case, because you used the company credit card for the purchase, you are probably out of luck. Your best approach to correcting the problem will be through negotiation, not legal appeals. "Hey boss, when you said you'd replace my personal property that was damaged because of work, I thought you meant the new machine would be mine too. What can we do to make this right? Do you need me to pay some part of the cost since it's a newer, better machine?"



In the future, if personal property is damaged on the job it is much better for you to seek reimbursement for your expenses, rather than having the company pay them directly. That way it's clearer, and if they reimburse you via your paycheck it may even generate a specific line-item for your records.



All that said, it sounds like the company provided you a machine that you decided you didn't want to use. If that happens again, you should discuss the problem with them up front before resorting to the use of personal property. If you can avoid putting yourself in the position of having to use your own property, you can avoid this class of problems.






share|improve this answer
















  • 4




    @JoeStrazzere yes, especially for hardware, but you can't always avoid it. For example, I bought my own office chair because I found the standard-issue ones in our office to be ergonomically unsuitable; I could have petitioned for them to evaluate and buy me one, but it was easier for me to just go shopping and pay for it. I made sure they knew that it's personal property (and I'll take it when I leave), and it has a suitable sticker on it now.
    – Monica Cellio♦
    Nov 4 '13 at 20:20










  • I'm using my own mouse/keyboard for similar reasons. And whiteboard, for that matter. But I've got "Personal property of enderland" on all of them in permanent marker...
    – Elysian Fields♦
    Nov 4 '13 at 21:19






  • 3




    @MonicaCellio I've done the same. While I agree with Joe that it's a suboptimal situation, when the choices boil down to spending a few hundred dollars on a chair that allows you to work comfortably or spending a few hundred dollars on chiropractory in an attempt to mitigate the effects of sitting in a bad chair for 40 hours/week, it becomes painfully apparent that standing on principles is no more than cutting off your nose to spite your face.
    – Dan Neely
    Nov 5 '13 at 1:37

















up vote
2
down vote













OK, unless it's a Mac PowerBook, laptops are incredibly cheap. $500 gets you a really decent machine these days, if you watch the store specials.



  • First, get your original one working, ASAP, and use it for school.
    You're right back to where you started from. Put in a new hard
    drive, re-install the OS (If it's Windows, your license key is on a
    sticker, probably on the bottom of the machine) and get that thing
    working again.


  • Second, stop using the other laptop for school. Your boss reneged on
    the agreement, so the new laptop is effectively the company's, now. Get everything for school OFF of that PC. Use DropBox, GoogleDrive, or whatever to keep your stuff "handy."


  • Third, realize your mistake in ever using your own machine for your
    employer. If their machines are problems, then get a virtualized
    machine running inside of theirs (VMWare Workstation or Microsoft Virtual
    PC), and use that for your work. NEVER put your own software on it.


  • Fourth, realize how lucky you are to just lose a laptop to this
    company. From this day forward, never take anything to work you
    can't walk away from. Pictures? Bring in copies. Personal
    knickknacks? Better be cheap and have no sentimental value.
    Personal computer - absolutely never. Leave it locked in your car or
    better yet, leave it at home and run LogMeIn to reach it from work if
    you have to.


  • Fifth, and I hate to say this: Unless you change yourself, this will not be the last time an
    employer steals from you. They are the business equivalent of an
    abusive spouse. Abusive employers require employees that don't stand
    up for themselves to "get away with it." Stop being that employee.
    They treat you like dirt and make you feel like you're not worth
    working anywhere else. Finish your degree and get happy at your
    "Real" job as fast as you can. Don't ever look back on this job.






share|improve this answer
















  • 2




    "this will not be the last time an employer steals from you." Care to explain this? How exactly did the employer steal in this case?
    – jmac
    Nov 5 '13 at 4:15






  • 4




    The employer hasn't stolen from him. He was reimbursed for purchasing a laptop. It doesn't mean he automatically owns it.
    – Simon O'Doherty
    Nov 5 '13 at 8:11










  • $500 for a nice machine depends on the country you are in. If Liz is in the US, that's alright, but if she's in Mexico it may be not that cheap, and in Brazil that wouldn't even buy any machine whatsoever.
    – user10483
    Nov 5 '13 at 13:09










