This Wedding Photographer Is Being Asked For A Full Refund After The Groom Cheated, And He Doesn't Know What To Do

    "Sometimes, through no fault of our own, we have to pay for problems to go away."

    When wedding drama comes from within the family, things can be juicy. But when vendors get involved, it gets even messier.

    A groom giving a bride a piggyback ride

    Recently, Redditor u/Wedding_dude (or Wedding Dude, for short) took to the r/WeddingPhotography subreddit to share an incident with a bride who wanted a refund after he had already shot her entire wedding.

    Old-school camera shooting a wedding

    She'd found out that the groom had had an affair; but it wasn't just any affair. "Earlier this summer I shot a wedding," Wedding Dude began. "My typical second shooter couldn't make it, so I found someone else online who I felt did good work."

    Hands over a laptop show that somebody is browsing through photographs on the laptop's screen

    "Anyway, she and I shot the wedding, and everything seemed to be business as usual. The photos were edited and delivered to the client, everything was good. Then this morning I got an email from the bride."

    wedding couple looking at the digital frame from the camera with the photographer

    "She wanted a refund because the woman I had hired as my second shooter for the day had ended up sleeping with her husband after the wedding. [In her email to me] she also included photos from his phone to prove it."

    In later comments, Wedding Dude went on: "[The bride] sent a handful of photos taken with her husband's phone. Pictures appear to be in a hotel room. Images for some reason have today's date on them, with titles like 'img_01.'"

    "I haven't responded yet — what's the best thing to do here? She hired me for a job, the job was completed, and the product was delivered. But I also feel like this would be like if I were a professional dog walker who walked a client's dog, then came back and shot it."

    Rice is thrown at a bride and groom as they exit a church

    In a follow-up, Wedding Dude said that he asked the second shooter for her side of the story. "She initially denied it," he wrote, "then after I brought up the pictures she said he claimed they were in an open relationship so she thought it was okay."

    People in r/WeddingPhotography were having a field day with this post, which they're saying is "by far the best post of the year in this [subreddit]."

    u/Idflipthatforadollar

    "First, this is the funniest shit I ever heard. Seriously, this is some sitcom-level writing right here. I know you may not see it that way, but come on. Second, tell them to eff all the way off. You run a business, and don't offer infidelity clauses in the contract."

    Another proposed compromise: "Offer her a discount on her next wedding."

    u/ByronScottJones

    Meanwhile, commenters repeatedly expressed that the husband was more in the wrong: "This sounds harsh, but her husband was going to cheat on her regardless of who your second shooter was. It’s not your fault that she married him."

    person removing a ring behind their back

    "How about had you been the bartender? 'Hey bartender, my husband got drunk with your booze and cheated on me, give me a refund!' Lol, no, they wouldn't even ask. It doesn't happen with other vendors. Clients keep asking for unreasonable refunds from photographers because we keep enabling that behavior. Your job was completed and delivered. You can't take out the eggs after the cake was baked. So no refund. This is soap opera-level drama, lol."

    man making a champagne tower in front of the wedding couple

    And that ultimately, no refund should be granted. "Tell her you're sorry to hear that but there isn’t a way for you to refund for a service that has been completed per your contract. The second shooter is a contractor who you will not work with again, but she's not directly involved with your business. You can't refund her just because something unfortunate happened that you had no control over."

    Not everyone held this opinion, though. One person wrote,"I don't know what the people here are talking about, I would refund her fully. If she shares this story all over the place, like online, in reviews, or in podcasts, it is YOUR name on the photography contract. I have refunded weddings for less than this because reputation is everything and it's just not worth it [to risk it]."

    closeup of people at the alter

    Okay, I read, like, a ton of Reddit replies and I'm still not sure what I would do here, LOL. Feel free to share your opinions below!

    Note: Some submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity.