Judge John Hodgman - Marco? Justice!
Episode Date: November 22, 2017Nate brings the case against his wife, Pam. They have just bought their first house and Pam wants to have a swimming pool installed. Nate says pools are too expensive and time consuming to maintain. T...hank you to Sandra Macke for suggesting this week's title! To suggest a title for a future episode, like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook. We regularly put out a call for submissions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne.
This week, Marco?
Justice!
Nate brings the case against his wife, Pam.
They've just bought their first house,
and Pam wants to have a swimming pool installed.
Nate says pools are too expensive and time-consuming to maintain.
Who's right, who's wrong?
Only one man can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom and time-consuming to maintain. Who's right? Who's wrong? Only one man can decide.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman enters the courtroom
and presents an obscure cultural reference.
Somebody said to me,
but the Judge John Hodgman podcast
was always so anti-materialistic,
but that's a huge myth.
I mean, Jesse and I literally used to sit down and say,
now let's podcast ourselves up a swimming pool.
Isn't that right, Bailiff Jesse Thorne?
Sure.
Nate and Pam, please rise and raise your right hands.
Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God or whatever?
I do.
I do.
Do you swear to abide by Judge John Hodgman's ruling, despite the fact that he recently purchased an infinity pool in which to ride
his poke boat.
And a third thing that you always see in those little advertisements on the side of the New
Yorker.
I do.
I do.
Very well.
Judge Hodgman.
You know what I want, Jesse?
What's that?
I want a party barge.
You ever see those on a lake, a party barge?
I just assumed you were going to say a tilly hat.
Oh, I owned a tilly hat once. I owned a tilly hat. It just never worked out. It seemed it was
too versatile. Right. There are too many options for wearing it. It had a strap, a non-strap.
You could snap it up on the side. You could look like an Australian outbacker,
or you could take them both down and you look like Katharine Hepburn tending her garden.
Judge Hodgman, I am literally a professional menswear writer.
And there is a part of me that I would estimate at 20% that wants to wear exclusively adventure clothing.
Like vests with hidden pockets.
Oh, I have a recommendation for you then.
It's in Harvard Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts, which is part of New England, a region of the United States.
It's a place called Banana Republic in the Past.
Yeah, man.
Oh, I used to go there in like 1988 and just look at the Jeep that was half in the store, half out the store with plate glass down the middle.
Oh, wow.
Have you seen my pile of 1980s Banana Republic catalogs that's immediately outside the studio in which we're sitting right now?
Producer Jennifer Marmer, cancel the podcast.
Send our litigants home.
I'm good. Nate and Pam, goodbye.
Did I win? Nate and Pam,
you may be seated. The reason
that Jesse and I are not paying attention to you
because this is one of the rare times when we're actually recording
the podcast in person
together here at the Maximum
Fun headquarters in the American
Cement Building in Los Angeles, California. And it is just too much fun to talk to my friend
than to listen to your dumb dispute. But I guess we have to do it unless one of you is able to
identify the piece of popular culture I referenced as I entered the courtroom, in which case I will
award you a summary judgment. Nate, Pam, I'm going to flip a coin.
Bling.
Got it.
Pam, go.
What's your guess, Pam?
What am I guessing?
What was the piece of culture that I referenced as I entered the courtroom?
Pam, have you ever listened to the podcast before?
I have.
It's been a while.
The Tilly hat?
Well, no thank you.
Whoopsie daisy.
The materialism quote. oh yeah it was the
quote i'll do it again for you and i'm gonna give you a hint pam even though you were mean to me
saying you haven't listened to the podcast for a longman podcast, that is not from the original quote.
Okay?
Okay.
So in the original quote, I'm referencing a famous...
I'm going to tell you what it is.
I'm practically handing this to you, Pam.
Imagine in the place of Judge John Hodgman podcast, the name of a famous band.
Okay?
Now I just have to find right somebody said to me
but the judge john hodgman podcast was always so anti-materialistic that's a huge myth
jesse and i literally used to sit down and say now let's write a swimming pool
what's your guess who said that pam i don't the quote yeah oh um okay we'll put
that in the guest book and now we'll move on to what did you have a guess john mccain john mccain
all right that's a good guess good guess thanks one of our great songwriters. Enter it into the guest book. Now, Nate, what is your guess?
Keith Richards.
Keith Richards.
Guess what, Nate?
You're very close.
