Are you responsible for a gas attendant's pumping mistake?

After hours, these stations have their lights turned off, and I’ve never seen anyone inside. Either the law is different here, or every gas station in town is operating illegally. I’ve never been unable to pump my own gas in Spokane no matter how late it was.

If someone has an accident at a gas station while filling up (like driving away with the nozzle still in or something like that), I think the station would like to have somebody around to help out.

A gas station is dispensing a flammable substance and its sale is regulated. I would assume that a gas station owner wants somebody around. Even if it’s just one guy sitting behind bulletproof glass.

At least in NE Minnesota, this is not true. We have a brand of totally unattended gas stations (Armor, I believe). You pull up, and either slide your credit card through the slot or put cash into a machine, and it activates the pumps. If you put in more cash than your tank will take, it prints out a receipt for you with a code number that you can enter the next time you go through to get the rest of your gas.

It may be a law elsewhere that you need to have an attendant, but that apparently isn’t so here.

I already did.

With all due respect, Tim314 does not evidence any qualifications or cites. I don’t have any reason to believe he is correct.

Sure- you’re still getting a product you can and will use, and there is no way of taking it back. You are getting value. Of course- you can complain to the manager, and maybe get the guy fired for poor customer service.

Not the same with higher octane gas, where the ‘extra cost’ is valuless for you.

However, there is fine print that says they don’t have to provide an attendant for handicapped persons if there is only one attendant on duty.

About a month ago, I was in Bakersfield (California) on business and stopped at a station that had a set-up just as you describe. I’ve never seen one where I live, though (Los Angeles area).

A few years ago, the first few stations that had pumps that accepted credit cards here (NC, USA), allowed access any time, whether there was an attendent or not. I’m pretty sure that’s not true anywhere anymore.

I can think of at least 5 gas stations in Minnesota and Iowa that have 24-hour pay at the pump setups. The store is closed, nobody’s there, but you can still swipe your card and get gas.