on 13-11-2019 08:54 PM
Solved! Go to Solution.
on 17-11-2019 12:32 AM
I had a case where I sold a pair of Hugo Boss Orange label, as new, men’s jeans. Buyer said Size was different to what I advertised and sent a photo of the size tag on the jeans. Thought it very odd that there must have been 2 sizes on the jeans, the size tag and also the size printed on the actual jeans, buyer got all narky saying “I don’t have time to be stuffed around blah blah blah”. So I agreed to the refund.
Paid the return postage, then when tracking showed delivered Ebay refunded him. What pee’d me off, the jeans he sent back were a different size, style, extremely worn and Red label. I sent photos of my jeans from my listing to the buyer together with what he returned showing to completely different jeans. His response, was “oh sorry, my bad, you can keep them.” **bleep**, he gets new jeans, a full refund and I’m also out of pocket return postage.
I appealed the decision Ebay made and it was denied “because the buyer returned “AN” item. So got on the phone and pointed out eBay’s policy regarding return items in the condition they are sent. They tried to say “but we don’t visibly see the item so we MUST side with the buyer. I then pointed them to read the buyer’s response where he admitted sending back the wrong jeans. Ebay then agreed that the decision was wrong, and as a “goodwill gesture” refunding me back the money and the return postage.
this is where there returns is seriously flawed.
on 13-11-2019 09:06 PM
If you have the receipt for the item sent and you can get verification from a retailer of returned item being fraudulent then you have a chance to appeal the case.
Otherwise reporting to the online fraud squad may be the only action and won't necessarily get your item back.
on 13-11-2019 09:59 PM
13-11-2019 10:28 PM - edited 13-11-2019 10:33 PM
No, you need to send eBay proof from a retailers letterhead that the item received in return is a copy in order to have any chance of a look in.
eBay doesn't compare or think, it is mostly an automated system where you need to provide concrete evidence.
Unfortunately selling online requires a certain amount of nouse.
If I had this return come in, I would have not accepted the parcel based on being a different item whilst the postal staff witnessed.
on 13-11-2019 11:56 PM
I was going to say, that it should be pretty easy to prove the returned item, did not match the sold item, by simply referring to the serial number, but then I see that you have sold the exact same item twice, once via auction and then via fixed price. So the proof of serial number might not be so straight forward.
I am No expert, and it could be a combination of pic quality and my old tired eyes, but the serial number on this particular item and also the Brand logo on the card holder you also sold, both look a bit suspect when compared with genuine examples.
When selling an item that has a serial number, it is also a good idea to include the serial number in the listing.
on 17-11-2019 12:32 AM
I had a case where I sold a pair of Hugo Boss Orange label, as new, men’s jeans. Buyer said Size was different to what I advertised and sent a photo of the size tag on the jeans. Thought it very odd that there must have been 2 sizes on the jeans, the size tag and also the size printed on the actual jeans, buyer got all narky saying “I don’t have time to be stuffed around blah blah blah”. So I agreed to the refund.
Paid the return postage, then when tracking showed delivered Ebay refunded him. What pee’d me off, the jeans he sent back were a different size, style, extremely worn and Red label. I sent photos of my jeans from my listing to the buyer together with what he returned showing to completely different jeans. His response, was “oh sorry, my bad, you can keep them.” **bleep**, he gets new jeans, a full refund and I’m also out of pocket return postage.
I appealed the decision Ebay made and it was denied “because the buyer returned “AN” item. So got on the phone and pointed out eBay’s policy regarding return items in the condition they are sent. They tried to say “but we don’t visibly see the item so we MUST side with the buyer. I then pointed them to read the buyer’s response where he admitted sending back the wrong jeans. Ebay then agreed that the decision was wrong, and as a “goodwill gesture” refunding me back the money and the return postage.
this is where there returns is seriously flawed.
on 22-11-2019 06:32 AM
why bother selling here - what a scam