I don't know that anyone would have suggested that the Rolling Stones were defined by their anti-materialism.
Right? I mean, that was a pretty hedonistic band.
Or is. I suppose there's still a band, right, Jesse Thorne?
I feel like the most distinctive thing about them is their critique of the capital system.
Jesse Thorne, do you know who said it?
Ian McKay of Fugazi, right?
That's right, but he would only pay $5 for a swimming pool.
No, the answer is Paul McCartney of The Beatles.
Paul McCartney said, someone once told me The Beatles are so anti-materialistic, which is a huge myth. John, meaning John Lennon
and I, used to sit down and say, now let's write a swimming pool. And that's why Paul McCartney
is known as the owner of the most swimming pools in England.
He's really not sweating it in the swimming pool department.
His estate is called the land of 10,000 pools.
I like that Paul McCartney really identified that the thing that people don't understand about Paul McCartney is that he wants people to like him.
It's true.
Well, Pam and Nate, neither of you got that quite right.
And frankly, your guess really confused me, Pam.
So let's hear your case.
Pam and Nate, you two are a married couple yep how long have you been married
uh six years congratulations and you live together in uh phoenix arizona it says here
that's correct and my understanding from the affidavit is that Pam would like a swimming pool and Nate, you hate pleasure.
That's exactly right.
Why must I ask you, Pam, to explain why a swimming pool in Phoenix, Arizona might be a fun thing to have?
Is there any argument other than it cools you off that I should know about?
Are you a training to be an Olympic swimmer or anything?
No, I am not training.
I think it's fairly obvious why i would like a swimming pool so and uh and what do you do for a living i am a nurse well
that's a good work that you do in the world it would seem to me that at the end of the long I go, yeah, I heard it.
Yeah, I'm out here nursing.
Yeah, that's right.
I don't, yeah.
Pam is absolutely entitled to her self-congratulation.
Being a nurse is hard work.
Yeah.
My mom was a nurse, Jessie.
What kind of nursing do you do?
Cardiac nursing.
Cardiac nursing.
What does cardiac nursing mean?
I actually work in two different roles. One as an inpatient bedside nurse. So I take care of
patients after they've suffered heart attacks, received stents, heart surgery. You're the person
in their lives. I'm in their lives. Yeah. That's right. And what's the other role? The other role
is I work in an
ambulatory setting where I put patients on... Who knows what that means? Well, outpatient. Okay.
And put patients on the treadmill and watch their heart rhythms while they walk on the treadmill and
make sure that they don't have heart attacks. When you say in an ambulatory setting,
you literally mean while people are ambling. Exactly. Ambulating. You got it.
But ambulatory does have a specific meaning in the world of medicine.
Is that what it means or does it mean outpatient or not in the hospital?
What does it mean?
Outpatient, like they're coming in for something and then they're leaving for something versus
staying as an inpatient in the hospital.
Right.
Which would be called bed and breakfast.
Essentially. Right, which would be called bed and breakfast. Essentially.
Right.
Well, I restate my original opinion that you're doing valuable work in the world.
Thank you.
And it seems to me like after a long day of helping people who are relying upon you, you deserve to have a dip in a swimming pool.
Nate, what do you do?
I'm a judicial law clerk. Okay. So I work for a judge
doing a lot of research and writing. Okay. That's good work. We believe in the law here on the Judge
John Hodgman podcast. I'm going to go ahead and just say as a matter of broad decree, all work is
good work for the most part. But why do you think that your wife does not deserve to have a dip in a cool pool by the time she gets home?
Well, there's a few reasons.
The first is that pools are very expensive.
Stop right there, and I'm just going to help you.
I'm going to give you a little law lesson from your judge.
I'm going to give you a little help on winning a case.
When I say,
why does your wife not deserve to enjoy a dip in the pool? You do not say, there are a few reasons.
First you say, well, no, judge, excuse me. She absolutely does deserve a swimming pool.
The problem is we can't get one for these reasons. And there are a few of them.
Yes. That was much better stated.
Would you like to restate?
Yeah.
All right. I'll allow it.
Well, so as someone who works in the field of law- That's not what I told you to say.
Okay.
My wife definitely deserves to relax in a pool.
The problem is there's a few financial obstacles.
For example, I believe the article I sent you said that the average cost of a pool installation is $30,000.
That's a lot of money.
I just got out of law school a year ago, so I've only been working a year.
Pam was smart and did not go to graduate school,
so she has six years of experience in her field.
The second reason is that pools are very time-consuming to maintain
and they're expensive to maintain.
They're also very dangerous.
I sent you another article that pointed out that pools are 100 times more likely
to kill a child than a gun.
Do you have a child?
We do not have a child.
Do you have a gun?
We don't have a gun either.
All right.
So I don't see why that article has to do with you at all.
Judge Hodgman, they intend to allow neighborhood children
and neighborhood gun wielders to use the pool area.
That sounds like a fun party.
If someone walked up to my front door with a gun, I would let to use the pool area. That sounds like a fun party.
If someone walked up to my front door with a gun, I would let them use the pool.
Fair. I'll allow it.
Let's talk about the financial impact first.
Pam, $30,000.
That is substantially more than $0.
Correct.
Can you guys afford this pool?
Be honest.
This is not even talking about maintenance.
Right.
This is about digging down and building the pool.
Have we established that it's going to be an underground pool or a below ground pool?
We can establish that now.
Yeah, I established it when I allowed this case.
Yeah, exactly. Thank you. No offense
to those of you with above ground pools. They're not real pools. It's not the same. It's not the
same. So you would like to have a below ground pool. And if we stipulate to Nate's contention
that it will cost $30,000, do you have that lying around in a hidden way in your nurse's shoes?
No, it's not hidden yet.
Now I'll go back to the original question.
Can you afford this pool?
Be honest.
I think so.
How would you afford it?
With money.
You are really breaking it down right now.
Breaking down economics for me.
So unless we have a financial burden we're not expecting, we won't have the cash until March or April probably.
Okay, so even you, Nate, are suggesting that if you save up by March or April, you will actually have $30,000 set aside in the pool jar to install a pool.
That's possible?
That's within reach, barring a catastrophe?
Yeah, I can concede that.
All right.
And here's a question I might have asked.
Do you own your home or do you rent this place that you're about to dig a huge hole in?
We own it.
We actually closed on September 21st.
So we've been homeowners for about three weeks. Oh, congratulations.
Thank you.
And may I presume that you have a mortgage?
We do.
All right.
Taking into the account your home payments, you still think
you could set aside 30K. That's great, you guys. Thank you. You're grownups. That's right. Yeah.
How old are you again? I'm sorry. We're both 28. My goodness. When I was 28. No kids. That's right.
No kids. And if we have kids and get this pool, it might happen again. No kids. That was dark. It was a dark joke. But that's OK, because you know what? Edward Gorey made lots of books about untimely death of children and kids love him. I sure did. So, Nate, even you concede that this is affordable, barring a catastrophe. So why are you coming to me whining about money?
Well, I mean, it's affordable.
It would come with substantial tradeoffs.
Tell me about them.
For example, Pam probably will need a new car within the next couple of years.
She disagrees.
But she drives a 1992 station wagon.
What kind? Make and model. Let's hear it.
Mercedes Benz 300 TE.
Oh. It's one of those cheap
reliable numbers.
No, but they go forever.
Ah. Did you send
a picture? Do you have a picture?
Oh, I should have. I could send a picture.
Can you send me a picture right now?
Hmm. It'd be pretty hard.
How many miles are on that?
224,000.
How many owners?
Was it your mom and dad's?
Oh, no.
My dad did help me find it because he works on old Mercedes-Benz, and he's very good at it.
He actually had the same make and model but a different, and drove it to 400,000 miles.
And your dad is living?
He is living, yes.
Is he local to you?
He is local to me.
That's why I think I can drive it for a while.
Yeah.
And also, do you think your dad can help me find a 1992 Mercedes-Benz station wagon?
Because I'm kind of in the market. Yeah, I want like a early 80s SL convertible.
Oh, yeah. I think that we're
going to do some really good business together.
I think you're going to be...
If you get a finder's fee in your dad's
biz, you're going to be getting a pool
before you know it. I should also
mention your dad would have to move to Los Angeles.
To work on it for you personally?
Exactly.
Okay. She's going to need a new car thing is out the window what next nate oh we have a brand new house we have a number of projects we want to do on that um we need
our bathrooms redone we need the awful taupe color on the wall to be changed
um we'd have to trade off some luxuries such as you know tickets to certain comedians
coming to the valley on november 7th how dare you how dare you let the record show that this
taping happened before my appearance in phoenix uh so this is a viable threat even though by the
time you the listener hear this i will have already passed through phoenix and nate and pam
will have already made a decision about whether or not they were going to attend my appearance at the Mesa Performing
Arts Center on November, what is it again, Nate? Seventh. November 7th with the Skyped-in floating
head of George R.R. Martin. But right now I do not know. And I say to you, sir, how dare you hold that above my floating, Skyped-in head.
You know the tickets come with a book.
It's a pretty good deal.
Yeah, I think I saw it at a local bookstore, Changing Hands, maybe.
Yeah, that's right.
Changing Hands Bookstore sponsored my great event,
which has not yet happened by this taping, but I know it went well.
Should we plug it some more for our Time Machine listeners?
That's right.
Nate, let's throw that emotional blackmail out of court already because that just, you know that that prejudices me against you.
Let's talk more about your terrible bathrooms and your terrible wall colors.
Pam doesn't think they're as bad.
But there's also, so $30,000, you do a lot with $30,000.
At least most people can.
So we can get closer to paying off our, what's it called, private mortgage insurance that comes out of our mortgage every month.
What's your private, I don't, Jesse, I don't know what that is.
I probably have it, right?
Is that the thing where it protects you
from being underwater on your mortgage
if something happens?
No, better.
It protects the lender if we default.
Right.
Oh, I see.
So once you have 20% principal,
it falls off your payment.
I'm glad somebody's standing up for these home lenders.
So once you've paid 20% of the principal down on your mortgage, that additional cost comes off your mortgage and your monthly payment goes down.
Correct.
Okay, I got it.
And when do you anticipate that happening?
Well, if we pay according to the schedule, 2022, I think.
2022, that's a thousand years from now.
I think I'll be dead by then.
Certainly, if you get a pool.
From the pool.
Yeah.
Pam, why don't you want to fix up your janky bathrooms?
I guess I wouldn't use the term janky to describe the bathrooms i think they are in
decent shape um actually recently remodeled um but they're the way when the house was remodeled
they one of the bathrooms is a half bath and it's connected to the master and it's not it's like connected by a hallway so it's
not you know actually a master which is unfortunate the other official master has a very small shower
and i think that is making it janky for nate um got it yeah it's i think it's how small a shower does a shower have to be in order for it to be small?
It's like a coffin.
No, it's not a coffin.
It's larger than a coffin.
It is velvet lined.
And it's buried in graveyard earth.
Pam, are you just underplaying the amount of renovations so that you can get your precious, precious pool?
I don't think so.
All right.
I think that if we don't build the pool within the first year of having the home, that it won't happen.
But I think renovating—
Because of a witch's curse?
Yeah, and just getting comfortable without one.
I see.
You're afraid that years of not having a pool will mean you'll never get a pool.
Yeah.
It seems to me like the odds of getting comfortable without a pool while living in Phoenix are relatively low.
Okay, fair.
It's time for a quick recess.
So we have a really awesome new show joining the Max Fund Network.
Let's hear about it.
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Court is back in session.
You're listening to Marco Justice.
Pam wants to get a pool. Her husband, Nate, is opposed. Let's get back into the courtroom to hear more about the case.
Nate and Pam, you just bought this house. Did you look at any homes with pools when you were considering your home purchase?
We looked at several.
Do they have other homes without pools in Phoenix, Arizona?
They do.
That's what we bought.
You bought the one?
Well, we were looking and we were narrowing it down to a certain neighborhood.
And we actually were under contract with a different home and yada, yada, yada.
So anyway, I decided I'll look at homes that don't have pools.
No, you know what?
I'm not going to allow that yada, yada, yada.
You're under contract with a different home.
Did that home have a pool?
It did.
Why did that fall apart?
Did Nate sabotage the deal?
I don't know.
I would be upset if he did that.
The sewer needed to be replaced beneath the home.
Oh, okay. And the seller wasn't interested
in doing that for us. So at that point, I agreed to look at homes that didn't have pools
with the plan to build one, as long as the backyard would accommodate a pool.
This is a contract, a verbal contract that you made with Nate?
This is a verbal contract.
Nate, do you deny the existence of this verbal contract? Yeah, there was no consideration, Your Honor.
So it's not binding. That is some real legal stuff you bring to me. And there have been times before
when I have made reference to a contract in cases like this. And I've heard from legal experts that I
misunderstand the concept of consideration. And they inform me, and I refuse to remember what
they tell me out of spite. So would you remind me and our listeners what you mean by that when
you say there was no consideration in the contract? Yeah, so for a contract to be binding,
both parties have to give up something. And what each party is giving up is called consideration.
Right. So Pam was willing to look at a poolless house as a sacrifice on her part in exchange for the promise that a pool would be built. How is that not consideration? What am I missing?
is that not consideration what am i missing because all all she's getting is the promise she's not getting a uh any sort of act by me or any sort of valuable trade and oh in consideration
of one pool i will buy this janky house would that would that be a contract in consideration
of one pool in one year i will buy this janky house that you want me to buy, even though you already hate the bathrooms.
And there's a coffin for a shower.
Did you promise a pool or not?
No.
Yeah.
I also say hmm.
I also say hmm because of peer pressure.
Thank you.
Even if not a binding contract in the legal sense in the state of Arizona, Pam seems to indicate that the agreement was that she would consider a house without a pool so long as the plan was a pool would be put in.
Pam, is that an accurate reflection of your understanding?
Well, that was definitely the discussion.
I don't recall, you know, acknowledging this is a verbal contract.
No, no, no.
I understand.
You had a discussion.
With Nate?
With Nate and our realtor.
Or with the pool fairy that lives under your pillow?
With my husband.
Nate, did you have this discussion?
Yes or no?
The discussion we had was
that we would buy a house
with the possibility of installing the pool.
So the house we have has a backyard
big enough for a pool.
But it wasn't concrete. We'll have a pool by the possibility of installing a pool. You wanted
to make sure that it was possible for you to be the one who said we cannot have a pool
rather than the geography. No, I don't think she would have agreed to buy a house where it was
impossible. Right. So you said, I agree that it is possible that a pool can be installed.
And she inferred from that that you would agree to a pool in the future,
but you were just keeping the possibility open,
knowing that it would never be binding upon you to install a pool.
Nate, I don't want to know your last name, but I'm sure you have a middle name.
What is it? Is it Mr. Loopholes?
No, it's Kevin.
Well, Kevin Loopholes? No, it's Kevin. Well, Kevin Loopholes, you successfully outlawed your wife.
I hope you're proud of yourself.
Pam, he's right.
It's not a binding contract.
Here's my question.
Pam, do you love to swim?
Um, yeah.
You're not making a great case for yourself well swim i'm not a great swimmer
i enjoy being in the water and doing like so we want to i want a play pool and i think nate
is i mean he's talked about that what's a play pool? Play pool is like a pool that's like three feet on one end, five in the middle, three on the other side.
So you can play like water volleyball.
Okay.
Is that a passion of yours?
I enjoy doing it.
We lived with my parents leading up to buying our house.
My parents have a play pool.
And we lived with them during the heat of the summer.
So we did do that. I also
like to exercise, like run and bike and stuff. It's hard to do that in the summer, hence Arizona.
So I did engage in water aerobics in the pool. And that's something I found I could remain active doing.
And I would like to have a pool so I can do that in the summer.
In water aerobics, are you like tying floats to your feet and stuff
and like building resistance training in the play pool?
Well, that's what I would like to do.
I kind of did my own version of water aerobics.
It sounds like you do your own version of everything, Pam.
Well, you know.
Yeah, I know.
What's your own version?
Floating on a float shaped like a slice of pizza while drinking a daiquiri?
No.
That's my version.
Sounds better, though.
There's a lot of rocks in Arizona, so I would lift rocks in the water because I just had them accessible to me.
All right.
Let me understand this, Pam.
You don't want a swimming pool so much as you want a very specific kind of wading pool that you couldn't swim from one end to the other because you'd bump your knees and you want to fill it with rocks.
No.
There's an argument to be made for the budget conscious.
That installing a pool would enhance the value of your investment of your home.
And I'm going to be honest with you, Pam.
People can like what they like. But I don't like the sound of this play pool.
This sounds like a kid's pool.
I've never heard of it.
Have you heard of such a thing, Jesse?
No, I'm pretty sure she's made it up.
And I'm also pretty sure that her imagined activity of pool volleyball is going to be very difficult to do without the participation of other pool volleyball players.
Well, like her mom and dad, who already have one of these pools and live nearby.
I guess.
Pam, you know I was 100% on your side, because dudes are usually wrong.
