I don’t know much about instacart but if it’s like serving where tipping is how you make money then I totally understand the delivery lady. At one point she says “you paid the app not me” so I’m assuming she gets paid through tipping, how do you just expect someone to complete a job knowing that you won’t get paid? This would not work in literally any other profession where a service is provided.
If you’re going to use a service like instacart there is a social contract that you sign up for. Use the service and tip the person (again I’m assuming from what I gather in the video) who is providing the service. Otherwise get your lazy fucken ass to the store and grab groceries yourself. Better yet, tell the person upfront that you aren’t going to tip them and see how that works out.
The problem here I think is the customer paid for the food, they paid for the delivery service, and now the driver is demanding a TIP in exchange for the goods and services they already paid for.
Even if she's in the right and should be compensated, that's usually spelled out when the order is placed so the customer knows. i'm sure many customers are new to the delivery services or just hurriedly completed the order without paying attention to the tip information. Either way, what the driver did is how NOT to get paid. Had she been more tactful and courteous in explaining how the app works, she might have been tipped an appropriate amount.
I think she's not getting the tips she thinks she deserves, and this large order was one for which she expected would make up for the small ones that paid little to nothing for her. When she saw there was no tip, I believe she became angry and things blew up from there.
It's up to the customer to tip. There is no "social contract" when it comes to people trying to separate you from your money. Our society allows you to keep your moeny in your pocket until you decide to spend it. The driver was over-the-top wrong trying the force the customers to tip. The food was delivery was paid up front. She didn't own the food, so to not complete the delivery was pure theft.
She can argue all day the customer was wrong for not tipping, but that doesn't mean she was any less wrong for keeping the food. Tipping is optional. Delivering the food that the customer alreeady paid for is not.
If you want to talk about contracts, there's a legal one here that i'm sure sides with the customer, not the woman pretending she can make up the rules when someone doesn't tip.