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eBay - INR
ohreally
Posts: 7,525 Forumite
I recently won an auction for an item of test equipment worth serveral hundred pounds. The item was brand new and I won it for a tiny fraction of that.
The seller has refused to ship the item due, i suspect, to the very low wining bid. I opened a case with ebay informing them that i want the item as won and not a refund. eBay has simply refunded my money despite clear instructions that i wanted the instrument.
It's needed for work and jobs have been turned down, anything that I can do eg https://www.moneyclaim.gov.uk/web/mcol/welcome for the differential between the new ebay item and purchasing a new one and chasing the seller for the difference?
The seller has refused to ship the item due, i suspect, to the very low wining bid. I opened a case with ebay informing them that i want the item as won and not a refund. eBay has simply refunded my money despite clear instructions that i wanted the instrument.
It's needed for work and jobs have been turned down, anything that I can do eg https://www.moneyclaim.gov.uk/web/mcol/welcome for the differential between the new ebay item and purchasing a new one and chasing the seller for the difference?
Don’t be a can’t, be a can.
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Comments
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I don't know the ins and outs, but I believe there is a possibility to sue 'for the loss of a bargain' - or something very similar. However, advice on whether this would qualify and what steps you can take you would need to find out from someone qualified to give such advice... I doubt you'll get that here."The secret of life is honesty and fair dealing.
...If you can fake that, you've got it made."
Groucho Marx0 -
Nothing can really physically force the seller to sell and a court case could get difficult and/or expensive.
Unfortunately you may have to buy the item elsewhere for a more realistic price."Well, it's election year, Bill, we'd rather people didn't exercise common sense..." - Jed Bartlet, The West Wing, season 4
Am now Crowqueen, MRes (Law) - on to the PhD!0 -
You could try and you may win, but then the seller may not have means to pay you any difference. If they were auctioning off a valuable item, the chances are they needed cash. Do you have a reason why the seller didn't sell? there could be genuine ones, theft, damage, etc and then you wouldn't win a case. Either way you're likely to keep losing money.It's needed for work and jobs have been turned down, anything that I can do eg https://www.moneyclaim.gov.uk/web/mcol/welcome for the differential between the new ebay item and purchasing a new one and chasing the seller for the difference?
I believe there have been 'loss of bargain' victories in court but it isn't an open and shut case, so you'd need legal advice at some point..0 -
If they were auctioning off a valuable item, the chances are they needed cash.
To be fair to OP, the winning bid is a contract, so if they needed the money they ought to have started at a realistic price."Well, it's election year, Bill, we'd rather people didn't exercise common sense..." - Jed Bartlet, The West Wing, season 4
Am now Crowqueen, MRes (Law) - on to the PhD!0 -
I doubt the seller is that short of money as they're advertising their services on the internet/ facebook. A couple of hundred ££ is unlikely to be out of their reach.
The item won is kind of trade specific and nothing to do with their apparent line (media/ entertainment).
They appear still active on eBay, but selling different things.Don’t be a can’t, be a can.0
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