But I got to say, if I were looking at homes in
Arizona, I'm like, I want one with a pool. And I'm looking at two houses that have pools that
you can dive into and swim in and also have a shallow area where you can hang around and do
whatevs. And then I look at your place that has this weird puddle in the back with a volleyball net and it's all full of boulders you picked up.
I don't think I would pay a premium for that house.
Am I wrong?
Well, the pool you just described isn't one that I want.
Well, I agree.
Because I don't want boulders in the pool.
Well, you said you take rocks into the pool.
Well, small rocks that I can hold and move, and then they don't stay in the pool.
Oh, okay.
You improvise weights.
Sure.
Yes, exactly.
You locally forage your dumbbells.
We were trying to buy a house, so I wasn't going to go out and buy weights and things at that time.
How far away do your parents live?
They're about 20 miles.
Do you have access to any other pools nearby?
The same distance, 20 miles.
Nate's parents have a pool.
Oh, I have some evidence here that was submitted from a couple named Nikki and Greg.
Yes. Who are they? Nikki is my Nikki and Greg? Yes.
Who are they?
Nikki is my sister, and Greg is her husband.
Okay.
Pam, you withheld evidence from me of a third pool.
Nate, how close is this pool to you?
Probably 25 minutes.
But I don't know how fast you drive there. Closer than the 20 miles, I would imagine.
They're all about 25 minutes.
They're all about 25 minutes away.old German car in Phoenix, Arizona in the summer, 20 miles in any direction means potential death.
Yeah, that's true.
Nikki and Greg write, Pam can come over and use our pool anytime she wants.
She is a lovely and sincere person capable of no wrong.
Nate can use our pool as well, but must give us at least 24 hours warning.
But must give us at least 24 hours warning.
However, Nikki and Greg say we think Nate and Pam should get their own pool because we want to have pool parties at their house.
Your own sister, Nate.
Yeah, I had to include the mean part about me just to get her to sign it.
That's a contract.
Each person gets something some evidence you did submit were a picture of your sister's pool and your in-laws pools i presume
this is the a picture of nicky's pool yeah there's a picture of nicky's pool and a picture
of pam's parents pam's parents pool pam's parents play pool exactly I've just renamed this episode of the podcast.
Is it pretty? Because... Pam's parents' pretty play pool.
Uh-huh.
Now,
this is... See, now,
Pam, Nikki's pool is a pool I'm
talking about. Kidney-shaped
classic pool. Deep end,
shallow end. Looks like there's
some kind of hot tub in there. What's that?
Yeah, there's a built-in spa spa yeah pam i gotta tell you your mom and dad's pool looks weird to me it's a play pool i don't like it sorry it also has a cover over it that helps keep it warm
oh so the water might look weird you have trouble keeping your pools warm in arizona
Oh, I see. So the water might look weird.
Do you have trouble keeping your pools warm in Arizona?
Only on the edges of the swimming season.
I see.
Okay.
I would imagine you would have trouble keeping your pools wet in Arizona.
Well, part of the cost of maintaining a pool is constantly refilling it.
Yeah.
Tell me more about the cost.
Refilling it because of evaporation, cleaning.
Mm-hmm.
The chemicals are probably $800 to $1,300 a year.
Have you figured out the whole cost of maintenance per year?
No, I would ballpark it at around $2,000 a year.
You don't seem to spend a lot of time in courtrooms, my friend.
You've got to come armed.
Come armed with some evidence.
Yeah, this is not a moot court.
This is a standard court.
Well, the article I sent you says $780 to $1,300 a year for chemicals.
Well, then you say that.
I'm a busy guy. You think I'm going to read every article you send me? $780 to $1,300 a year for chemicals. Well, then you say that. And then, but there's also-
I'm a busy guy.
You think I'm going to read every article you send me?
If I ask a simple question, you have the information at your fingertips.
Yeah, why are you sending us articles?
I know.
What are you, my mom?
So $1,300 a year, you want to say that?
That's your strongest case.
Sure, I'll say that.
$1,300 a year.
Pam, how frequently will you use this pool if I order in your favor?
I used it almost every day in the summer at my parents' house.
Days that I didn't have long shifts, I went into the pool because I ordinarily like to run.
It's so hard to do in the
um in the summer I there's water running it sounds weird but it can be done in the play pool and I
did a lot of that how tall and how tall are you Pam because I may be misunderstanding I'm five
four you're five four so in the middle of the play pool, you'll... You're staring down death.
You'll still be standing, but you can do stuff in the middle of the play pool.