  • @jmac - He used personal property for work, and that property was damaged by using it for work. That property was not repaired or replaced by his employer. That's theft where I come from. You may see it differently.
    – Wesley Long
    Nov 5 '13 at 19:53






  • 1




    (while I get a delightful image when thinking of an employer twisting his mustache saying, "Now for my next evil scheme, I will have work software installed on my employee's personal computer, and when it breaks the computer I will refuse to reimburse it and reap huge profits!", I don't think it's a very plausible scenario -- there are probably far more employees trying to con their employers in to reimbursing them for fraudulent 'work-related' expenses than vice versa)
    – jmac
    Nov 6 '13 at 4:05

















2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
15
down vote













This is the problem with verbal agreements: everybody involved understands it differently and there's no record to consult.



In this case, because you used the company credit card for the purchase, you are probably out of luck. Your best approach to correcting the problem will be through negotiation, not legal appeals. "Hey boss, when you said you'd replace my personal property that was damaged because of work, I thought you meant the new machine would be mine too. What can we do to make this right? Do you need me to pay some part of the cost since it's a newer, better machine?"



In the future, if personal property is damaged on the job it is much better for you to seek reimbursement for your expenses, rather than having the company pay them directly. That way it's clearer, and if they reimburse you via your paycheck it may even generate a specific line-item for your records.



All that said, it sounds like the company provided you a machine that you decided you didn't want to use. If that happens again, you should discuss the problem with them up front before resorting to the use of personal property. If you can avoid putting yourself in the position of having to use your own property, you can avoid this class of problems.






share|improve this answer
















  • 4




    @JoeStrazzere yes, especially for hardware, but you can't always avoid it. For example, I bought my own office chair because I found the standard-issue ones in our office to be ergonomically unsuitable; I could have petitioned for them to evaluate and buy me one, but it was easier for me to just go shopping and pay for it. I made sure they knew that it's personal property (and I'll take it when I leave), and it has a suitable sticker on it now.
    – Monica Cellio♦
    Nov 4 '13 at 20:20










  • I'm using my own mouse/keyboard for similar reasons. And whiteboard, for that matter. But I've got "Personal property of enderland" on all of them in permanent marker...
    – Elysian Fields♦
    Nov 4 '13 at 21:19






  • 3




    @MonicaCellio I've done the same. While I agree with Joe that it's a suboptimal situation, when the choices boil down to spending a few hundred dollars on a chair that allows you to work comfortably or spending a few hundred dollars on chiropractory in an attempt to mitigate the effects of sitting in a bad chair for 40 hours/week, it becomes painfully apparent that standing on principles is no more than cutting off your nose to spite your face.
    – Dan Neely
    Nov 5 '13 at 1:37














up vote
15
down vote













This is the problem with verbal agreements: everybody involved understands it differently and there's no record to consult.



In this case, because you used the company credit card for the purchase, you are probably out of luck. Your best approach to correcting the problem will be through negotiation, not legal appeals. "Hey boss, when you said you'd replace my personal property that was damaged because of work, I thought you meant the new machine would be mine too. What can we do to make this right? Do you need me to pay some part of the cost since it's a newer, better machine?"



In the future, if personal property is damaged on the job it is much better for you to seek reimbursement for your expenses, rather than having the company pay them directly. That way it's clearer, and if they reimburse you via your paycheck it may even generate a specific line-item for your records.



All that said, it sounds like the company provided you a machine that you decided you didn't want to use. If that happens again, you should discuss the problem with them up front before resorting to the use of personal property. If you can avoid putting yourself in the position of having to use your own property, you can avoid this class of problems.






share|improve this answer
















  • 4




    @JoeStrazzere yes, especially for hardware, but you can't always avoid it. For example, I bought my own office chair because I found the standard-issue ones in our office to be ergonomically unsuitable; I could have petitioned for them to evaluate and buy me one, but it was easier for me to just go shopping and pay for it. I made sure they knew that it's personal property (and I'll take it when I leave), and it has a suitable sticker on it now.
    – Monica Cellio♦
    Nov 4 '13 at 20:20










  • I'm using my own mouse/keyboard for similar reasons. And whiteboard, for that matter. But I've got "Personal property of enderland" on all of them in permanent marker...
    – Elysian Fields♦
    Nov 4 '13 at 21:19






