on 20-07-2020 05:49 AM
on 20-07-2020 05:50 AM
on 20-07-2020 09:44 AM
on 20-07-2020 09:49 AM
on 20-07-2020 11:20 AM
I'm unsure what your issue is.
I understand that the buyer has the item and their money, but that would surely be between AP and the buyer. You have your money, so at this point you have what you would have had if there had been no delivery delays.
Given the buyer isn't contactable, you only have AP tracking showing the item as delivered, which isn't always true.
But, as I said, it is nothing to do with you any more. If AP wants their money back, AP should have had the tracking number flagged and should be pursuing the matter themselves.
on 20-07-2020 11:47 AM
Buyer paid you. You got the money. Item was late arriving. AP paid the refund to the buyer, not you, but via you. If you get the buyer to repay, then you are effectively being paid twice. You have the money for the item. This is a non issue.
on 20-07-2020 12:00 PM
davewil, I heard an acquaintance speaking of a recently received order which he had placed back in March. His loudly stated view was that Australia Post "owed it to [him]" for "mucking [him] about".
I'm not of the same view; it was obvious that the delay and presumed lost in transit status was a COVID-19 casualty. I ventured to suggest this; I was shouted down (but quite politely). I retired, crushed*, to the balcony beyond Zoom range.
(*Not noticeably, though. One slice of cheesecake and I was fully revived.**)
(**Oh no! Dismay deflates me once more! The bin man just went past and I'd not put out the blue (recycling) bin which is as stuffed as an aubergine! 👟🏃🏼♀️🏇🌪🗑🚚🗑🏃🏼♀️👟💨 <-- symbols to signify extreme speed and breathlessness ...... I am back, having successfully completed Mission Blue Bin. Cunningly placing the blue bin on the nature strip of a very obliging neighbour on the opposite side of this quiet and secluded thoroughfare has triggered the bin man to pause his truck. Rubbish gone. Thanks shouted out to neighbour together with sempahore gestures. Bin dragged back up the driveway curving with blue-grey steepness around the lavender and sacred bamboo and rosemary.)
on 20-07-2020 12:12 PM
@*tippy*toes* wrote:Buyer paid you. You got the money. Item was late arriving. AP paid the refund to the buyer, not you, but via you. If you get the buyer to repay, then you are effectively being paid twice. You have the money for the item. This is a non issue.
Technically AP were refunding the seller, not the buyer, as it was the seller who engaged the services of AP and between whom a contract was formed. The fact that the seller refunded the buyer via eBay is a seperate issue.
If AP (or their insurance company) were to now seek a return of the refunded amount (and I admit I have no idea if this is something likely to happen), they would be pursuing the seller and not the buyer.
So while in one sense I agree with your point that the seller has been 'made good' and shouldn't be seeking re-payment from the buyer now, it's not an unreasonable request to be making either, IF the intention were right and there were some chance of the seller being stung now that delivery has been made.
on 20-07-2020 04:55 PM
on 20-07-2020 05:18 PM
@danieh_6 wrote:
... the seller should not be profiting off this. Why should the seller be paid twice for the item?
To borrow your own "logic", why should the buyer be profiting off this? Why should the buyer get both the item and the refund?