Taking eBay to the small claims court (and a bit about eBay plus)

I'm wondering if I can get any advice on this issue I have.

 

I bought some computer speakers from the UK.

The speakers were not as described.

I contacted seller the seller wanted the speakers back and agreed to pay return postage cost.

I posted the item back and the seller just didnt pay for the retrun postage cost.

I asked ebay to step in and ebay agreed the refund me the return postage cost of $41.90.

This was about 6 months ago and ebay still havent refunded me the money.

At first they were telling me to just wait, now ebay are telling me they are not going to refund me.

I contacted CBS (Consumer Affairs) here in SA about the issue. They tell me they have tried to contact ebay but ebay are ignoring them. 

CBS advised me to go through the small claims court.

 

I'm just wondering if there's any advice the community can offer me?

 

 

Another thing I would like to know, has anyone else been flagrantly and outrightly abused by ebay's so-called premium service?

I have, surrounding this issue about the refund for the speakers. One represntative said to me; "Yeah, what are you going to do about it if we don't refund you?"  As if to say, we're taking your hard earned money and there's not a damned thing you can do about it. (I have the chat transcript btw.) I've been nothing but gentlemanly to eBay's staff btw, yet their staff are acting hostile.

 

I'm interested in the premium services for the discounts, but I'm not interested in being abused by the staff, I'm hoping to revert to the regular chat, I think this will minimize the chance of lashed out at by a representative.

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Re: Taking eBay to the small claims court (and a bit about eBay plus)

Taking eBay to the small claims court

 

Last I heard it costs $135 minimum to lodge with small claims.

(Your cost, not legal costs that may be awarded)

 

My advice, forget it and use your time to benefit you.

 

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Re: Taking eBay to the small claims court (and a bit about eBay plus)


@kaibacorp* wrote:

For the sake of being precise with a somewhat important topic I will add some informaiton to the above post. The editing time has ended, so I couldn't do it to the original post sorry.


The return of the speakers was not a steriotypical return. The speakers were so low quality that I think it could be fairly classified as being not as described. For example, there was a buzzing sound in the background when the speakers were on.

ebay themselves considered this as a valid reason for a return.

 

The seller did agree on paying the return postage.

eBay much later claimed that the seller did not agree to pay for the return postage.

Here's what happened.

I contacted the seller and told him/her, I'll post the item, but I expect to be refunded for the postage cost.

The seller replied to this "Post the item back please." And gave me the return postal address.

Context wise, the refund for the postage was agreed upon. eBay for some amazing reason, deny that the seller agreed on paying the postage cost. Although, they still agreed to refund me.

 

The whole event happned close to 4 months ago, not 6.

 

 

The eBay Plus represntive said verbatim "What are you going to do about it if we don't refund you?"

It's not the first time a rep has said something like that to me and there's no misunderstanding on my end what that means.

 

Those are the fine details.

Just to be clear, I added them because this may be an important topic and it's best to be accurate.

________________________________________________________________________________________________

I seriously doubt that a court of law would agree that the seller agreed to pay the return postage costs if what you've got above is their actual words.  In fact, it's apparent that the seller actually avoided answering that part of your question.  Just because they answered part of your question doesn't automatically mean they were replying to all of it.

 

You should have used the paypal funded returns to send it back, unless you've already used your 8 for the year.

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Re: Taking eBay to the small claims court (and a bit about eBay plus)

Trust me, as someone who got dragged through the small claims court by a buyer, it's not worth it for $41. I understand that it hurts, but it could end up costing you thousands to get your $41 back. Even if the courts say that the other party is to pay all your costs, it is not enforceable. I won the case, but was still out of pocket thousands, because despite the buyer being told they were to pay all my costs, it couldn't be enforced.

 

Seriously, let it go. Going to court isn't worth it for $41. Chalk it up to a bad experience. Sign up to PayPal's free returns, in case anything like this happens again. Then you are covered.

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Re: Taking eBay to the small claims court (and a bit about eBay plus)


@brerrabbit585 wrote:

I seriously doubt that a court of law would agree that the seller agreed to pay the return postage costs if what you've got above is their actual words.  In fact, it's apparent that the seller actually avoided answering that part of your question.  Just because they answered part of your question doesn't automatically mean they were replying to all of it.

 

You should have used the paypal funded returns to send it back, unless you've already used your 8 for the year.


They wouldn't, full stop.

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Re: Taking eBay to the small claims court (and a bit about eBay plus)

@kaibacorp*,

 

Small claims court cases can be worth it, but it depends upon which jurisdiction is in play. Different states, different fees. You should be able to recover the filing fee if your case is successful - at least, this is the case in Victoria.

 

eBay comes under the NSW legislation and any civil case would be heard in a local court in NSW.

 

Quoting from eBay's User Agreement:

 

 

Spoiler

22. Notices

Legal notices must be served on eBay's registered agent (in the case of eBay) or to the email address you provide to eBay during the registration process (in your case). Notice will be deemed given 24 hours after email is sent, unless the sending party is notified that the email address is invalid or that the email has not been delivered. Alternatively, we may give you legal notice by mail to the address provided by you during the registration process. In such case, notice will be deemed given three days after the date of mailing.

 

Any notices to eBay's registered agent must be given by registered ordinary post (or if posted to or from a place outside Australia, by registered airmail) or by facsimile transmission to eBay Marketplaces GmbH c/- Corrs Chambers Westgarth, 8 Chifley, 8-12 Chifley Square, Sydney NSW 2000, Fax: (02) 9210 6611.