  • 3




    @MonicaCellio I've done the same. While I agree with Joe that it's a suboptimal situation, when the choices boil down to spending a few hundred dollars on a chair that allows you to work comfortably or spending a few hundred dollars on chiropractory in an attempt to mitigate the effects of sitting in a bad chair for 40 hours/week, it becomes painfully apparent that standing on principles is no more than cutting off your nose to spite your face.
    – Dan Neely
    Nov 5 '13 at 1:37












up vote
15
down vote










up vote
15
down vote









This is the problem with verbal agreements: everybody involved understands it differently and there's no record to consult.



In this case, because you used the company credit card for the purchase, you are probably out of luck. Your best approach to correcting the problem will be through negotiation, not legal appeals. "Hey boss, when you said you'd replace my personal property that was damaged because of work, I thought you meant the new machine would be mine too. What can we do to make this right? Do you need me to pay some part of the cost since it's a newer, better machine?"



In the future, if personal property is damaged on the job it is much better for you to seek reimbursement for your expenses, rather than having the company pay them directly. That way it's clearer, and if they reimburse you via your paycheck it may even generate a specific line-item for your records.



All that said, it sounds like the company provided you a machine that you decided you didn't want to use. If that happens again, you should discuss the problem with them up front before resorting to the use of personal property. If you can avoid putting yourself in the position of having to use your own property, you can avoid this class of problems.






share|improve this answer












This is the problem with verbal agreements: everybody involved understands it differently and there's no record to consult.



In this case, because you used the company credit card for the purchase, you are probably out of luck. Your best approach to correcting the problem will be through negotiation, not legal appeals. "Hey boss, when you said you'd replace my personal property that was damaged because of work, I thought you meant the new machine would be mine too. What can we do to make this right? Do you need me to pay some part of the cost since it's a newer, better machine?"



In the future, if personal property is damaged on the job it is much better for you to seek reimbursement for your expenses, rather than having the company pay them directly. That way it's clearer, and if they reimburse you via your paycheck it may even generate a specific line-item for your records.



All that said, it sounds like the company provided you a machine that you decided you didn't want to use. If that happens again, you should discuss the problem with them up front before resorting to the use of personal property. If you can avoid putting yourself in the position of having to use your own property, you can avoid this class of problems.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 4 '13 at 18:28









Monica Cellio♦

43.7k17114191




43.7k17114191







  • 4




    @JoeStrazzere yes, especially for hardware, but you can't always avoid it. For example, I bought my own office chair because I found the standard-issue ones in our office to be ergonomically unsuitable; I could have petitioned for them to evaluate and buy me one, but it was easier for me to just go shopping and pay for it. I made sure they knew that it's personal property (and I'll take it when I leave), and it has a suitable sticker on it now.
    – Monica Cellio♦
    Nov 4 '13 at 20:20










  • I'm using my own mouse/keyboard for similar reasons. And whiteboard, for that matter. But I've got "Personal property of enderland" on all of them in permanent marker...
    – Elysian Fields♦
    Nov 4 '13 at 21:19






  • 3




    @MonicaCellio I've done the same. While I agree with Joe that it's a suboptimal situation, when the choices boil down to spending a few hundred dollars on a chair that allows you to work comfortably or spending a few hundred dollars on chiropractory in an attempt to mitigate the effects of sitting in a bad chair for 40 hours/week, it becomes painfully apparent that standing on principles is no more than cutting off your nose to spite your face.
    – Dan Neely
    Nov 5 '13 at 1:37












  • 4




    @JoeStrazzere yes, especially for hardware, but you can't always avoid it. For example, I bought my own office chair because I found the standard-issue ones in our office to be ergonomically unsuitable; I could have petitioned for them to evaluate and buy me one, but it was easier for me to just go shopping and pay for it. I made sure they knew that it's personal property (and I'll take it when I leave), and it has a suitable sticker on it now.
    – Monica Cellio♦
    Nov 4 '13 at 20:20










  • I'm using my own mouse/keyboard for similar reasons. And whiteboard, for that matter. But I've got "Personal property of enderland" on all of them in permanent marker...
    – Elysian Fields♦
    Nov 4 '13 at 21:19






