on 10-05-2017 01:10 AM
After a winning bid and payment can a seller say he made a mistake with the postage he asked for in the ad, I paid what was asked for and now he is not sending my winning bid item until I pay more money.
Isn't the final bid at the time of the auction finishing binding, can I be asked to pay more especially as he has in his ad has the following "Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing."
on 14-05-2017 11:31 AM
It sounds like the seller realises he has stuffed up by starting the auction at 99c. EBay actually advise to start at 99c to gain more attention. It's a rookie mistake to follow that advice. The days of starting at 99c and having a bidding war are long gone. Even if the seller didn't ask for more money, the fees he'll pay are way more than 99c, so he won't just be breaking even, he'll be in the red.
There is nothing you can do to get the seller to send the item. If they are a new seller offer to cancel and explain they should always start an auction at the minimum they are willing to accept. If they are an experienced seller, leave bad feedback and put in an item not received claim. I know buyers will mention contracts and what not, but you still can't force the seller to post the item. The "contract" wouldn't stand up in court.
on 14-05-2017 09:48 PM
on 18-05-2017 07:52 PM
now springy, if the shoe was on the other foot all the sellers on here would be ranting and raving about non- paying bidders so where is this any different? the seller should honour the sale and learn from the mistake.
on 18-05-2017 08:13 PM
Should...
I remember a saying "People have been shoulding on you all your life".
And it means what it infers.
19-05-2017 08:58 AM - edited 19-05-2017 09:02 AM
@bsal6160 wrote:now springy, if the shoe was on the other foot all the sellers on here would be ranting and raving about non- paying bidders so where is this any different? the seller should honour the sale and learn from the mistake.
In the past when we were selling, we sometimes lost out on some of our sales by misquoting postage. We really didn't want any negs so we copped it.
But 'should' a seller always honour a sale and 'learn from the mistake'?
I'm more pragmatic now and I believe the answer is no, not always.
If the difference is small, a seller might decide to absorb it, but I don't believe they should if the difference is a big one.
If someone lists a really expensive item for 99c, then usually the buyer is well aware that's not a fair price. They are willing to take advantage of the seller. That's the key point, to me.
Sure, sellers here do complain about non paying buyers & they issue a strike (or often they do). But no one can actually force the buyer to pay up, that never happens.
In the same way if a seller sells at a ridiculously low price or if the postage cost is seriously underquoted, then I think it is fine if they back out too. I would advise it. They can get a neg from the buyer. That's their lesson.
on 24-05-2017 02:06 AM
on 24-05-2017 02:08 AM
on 24-05-2017 02:13 AM
on 24-05-2017 02:15 AM
on 24-05-2017 02:16 AM