Legal Question in Civil Litigation in Virginia
I signed a contract with Gold's Gym (via a company named GymQuest). However, I decided to cancel since the contract I signed was not the proper corporate discount rate I was supposed to receive. I mailed my cancellation letter within the proper 3-day cancellation period via certified mail to the address noted on the contract, and was supposed to receive my initial membership fees back within 30 days. However, after 30 days, I did not receive those fees back and was charged for another month of membership. I went to the gym personally with copies of my cancellation letter and certified mail receipts to discuss the matter and was told there was a mix-up but they would fax copies of my documents to their billing office so my membership would be cancelled. Unfortunately, I have been charged again and have yet to receive my other charges back. I am now considering suing. If I do so, do I sue Gold's Gym itself or the company that is franchising it (the one named on the contract)?
1 Answer from Attorneys
I would name them both as defendants.
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Special power of attorney to appear in court on behalf of a litigant. Asked 7/19/11, 12:37 pm in United States Virginia General Civil Litigation