  • 3




    @MonicaCellio I've done the same. While I agree with Joe that it's a suboptimal situation, when the choices boil down to spending a few hundred dollars on a chair that allows you to work comfortably or spending a few hundred dollars on chiropractory in an attempt to mitigate the effects of sitting in a bad chair for 40 hours/week, it becomes painfully apparent that standing on principles is no more than cutting off your nose to spite your face.
    – Dan Neely
    Nov 5 '13 at 1:37







4




4




@JoeStrazzere yes, especially for hardware, but you can't always avoid it. For example, I bought my own office chair because I found the standard-issue ones in our office to be ergonomically unsuitable; I could have petitioned for them to evaluate and buy me one, but it was easier for me to just go shopping and pay for it. I made sure they knew that it's personal property (and I'll take it when I leave), and it has a suitable sticker on it now.
– Monica Cellio♦
Nov 4 '13 at 20:20




@JoeStrazzere yes, especially for hardware, but you can't always avoid it. For example, I bought my own office chair because I found the standard-issue ones in our office to be ergonomically unsuitable; I could have petitioned for them to evaluate and buy me one, but it was easier for me to just go shopping and pay for it. I made sure they knew that it's personal property (and I'll take it when I leave), and it has a suitable sticker on it now.
– Monica Cellio♦
Nov 4 '13 at 20:20












I'm using my own mouse/keyboard for similar reasons. And whiteboard, for that matter. But I've got "Personal property of enderland" on all of them in permanent marker...
– Elysian Fields♦
Nov 4 '13 at 21:19




I'm using my own mouse/keyboard for similar reasons. And whiteboard, for that matter. But I've got "Personal property of enderland" on all of them in permanent marker...
– Elysian Fields♦
Nov 4 '13 at 21:19




3




3




@MonicaCellio I've done the same. While I agree with Joe that it's a suboptimal situation, when the choices boil down to spending a few hundred dollars on a chair that allows you to work comfortably or spending a few hundred dollars on chiropractory in an attempt to mitigate the effects of sitting in a bad chair for 40 hours/week, it becomes painfully apparent that standing on principles is no more than cutting off your nose to spite your face.
– Dan Neely
Nov 5 '13 at 1:37




@MonicaCellio I've done the same. While I agree with Joe that it's a suboptimal situation, when the choices boil down to spending a few hundred dollars on a chair that allows you to work comfortably or spending a few hundred dollars on chiropractory in an attempt to mitigate the effects of sitting in a bad chair for 40 hours/week, it becomes painfully apparent that standing on principles is no more than cutting off your nose to spite your face.
– Dan Neely
Nov 5 '13 at 1:37












up vote
2
down vote













OK, unless it's a Mac PowerBook, laptops are incredibly cheap. $500 gets you a really decent machine these days, if you watch the store specials.



  • First, get your original one working, ASAP, and use it for school.
    You're right back to where you started from. Put in a new hard
    drive, re-install the OS (If it's Windows, your license key is on a
    sticker, probably on the bottom of the machine) and get that thing
    working again.


  • Second, stop using the other laptop for school. Your boss reneged on
    the agreement, so the new laptop is effectively the company's, now. Get everything for school OFF of that PC. Use DropBox, GoogleDrive, or whatever to keep your stuff "handy."


  • Third, realize your mistake in ever using your own machine for your
    employer. If their machines are problems, then get a virtualized
    machine running inside of theirs (VMWare Workstation or Microsoft Virtual
    PC), and use that for your work. NEVER put your own software on it.


  • Fourth, realize how lucky you are to just lose a laptop to this
    company. From this day forward, never take anything to work you
    can't walk away from. Pictures? Bring in copies. Personal
    knickknacks? Better be cheap and have no sentimental value.
    Personal computer - absolutely never. Leave it locked in your car or
    better yet, leave it at home and run LogMeIn to reach it from work if
    you have to.


