[78-L] He changed his mind..
Cary Ginell
soundthink at live.com
Wed Jan 18 22:25:44 PST 2012
It's my experience that only by mutual agreement can a sale be voided. You have every right to hold a winning bidder to his final bid. It all depends on how far you want to take it.
Cary Ginell
On Jan 18, 2012, at 10:22 PM, "neechevoneeznayou at gmail.com" <neechevoneeznayou at gmail.com> wrote:
> Report it to ebay. The winner is breaking a contract, as I understand
> it. I don't know what ebay will do...maybe send an email reminding the
> bidder that they entered into a binding contract. You can at least apply
> for a refund of the "price" realized fee, but not the placement fee. Or
> that's how it used to be. I haven't sold anything there in some time.
>
> Pls keep us informed.
>
> joe salerno
>
>
> On 1/18/2012 4:05 PM, David Lennick wrote:
>> Well, cocky doo doo..an eBay winner has decided he doesn't want the record,
>> after paying big bucks for it. And I can't seem to initiate a "second chance
>> offer" link..does that only apply if an item hasn't been shipped yet? Evidently
>> the return policy obliges me to accept it unless I've specified otherwise.
>> Let's hope the second-place bidder (within a dollar) still wants the thing.
>> What do you guys do when this happens? I mean after pouring the scotch.
>>
>> dl
>>
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>
> --
> Joe Salerno
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