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Courtesy MLive.com:​

Michigan boy, 6, spends $1k on Grubhub: ‘Doorbell just kept ringing, cars kept coming’​

Edward Pevos | [email protected]

Updated: Jan. 31, 2023, 9:34 a.m.|

a kid playing monopoly holding up a fake 100 dollar bill

Mason, 6, from Chesterfield Township, Michigan, used his father's Grubhub account to purchase more than $1,000 worth of food deliveries late at night. (Photo by Keith Stonehouse)

CHESTERFIELD TWP., MI - The doorbell just kept ringing and the cars just kept coming. A 6-year-old Michigan boy went on a wild $1,000-dollar spending spree - like he was on a game show - using his father’s Grubhub account, ordering large amounts of food from numerous area restaurants.

The food piled up quickly for Keith Stonehouse of Chesterfield Township in Metro Detroit on Saturday night while he was home alone with his son, Mason, with his wife, Kristin, away at the movies with some friends.

We’re talking five large orders of jumbo shrimp, salads, shawarma and chicken pita sandwiches, chili cheese fries, ice cream, grape leaves, rice ... and that’s just some of what was delivered by one Grubhub driver after another.

“This was like something out of a “Saturday Night Live” skit,” Stonehouse, who says he still isn’t laughing, told MLive. “I was probably a 9.5 out of 10 anger while it was happening. The next day, I was at an eight and now I’m at about a three. I don’t really find it funny yet, but I can laugh with people a little bit. It’s a lot of money and it kind of came out of nowhere.”

Stonehouse says he let Mason use his cell phone to play a game for about a half hour before bed. He never thought he would instead click on the Grubhub app and order large amounts of food from one restaurant after another.

“He’s 6, so it doesn’t kind of sink in. It’s not like if our 13-year-old did this, then it would sink in to him,” added Stonehouse. “Trying to explain this to a 6-year-old, we told him we took money out of his piggy bank to pay for this bag of food and this one and so on. We could tell he was upset, but we don’t know if it has really sunk in. That’s the frustrating part.”

So much food had been ordered from so many different places, Chase Bank actually sent Stonehouse a fraud alert declining a $439 order from Happy’s Pizza. However, the $183 order of jumbo shrimp from the same restaurant did go through just fine and arrived at the house.

It took a few orders of food for Stonehouse to realize what was going on. Even after he put two and two together, there was nothing he could do to stop the orders from coming.

“I was putting Mason to bed and saw a car pull up and the doorbell rang with the driver dropping off a big bag of stuff. My wife owns “A Slice of Heaven Cakes” bakery and it was a big wedding weekend, so I thought it was just someone dropping off decorative stuff they used from her. But it was from Leo’s Coney Island. I said, ‘What the heck?’”

“The doorbell rang again and it kept happening. Car after car. Cars were pulling into the driveway while others were pulling out. I finally asked one of them what they were delivering. He said we ordered chicken shwarmas. I took the food and then it hit me. I looked at my phone with repeated messages that my food was getting ready, my food was being delivered. I looked at my bank account and it was getting drained.”

Stonehouse says there was nothing he could do to stop the orders. He says he called one restaurant, who told him he had to get ahold of Grubhub. Stonehouse says there was no way to do that which he could figure out, and no way to cancel the orders.


bags of grubhub food

Just a fraction of theGrubhub food delivery bags 6-year old Mason, from Chesterfield Township, Michigan, purchased using his father's Grubhub account. (Photo by Keith Stonehouse)

When it was all said and done, Stonehouse says most of the food went into the family’s refrigerators. The family has a few of them because of the bakery his wife owns. He says they also invited some neighbors over to eat some of the food.

“While all of the food was being delivered and I figured out what happened, I went to talk to Mason about what he did and this is the only part that makes me laugh. I was trying to explain to him that this wasn’t good and he puts his hand up and stops me and says “Dad, did the pepperoni pizzas come yet?” I had to walk out of the room. I didn’t know if I should get mad or laugh. I didn’t know what to do.”

Stonehouse says he’s heard of things like this happening to other parents, but not to this level. He recommends making sure you don’t have important apps readily available for your kids to click on when they’re using your phone. Maybe hide them. He also says he’s changing his password.
 

chinabald

Super Anarchist
15,475
837
This is a local story for me. Apparently this isn’t the first time this sort of thing has happened with this kid. First of all apparently the kid is advanced as far as reading goes. So he can read well, but at 6 has no concept of the ramifications of what he is doing. Anyway the story goes that he ordered a boatload of pay per view cartoons at one time. So mom and dad need to learn how to lock down the apps or unlink the credit card.
 

Israel Hands

Super Anarchist
3,267
1,932
coastal NC
So he can read well, but at 6 has no concept of the ramifications of what he is doing.
I call millenneal bullshit on this story. When I was 3 or 4 my older brother left the boat fire extinguisher in the back of my mom's car. I discharged it as she backed out of the drive. My dad spanked me when he got home, and I still remember it to this day. A lesson learned.
Most kids, unless they are late developers or are just slow, know which end is up by 6.
 

chinabald

Super Anarchist
15,475
837
Just move to the civilized world where 6 yos can not agree to lawful sales contracts and beating children is just as prohibited as beating adults.

Did you ever spank your dad back when he was naughty?
While I agree with you about children and contracts how can you blame the restaurant. The dad set up his app under his name and linked his credit card account to the app. How do they know it was a minor using his phone?
 

Lark

Supper Anarchist
9,892
1,941
Ohio
Does he actually have to pay that?

You muricans need some better laws.
Who should pay for it? The delivery driver? The cook? The restaurant owner? The internet service provider? Apple? The kid's parents seem the most reasonable choice.
 

MR.CLEAN

Moderator
47,578
5,453
Not here
Just move to the civilized world where 6 yos can not agree to lawful sales contracts
There is no sales contract between the minor and anyone. There is a contract between phone owner and the services he linked, and those require him to pay when someone buys shit with his phone so long as no one has stolen it. Unless he wants to press charges against his child for theft and make the kid pay restitution, or unless he can show the vendors knew it was a minor, it's the phone owners' obligation. EU has same rules.
 

mathystuff

Super Anarchist
1,168
773
Who should pay for it? The delivery driver? The cook? The restaurant owner? The internet service provider? Apple? The kid's parents seem the most reasonable choice.
This would be 100% on the restaurant here. There can not be a sales contract with a child. At least if dad doesn't accept it at the door.

Kids buying stuff without parental consent and parents returning it isn't all that uncommon.

Dads liability insurance might still cover it.
 

mathystuff

Super Anarchist
1,168
773
There is no sales contract between the minor and anyone. There is a contract between phone owner and the services he linked, and those require him to pay when someone buys shit with his phone so long as no one has stolen it. Unless he wants to press charges against his child for theft and make the kid pay restitution, or unless he can show the vendors knew it was a minor, it's the phone owners' obligation. EU has same rules.
Not true in germany.

Kid buys stupid shit on parent issued phone is not a rare situation. Still the kid trying to buy. You might have to prove that it was the kid in court, but i haven't heard about anyone taking a case there.
 


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