  • Fifth, and I hate to say this: Unless you change yourself, this will not be the last time an
    employer steals from you. They are the business equivalent of an
    abusive spouse. Abusive employers require employees that don't stand
    up for themselves to "get away with it." Stop being that employee.
    They treat you like dirt and make you feel like you're not worth
    working anywhere else. Finish your degree and get happy at your
    "Real" job as fast as you can. Don't ever look back on this job.






share|improve this answer
















  • 2




    "this will not be the last time an employer steals from you." Care to explain this? How exactly did the employer steal in this case?
    – jmac
    Nov 5 '13 at 4:15






  • 4




    The employer hasn't stolen from him. He was reimbursed for purchasing a laptop. It doesn't mean he automatically owns it.
    – Simon O'Doherty
    Nov 5 '13 at 8:11










  • $500 for a nice machine depends on the country you are in. If Liz is in the US, that's alright, but if she's in Mexico it may be not that cheap, and in Brazil that wouldn't even buy any machine whatsoever.
    – user10483
    Nov 5 '13 at 13:09










  • @jmac - He used personal property for work, and that property was damaged by using it for work. That property was not repaired or replaced by his employer. That's theft where I come from. You may see it differently.
    – Wesley Long
    Nov 5 '13 at 19:53






  • 1




    (while I get a delightful image when thinking of an employer twisting his mustache saying, "Now for my next evil scheme, I will have work software installed on my employee's personal computer, and when it breaks the computer I will refuse to reimburse it and reap huge profits!", I don't think it's a very plausible scenario -- there are probably far more employees trying to con their employers in to reimbursing them for fraudulent 'work-related' expenses than vice versa)
    – jmac
    Nov 6 '13 at 4:05














up vote
2
down vote













OK, unless it's a Mac PowerBook, laptops are incredibly cheap. $500 gets you a really decent machine these days, if you watch the store specials.



  • First, get your original one working, ASAP, and use it for school.
    You're right back to where you started from. Put in a new hard
    drive, re-install the OS (If it's Windows, your license key is on a
    sticker, probably on the bottom of the machine) and get that thing
    working again.


  • Second, stop using the other laptop for school. Your boss reneged on
    the agreement, so the new laptop is effectively the company's, now. Get everything for school OFF of that PC. Use DropBox, GoogleDrive, or whatever to keep your stuff "handy."


  • Third, realize your mistake in ever using your own machine for your
    employer. If their machines are problems, then get a virtualized
    machine running inside of theirs (VMWare Workstation or Microsoft Virtual
    PC), and use that for your work. NEVER put your own software on it.


  • Fourth, realize how lucky you are to just lose a laptop to this
    company. From this day forward, never take anything to work you
    can't walk away from. Pictures? Bring in copies. Personal
    knickknacks? Better be cheap and have no sentimental value.
    Personal computer - absolutely never. Leave it locked in your car or
    better yet, leave it at home and run LogMeIn to reach it from work if
    you have to.


  • Fifth, and I hate to say this: Unless you change yourself, this will not be the last time an
    employer steals from you. They are the business equivalent of an
    abusive spouse. Abusive employers require employees that don't stand
    up for themselves to "get away with it." Stop being that employee.
    They treat you like dirt and make you feel like you're not worth
    working anywhere else. Finish your degree and get happy at your
    "Real" job as fast as you can. Don't ever look back on this job.






share|improve this answer
















  • 2




    "this will not be the last time an employer steals from you." Care to explain this? How exactly did the employer steal in this case?
    – jmac
    Nov 5 '13 at 4:15






  • 4




    The employer hasn't stolen from him. He was reimbursed for purchasing a laptop. It doesn't mean he automatically owns it.
    – Simon O'Doherty
    Nov 5 '13 at 8:11










  • $500 for a nice machine depends on the country you are in. If Liz is in the US, that's alright, but if she's in Mexico it may be not that cheap, and in Brazil that wouldn't even buy any machine whatsoever.
    – user10483
    Nov 5 '13 at 13:09










  • @jmac - He used personal property for work, and that property was damaged by using it for work. That property was not repaired or replaced by his employer. That's theft where I come from. You may see it differently.
    – Wesley Long
    Nov 5 '13 at 19:53






  • 1




    (while I get a delightful image when thinking of an employer twisting his mustache saying, "Now for my next evil scheme, I will have work software installed on my employee's personal computer, and when it breaks the computer I will refuse to reimburse it and reap huge profits!", I don't think it's a very plausible scenario -- there are probably far more employees trying to con their employers in to reimbursing them for fraudulent 'work-related' expenses than vice versa)
    – jmac
    Nov 6 '13 at 4:05












up vote
2
down vote










up vote
2
down vote









OK, unless it's a Mac PowerBook, laptops are incredibly cheap. $500 gets you a really decent machine these days, if you watch the store specials.



