There are few things more satisfying than watching someone in a position of power, who is being a total jerk, realize they messed with the wrong person. This story, coming all the way from Portugal, is one of those moments.
A woman was just trying to buy a pack of cigarettes when a kiosk worker got creepy with her credit card, refused a simple request, and then broke the law multiple times.
He thought he had all the power. He had no idea he was dealing with someone who knew the system inside and out.
What happened next was a slow-burn revenge that ended in a perfect mic-drop moment:























You can just feel the smug satisfaction radiating from that final line, can’t you? This wasn’t just about bad customer service. It started with a legitimately creepy moment, the clerk lingering over her credit card details. That alone is enough to set anyone on edge.
But his refusal to let her simply insert her own card escalated the situation from awkward to confrontational. The real power play, however, was his refusal to provide the legally mandated “complaints book.” He was betting on her not knowing the rules. He bet wrong.
When You Know the Rules, You Hold the Power
This story is a fascinating glimpse into a consumer protection system that many of us have never heard of. The “Livro de Reclamações,” or complaints book, is a real and legally binding thing in Portugal. According to the official ePortugal government portal, all providers of goods and services are required by law to have one. Refusing to provide it, or tampering with it, comes with hefty fines.
The OP’s calm, methodical approach was brilliant. She didn’t yell or argue. She just quietly gathered her evidence. The clerk thought he was winning every little battle, the pen, the book, her supposed “giving up.” He had no idea he was just handing her more ammunition for the war he was about to lose.
The initial moment with the credit card was more than just weird; it was a major security red flag. As financial experts at Forbes Advisor warn, any time a clerk is overly interested in the physical details of your card, it could be a sign that they are trying to capture your information for fraudulent purposes. The OP’s instinct to take back control was spot on.
Here’s what the Reddit community had to say:
The entire internet was basically giving this woman a standing ovation.




Many users, especially from the US, were fascinated by the concept of a legally-mandated complaints book.





Other users shared similar systems in their own countries.
![Woman Uses a "Complaints Book" to Serve a Smug Clerk Some Cold, Hard Justice [Reddit User] - I was consulting to a hotel in Russia a few years ago. They have the same book with the same rules in Russia.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1764068190302-1.webp)


How to Handle a Situation Like This
While most of us don’t have access to a magical, legally-binding complaints book, the OP’s strategy is universal: stay calm and document everything.
If you are dealing with a hostile or rule-breaking employee, the worst thing you can do is escalate the argument in the moment. Instead, use the one tool you always have on you: your phone. Take photos, record videos (if legal in your area), and make detailed notes of what happened, including the date, time, and names of anyone involved.
Then, go over their head. A well-written, evidence-backed email to a corporate head office or a complaint filed with the Better Business Bureau is far more effective than a screaming match with a clerk who clearly doesn’t care.
In The End…
This clerk thought he was dealing with a powerless customer he could bully. He learned a very expensive lesson: never underestimate someone who knows their rights. That smug little chuckle as he saw the blank book probably cost his employer a fortune.
What do you think? Is the “complaints book” a system other countries should adopt?








