What would you think if your child did not attend a birthday and they wanted to charge you for it?

I think he would look where the hidden camera is. But that was what happened to some parents in England when their son did not attend a classmate's birthday. I don't know what would happen to them, both the father who received the notice, and the mother who wrote it.

Y What would you think if your child did not attend a birthday and they wanted to charge you for it?

Alex Nash Cornwell is a five-year-old boy and as many of you suppose you know at that age you have a social life that passes between birthday parties, parks and long instances in something called a school.

A good day our little Alex received an invitation for the birthday from one of his classmates and his parents accepted. So far everything normal, but the problem came later, when they realized that on the date on which the birthday was celebrated they had a previous family commitment, specifically Alex was going to spend the day with his grandfather.

Conclusion, that between one afternoon surrounded by more children, liters of juice and half a ton of sugar or a day with the yayo, the kid opted for the most normal at his age, spend the day with grandpa (apart from that they had stayed with him earlier than for the birthday).

The fact is that with the excitement of a day between grandfather and grandson and I suppose that before the perspective of their parents to spend together and alone, especially alone, all day, they forgot to warn to the party about the absence of your little one.

So far nothing that could not happen to us more than once and twice. The problem is that Julie Lawrence, which is what the birthday boy's mother is called, is not a mother to use. And such disrespect for the protocol of children's festivities decided that the thing could not remain so without more and neither short nor lazy decided to demand the parents of the child to pay their proportional part of the party. The fact that he did not attend seems to be not a reason of sufficient weight to not contribute his grain of sand.

The problem is that Mrs. Lawrence Blissful course and surreal request in an even rarer way that is none other than putting a note in the child's backpack demanding the payment of 15.95 pounds, which in exchange will be about 21 euros.

The fact is that the father of our friend did not find anything appropriate and funny to claim that amount for simply not notifying the absence. "Look, they are things that happen," our friend would say. But Mrs. Lawrence seems ready to go all the way and has denounced the parents of little Alex for the non-payment of the debt.

If it were not because the news was given by the BBC, I would have thought it was from a satirical newspaper. Well, you know what to do with anyone who has not come to the baptism.