  • First, get your original one working, ASAP, and use it for school.
    You're right back to where you started from. Put in a new hard
    drive, re-install the OS (If it's Windows, your license key is on a
    sticker, probably on the bottom of the machine) and get that thing
    working again.


  • Second, stop using the other laptop for school. Your boss reneged on
    the agreement, so the new laptop is effectively the company's, now. Get everything for school OFF of that PC. Use DropBox, GoogleDrive, or whatever to keep your stuff "handy."


  • Third, realize your mistake in ever using your own machine for your
    employer. If their machines are problems, then get a virtualized
    machine running inside of theirs (VMWare Workstation or Microsoft Virtual
    PC), and use that for your work. NEVER put your own software on it.


  • Fourth, realize how lucky you are to just lose a laptop to this
    company. From this day forward, never take anything to work you
    can't walk away from. Pictures? Bring in copies. Personal
    knickknacks? Better be cheap and have no sentimental value.
    Personal computer - absolutely never. Leave it locked in your car or
    better yet, leave it at home and run LogMeIn to reach it from work if
    you have to.


  • Fifth, and I hate to say this: Unless you change yourself, this will not be the last time an
    employer steals from you. They are the business equivalent of an
    abusive spouse. Abusive employers require employees that don't stand
    up for themselves to "get away with it." Stop being that employee.
    They treat you like dirt and make you feel like you're not worth
    working anywhere else. Finish your degree and get happy at your
    "Real" job as fast as you can. Don't ever look back on this job.






share|improve this answer












OK, unless it's a Mac PowerBook, laptops are incredibly cheap. $500 gets you a really decent machine these days, if you watch the store specials.



  • First, get your original one working, ASAP, and use it for school.
    You're right back to where you started from. Put in a new hard
    drive, re-install the OS (If it's Windows, your license key is on a
    sticker, probably on the bottom of the machine) and get that thing
    working again.


  • Second, stop using the other laptop for school. Your boss reneged on
    the agreement, so the new laptop is effectively the company's, now. Get everything for school OFF of that PC. Use DropBox, GoogleDrive, or whatever to keep your stuff "handy."


  • Third, realize your mistake in ever using your own machine for your
    employer. If their machines are problems, then get a virtualized
    machine running inside of theirs (VMWare Workstation or Microsoft Virtual
    PC), and use that for your work. NEVER put your own software on it.


  • Fourth, realize how lucky you are to just lose a laptop to this
    company. From this day forward, never take anything to work you
    can't walk away from. Pictures? Bring in copies. Personal
    knickknacks? Better be cheap and have no sentimental value.
    Personal computer - absolutely never. Leave it locked in your car or
    better yet, leave it at home and run LogMeIn to reach it from work if
    you have to.


  • Fifth, and I hate to say this: Unless you change yourself, this will not be the last time an
    employer steals from you. They are the business equivalent of an
    abusive spouse. Abusive employers require employees that don't stand
    up for themselves to "get away with it." Stop being that employee.
    They treat you like dirt and make you feel like you're not worth
    working anywhere else. Finish your degree and get happy at your
    "Real" job as fast as you can. Don't ever look back on this job.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 4 '13 at 21:44









Wesley Long

45k15100161




45k15100161







  • 2




    "this will not be the last time an employer steals from you." Care to explain this? How exactly did the employer steal in this case?
    – jmac
    Nov 5 '13 at 4:15






  • 4




    The employer hasn't stolen from him. He was reimbursed for purchasing a laptop. It doesn't mean he automatically owns it.
    – Simon O'Doherty
    Nov 5 '13 at 8:11










  • $500 for a nice machine depends on the country you are in. If Liz is in the US, that's alright, but if she's in Mexico it may be not that cheap, and in Brazil that wouldn't even buy any machine whatsoever.
    – user10483
    Nov 5 '13 at 13:09










  • @jmac - He used personal property for work, and that property was damaged by using it for work. That property was not repaired or replaced by his employer. That's theft where I come from. You may see it differently.
    – Wesley Long
    Nov 5 '13 at 19:53