You can do that, or you can run the perimeter of the pool.
Sounds really boring, but...
In the water.
Yeah, right.
Pam, just a question. Have you heard of swimming as a way of getting exercise?
Yes.
Or enjoying pools?
Nate, do you like swimming?
I do.
Okay, good.
Do you like pools?
I like big pools.
So I was actually in high school a competitive swimmer.
So I like what I consider real pools. But those are much larger than play pools. So I was actually in high school a competitive swimmer. So I like what I consider real pools.
But those are much larger
than play pools.
He likes big pools. He cannot lie.
Is your
resistance to this actually
about your contempt
for Pam's
parents' pretty play pool?
No.
And actually, if you ordered us to get a pool,
I would prefer a play pool too
because they're...
Why?
Yeah, now I'm on nobody's team.
They're more useful.
No, they're not.
I grew up with a pool
with a diving board.
Yeah.
So it was fun.
Where did you grow up?
San Gabriel Valley.
I don't know where that is.
That's near Los Angeles.
That's pool central.
Okay.
And you grew up with a pool, with a diving board,
and all the kids came by,
and you would tell these stories on your first dates
about all your diving board pool adventures,
and Pam married you.
And once you tricked her into marrying her, you said no pools ever again.
And now she's crying.
She's filling up a ditch with her tears.
And she's going to do water aerobics in it.
That's exactly right.
That's all I need to hear.
I'm going to go into my chambers and think about this.
And I'll come back with my verdict.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom. Pam, aren't there some sort of
public pool services in this nightmare desert where you live? They exist.
They exist.
How far do you have to go to get to a YMCA or equivalent?
There's a public pool less than a mile away.
What's wrong with that?
Kids pee, poop, throw up in the pool.
She's a nurse, so she spends all day dealing with other people's pee, pee poop and vomit that she doesn't want to swim in it when she gets home nate if you spend the money on this pool
is it money that you will get back if and when you eventually sell this home
i mean if we're lucky lucky, we'll break even.
But, you know, coming of age during the Great Recession,
I don't have the most faith in the housing market.
I don't really view it as an investment.
Pam, how do you feel about your chances in the case?
Good.
Nate, how do you feel?
Please don't end your statement with a question mark.
I think I'm going to lose.
I think the Grinch who wants to point to the budget usually loses.
I wouldn't mind something saying that she has to mostly take care of it, though.
Well, we'll see what Judge John Hodgman has to say when we come back in just a second.
You're listening to Judge John Hodgman. I'm bailiff Jesse Thorne. Of course, the Judge John Hodgman podcast always brought to you by you, the members of MaximumFun.org. Thanks to everybody
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Please rise as Judge John Hodgman re-enters the courtroom.
You may be seated.
My astral form was floating around the courtroom when I was meditating in my chambers on my verdict. And I heard that Nate said that if he were to lose, he would like
Pam to be responsible for the maintenance. Pam, is that acceptable to you?
Absolutely.
So here's the thing. This is definitely a case, as in many cases before it, where I am naturally
inclined to reward passion over miserliness.
If something is reasonably affordable and it will give one party tremendous happiness and will also increase the value of a home or something
or offer some other tangible benefit besides just the happiness of one party,
my inclination is to say to usually the husband,
stop being a jerk and let your partner
have what makes her happy. I'm going to try to be kind, but necessarily blunt in saying neither of
you came to this case with a lot of passion or preparedness. And Pam, you know, maybe it's just your laconic nature that you've developed over your years of working a difficult and tiring and often thankless job of taking care of other people's bodily fluids that you may be too tired right now to really convince me of your passion for lifting rocks and bodies of water.
I still think you want this thing.
Obviously, you wouldn't be here if you didn't. But there's another problem here. This is one where
the principle of the court comes up against the taste of the court. I do not understand this pool
at all. I would not. If I were led into a house that I was told had a pool and I discovered at its deepest in the middle,
it was five feet. And on either end, it was three feet. I would say, can you knock off a hundred
thousand dollars? Because I don't want it. Do you know why? Because I like to swim. Didn't always
like to swim. Now I love swimming. And I don't think I'm in the minority of people in the world
who, when they think of a swimming pool,
swimming is in the name for a reason.