 

23. Legal disputes

If a dispute arises between you and eBay, our goal is to provide you with a neutral and cost effective means of resolving the dispute quickly. We strongly encourage you to first contact us to seek a resolution. If your dispute is not resolved by contacting Customer Service, all legal notices and formal disputes should be sent to eBay's registered agent in accordance with Clause 22 above. We will consider reasonable requests to resolve the dispute through alternative dispute resolution procedures, such as mediation or arbitration, as alternatives to litigation.

 

Law and forum for legal disputes
This Agreement will be governed in all respects by the laws of New South Wales. We encourage you to try and resolve disputes using certified mediation (such as online dispute resolution processes). If a dispute cannot be resolved then you and eBay irrevocably submit to the non-exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of New South Wales, Australia.❞

 

I cannot agree with you, though, that the seller explicitly agreed to pay the return postage. The seller has only said "Post the item back please". You've assumed that this meant that the seller agrees to refund you the postage.

 

HOWEVER... under eBay's Money Back Guarantee, you are entitled to be refunded the return postage amount for a SNAD return.

 

What I would do if I were you is to phone eBay using the Have us call you option, and speak very politely and courteously, not allowing any frustration to be audible in your tone. You need to have the eBay CS rep on your side, and you won't do that by launching accusations or getting upset on the phone.

 

If an eBay employee said to you "What are you going to do about it?", that almost certainly means you must have got up their nose. That gives you something to use to approach this from a different angle. You now know that being confrontational won't work.

 

I actually don't think this is an eBay Plus issue, but rather a straightforward MBG issue.

 

I'll quote from eBay's MBG page:

 

When an item isn't significantly as described

 

[...]

 

When an item is returned

 

  • The buyer is responsible for returning the item.
  • The buyer must return the item in the same condition in which it was received.
  • The seller is required to accept the return at their specified return address.
  • The cost of return postage is the seller's responsibility.
  • Signature confirmation is required for returns of items with a total cost of $750 or more.
  • The seller pays for any customs charges on the returned item.

[...]

 

If the seller hasn't facilitated the return – for example by providing a return postage label – we may also charge the seller any reasonable return postage costs.

 

We require the seller to reimburse us for the full refund amount.

 

Bolding and rubrication are mine.

 

Before you call eBay using the Have us call you option, have everything ready, and be prepared to record the call (with permission), and take notes, and be as friendly and courteous as possible, and have all the information to hand.

eBay's "Have us call you" option is by far the best way to get in touch with eBay. (Emails are useless, for a number of reasons, but primarily because the responses, when they are finally sent, are bot-generated.)

eBay say: We'll call you at the phone number registered to your account, or you can enter a different number.

We’re available from 8am to 10pm AET, 7 days a week.

 

 

IMPORTANT

 

Read this post about recording calls with eBay.

 

The pattern of what to do before calling and during calling is here. Adapt it to your situation.

 

I cannot stress strongly enough that you cannot go in guns blazing with an audible sense of "I've been wronged". You need to do this with persistent niceness. Read the links I've given, and be prepared before you call.

 

You'll need to quote from eBay's MBG page (the text which I've quoted above). That should form the framework for your request of postage cost refund.

 

Good luck.

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Re: Taking eBay to the small claims court (and a bit about eBay plus)

Regardless of the MBG, prevention is always better than cure, so why do you insist on buying from sellers with terrible feedback? I wouldn't buy from any of the sellers you've left negatives for.
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Re: Taking eBay to the small claims court (and a bit about eBay plus)

"Paypal will not pay for return postage unless you opted into that option when you opened the dispute to return the item.

 

It does not sound as though you ever opened a dispute at all, which is where this all fell apart."

 

A dispute was opened.

I'm not sure if there was an option in the dispute page to opt-into about return postage.

The agreement that seller would pay was either: A. In a private message. B. In the dispute itself.

I'll have to look at the records to find the exact quotes.

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Re: Taking eBay to the small claims court (and a bit about eBay plus)


@kaibacorp* wrote:

 

I'm not sure if there was an option in the dispute page to opt-into about return postage.

 


That's not where the offer is, you have to activate it before opening a dispute.

 

https://www.paypal.com/au/webapps/mpp/returns

______________________________________________________

"Start me up I'll never stop......"
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Re: Taking eBay to the small claims court (and a bit about eBay plus)

"You are also not supposed to mention ebay's competitors as you have done.

Although the Moderators remove such posts they have usually been reported by other members.?

 

That's good to know, but the question was; Then why aren't they being honest about it then?

Why are they listing the post deletion reason as something else?

My opinion is that eBay has less than professional admins.

 

"As for the CS people being rude to you....that is a new one on me.....they usually just hang up on you"

I think you might have the wrong context here. Would they hang up for no reason?

The staff are openly hostile for no apparant reason.

I've been thinking about this a bit lately. The reason could be because they have been subject to abuse by members (wouldn't surprise me) and now they consider all members as "bad people." Ther's the only reason that comes to my mind.

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Re: Taking eBay to the small claims court (and a bit about eBay plus)

"I'm not sure if there was an option in the dispute page to opt-into about return postage."

Oh you are talking about a Paypal dispute. I'm talking about an eBay dispute.

They are different obviously.

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