  • 1




    (while I get a delightful image when thinking of an employer twisting his mustache saying, "Now for my next evil scheme, I will have work software installed on my employee's personal computer, and when it breaks the computer I will refuse to reimburse it and reap huge profits!", I don't think it's a very plausible scenario -- there are probably far more employees trying to con their employers in to reimbursing them for fraudulent 'work-related' expenses than vice versa)
    – jmac
    Nov 6 '13 at 4:05












  • 2




    "this will not be the last time an employer steals from you." Care to explain this? How exactly did the employer steal in this case?
    – jmac
    Nov 5 '13 at 4:15






  • 4




    The employer hasn't stolen from him. He was reimbursed for purchasing a laptop. It doesn't mean he automatically owns it.
    – Simon O'Doherty
    Nov 5 '13 at 8:11










  • $500 for a nice machine depends on the country you are in. If Liz is in the US, that's alright, but if she's in Mexico it may be not that cheap, and in Brazil that wouldn't even buy any machine whatsoever.
    – user10483
    Nov 5 '13 at 13:09










  • @jmac - He used personal property for work, and that property was damaged by using it for work. That property was not repaired or replaced by his employer. That's theft where I come from. You may see it differently.
    – Wesley Long
    Nov 5 '13 at 19:53






  • 1




    (while I get a delightful image when thinking of an employer twisting his mustache saying, "Now for my next evil scheme, I will have work software installed on my employee's personal computer, and when it breaks the computer I will refuse to reimburse it and reap huge profits!", I don't think it's a very plausible scenario -- there are probably far more employees trying to con their employers in to reimbursing them for fraudulent 'work-related' expenses than vice versa)
    – jmac
    Nov 6 '13 at 4:05







2




2




"this will not be the last time an employer steals from you." Care to explain this? How exactly did the employer steal in this case?
– jmac
Nov 5 '13 at 4:15




"this will not be the last time an employer steals from you." Care to explain this? How exactly did the employer steal in this case?
– jmac
Nov 5 '13 at 4:15




4




4




The employer hasn't stolen from him. He was reimbursed for purchasing a laptop. It doesn't mean he automatically owns it.
– Simon O'Doherty
Nov 5 '13 at 8:11




The employer hasn't stolen from him. He was reimbursed for purchasing a laptop. It doesn't mean he automatically owns it.
– Simon O'Doherty
Nov 5 '13 at 8:11












$500 for a nice machine depends on the country you are in. If Liz is in the US, that's alright, but if she's in Mexico it may be not that cheap, and in Brazil that wouldn't even buy any machine whatsoever.
– user10483
Nov 5 '13 at 13:09




$500 for a nice machine depends on the country you are in. If Liz is in the US, that's alright, but if she's in Mexico it may be not that cheap, and in Brazil that wouldn't even buy any machine whatsoever.
– user10483
Nov 5 '13 at 13:09












@jmac - He used personal property for work, and that property was damaged by using it for work. That property was not repaired or replaced by his employer. That's theft where I come from. You may see it differently.
– Wesley Long
Nov 5 '13 at 19:53




@jmac - He used personal property for work, and that property was damaged by using it for work. That property was not repaired or replaced by his employer. That's theft where I come from. You may see it differently.
– Wesley Long
Nov 5 '13 at 19:53




1




1




(while I get a delightful image when thinking of an employer twisting his mustache saying, "Now for my next evil scheme, I will have work software installed on my employee's personal computer, and when it breaks the computer I will refuse to reimburse it and reap huge profits!", I don't think it's a very plausible scenario -- there are probably far more employees trying to con their employers in to reimbursing them for fraudulent 'work-related' expenses than vice versa)
– jmac
Nov 6 '13 at 4:05




(while I get a delightful image when thinking of an employer twisting his mustache saying, "Now for my next evil scheme, I will have work software installed on my employee's personal computer, and when it breaks the computer I will refuse to reimburse it and reap huge profits!", I don't think it's a very plausible scenario -- there are probably far more employees trying to con their employers in to reimbursing them for fraudulent 'work-related' expenses than vice versa)
– jmac
Nov 6 '13 at 4:05


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