That said, people like what they like in this life,
even if it goes against my taste.
life even if it goes against my taste and pam i don't want to deny a registered nurse anything in this life and i am always prepared to deny a law clerk
everything especially if he comes at me with there's no consideration in the contract
i don't need your weasel language, sir. If you want to have this wading pool,
even though your own mom and dad have one,
if you don't want to branch out and mature and grow as a human being
and instead just have what mom and dad have
and stop messing around with floats and contraptions and rocks and instead
engage in what a pool is meant for swimming then i don't know what to say but if that's you that's
fine that said i don't think that you guys having just purchased this house and having other expenses and having embarked on this financial misadventure so recently, I'm not sure I do feel that it is the correct decision to rush into a major investment of a very specific kind of pool that is not typical of what other homebuyers might expect.
I think it might make more sense, to be perfectly honest, to take some time and reduce your expenses by paying down that.
What's it called, Nate?
PMI.
How dare you?
Private.
I don't remember what these initials are for.
Don't legalize me.
Private mortgage insurance?
Yeah.
And set aside some money at the same time, not only for the pool, but also for giving Nate a shower that is uncoffin-like.
giving Nate a shower that is uncoffin-like at the very least, because that is definitely something that will increase the value of your home and will bring justice to the world.
Because now you both will have the special water fund that you want to have.
So here is my ruling.
There shall be a pool,
but I find in Nate's favor,
insofar as PMI must be PRO'd,
paid right off,
during which time
savings account set up for pool,
ongoing pool maintenance,
and new shower for Nate.
Then once PMI is PRO'd, deploy savings account and have your water fun, both of you.
This is the sound of a gavel.
Judge John Hodgman rules. That is all.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Please rise as Judge John Hodgman exits the courtroom.
Pam, how are you going to find a new place to bring rocks in the aftermath of this decision?
Well, I have a couple options, so I'm not entirely screwed.
You could try land running in wet clothes.
I could try that.
Thank you for the option.
Nate, how do you feel?
That went much better than I could have hoped, so pretty good.
Nate, Pam, thank you so much for joining us on the Judge John Hodgman Podcast.
That's another case in the books. Now,
Judge Hodgman, before we pass out a little swift justice, we want to thank Sandra Mackey for naming this week's episode or possibly Sandra Mac. She named it Marco Justice. If you'd like to name a
future episode like Judge John Hodgman on Facebook, that's where we put out the call for submissions.
We're also on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman. You can That's where we put out the call for submissions. We're also on Instagram at Judge John Hodgman.
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And check out the Maximum Fun subreddit at MaximumFun.reddit.com to chat about the episode.
This week's episode recorded by Gene Barron at Central Sound at Arizona PBS,
our producer, Jennifer Marmer.
Now, let's get to Swift Justice,
where we answer your small disputes
with a quick judgment.
Billy asks,
must I always count the money from the ATM?
I think I should trust all machines
to do this counting accurately for us.
Trust all machines. Trust all machines.
Trust all machines.
That sounded like the start of some kind of robot march.
Yes, that was me doing the Daleks from Doctor Who.
Got it.
That is their motto after they have enslaved humanity.
It sounded like after that, it should just go.
If you don't know the daleks from dr who
they they are they are a kind of uh mobile atm with a with a plunger on its nose that kills
people got it that's exactly why you should not be trusting all machines billy a machine gun is
not a robot but an atm is not faultless now it may be the case that I am simply a terrified weirdo
that I have counted every dollar I've ever gotten out of an ATM and that is never miscounted once,
not in 25 years of using such a thing. But I still think you should count your money. It's
your money. You want to make sure you have all your money. You should also take a look at your
bank statements from time to time.
This is all just being a part of a responsible grown-up.
If it gave you $20 too much, would you give it back to the ATM?
I'd shove it right back in its plunger nose.
I have never counted them.
It wouldn't even have occurred to me to count the money.
Really? You don't count it every time?
No, there's a robot in there that makes sure there's the right amount of money.
Maybe for me, it's the case that I just enjoy reminding myself that I can do simple math.
Got it.
Five times 20 is 100.
Every time.
That's it for this week's episode.
Submit your cases at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO.
Or email us, Hodgman at MaximumFun.org slash JJHO or email us Hodgman at MaximumFun.org.
No case too small.
We love to get your cases.
I can't emphasize that enough.
If you've got kind of considering something, send it to us.
Yeah.
Send it along.
Tell you what.
Don't you worry about it.
I'll be the judge.
Exactly.
We'll see you next time on the Judge John Hodgman podcast.
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