What Do You Reckon?
#1
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What Do You Reckon?
Let's assume ....
Someone walks into a shop and they have a Grandfather Clock reduced from £2895 - marked down to £895.
They haggle hard and buy it for £800 - bargain!!
The shop agrees to deliver it within the week - they pay for it and leave their details.
Then, the Head Office of the shop telephones them and informs them that they will not be delivering the clock unless the person pays £1895. Apparently, the marked down price should have been £1895 and not £895!!
Was the sale concluded in the shop on payment and acceptance of delivery address? I believe that it was ..... or, is the sale only completed when said item is delivered?
Someone walks into a shop and they have a Grandfather Clock reduced from £2895 - marked down to £895.
They haggle hard and buy it for £800 - bargain!!
The shop agrees to deliver it within the week - they pay for it and leave their details.
Then, the Head Office of the shop telephones them and informs them that they will not be delivering the clock unless the person pays £1895. Apparently, the marked down price should have been £1895 and not £895!!
Was the sale concluded in the shop on payment and acceptance of delivery address? I believe that it was ..... or, is the sale only completed when said item is delivered?
#3
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Well, I do rather like them!!
You need the house to see them suited however.
You should hear the hour in my house ... chimes, gongs, tings, bings, bongs
You need the house to see them suited however.
You should hear the hour in my house ... chimes, gongs, tings, bings, bongs
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Let's assume ....
Someone walks into a shop and they have a Grandfather Clock reduced from £2895 - marked down to £895.
They haggle hard and buy it for £800 - bargain!!
The shop agrees to deliver it within the week - they pay for it and leave their details.
Then, the Head Office of the shop telephones them and informs them that they will not be delivering the clock unless the person pays £1895. Apparently, the marked down price should have been £1895 and not £895!!
Was the sale concluded in the shop on payment and acceptance of delivery address? I believe that it was ..... or, is the sale only completed when said item is delivered?
Someone walks into a shop and they have a Grandfather Clock reduced from £2895 - marked down to £895.
They haggle hard and buy it for £800 - bargain!!
The shop agrees to deliver it within the week - they pay for it and leave their details.
Then, the Head Office of the shop telephones them and informs them that they will not be delivering the clock unless the person pays £1895. Apparently, the marked down price should have been £1895 and not £895!!
Was the sale concluded in the shop on payment and acceptance of delivery address? I believe that it was ..... or, is the sale only completed when said item is delivered?
Does this person earn less than £50k a year?
Seriously Pete, who cares?
#13
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#16
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I have always had an appreciation for quality items. That's not age, that's taste. I've never been interested in 'timepieces' beyond a good quality, reliable wrist watch. I can't really see that changing with age.
So there is a definite link between age and interest/appreciation of 'timepieces'??
I can't think for the life of me why anyone in there twilight years would want every passing hour marked with the toll of a bell?
Surely, it should be to the contrary?
So there is a definite link between age and interest/appreciation of 'timepieces'??
I can't think for the life of me why anyone in there twilight years would want every passing hour marked with the toll of a bell?
Surely, it should be to the contrary?
#22
Yep, deal done when money changed hands. Sale concluded. Tough luck on the shop. Head office can say what they like it's too late.
Two elements are required to form a legally binding contract:
1. The offer. You see something you want and ask to buy it
2. The acceptance. The shop agrees to sell it to you at an the agreed price
Controlled by the Sales of Goods Act 1979 as ammended by Sale & Supply of Goods Act 1994.
Go get em!
P.S. You don't need a receipt. A shop doesn't have to legally give you one so they can't demand that you need a receipt for returns/faulty goods etc. Still, having one in this instance is a good thing.
Two elements are required to form a legally binding contract:
1. The offer. You see something you want and ask to buy it
2. The acceptance. The shop agrees to sell it to you at an the agreed price
Controlled by the Sales of Goods Act 1979 as ammended by Sale & Supply of Goods Act 1994.
Go get em!
P.S. You don't need a receipt. A shop doesn't have to legally give you one so they can't demand that you need a receipt for returns/faulty goods etc. Still, having one in this instance is a good thing.
Last edited by Pjamie; 19 May 2011 at 12:55 AM.
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If you push this I reckon the shop will "drop" the clock during packing, say how terribly sorry they are for their error, and offer you a full refund.
Mysteriously, a very similar clock will appear for sale shortly afterwards
Mysteriously, a very similar clock will appear for sale shortly afterwards
#29
I had a similar situation some years ago (though not for the sale of a clock).
A mate told me that a computer shop had a graphics card on sale on their website for £26.50 instead of £265.00. I ordered the item and had the money taken out of my account. But before it was shipped I had an e-mail telling me that this item was no longer in stock and refunded the money. I was convinced that this was just so they could get out of selling at the price I paid. There were plenty is stock when I ordered it. I took the matter to trading standards but there was not much they could do (they said) and the shop refused to send the product I had paid for and just refunded my card. I had written to them to state that I had made an offer, which they excepted by taking payment, and that this was therefore a contract, but in the end I was getting no where and dropped it. Some days later the item was on their website at £265.00
I suppose it depends on how much you want the item and how much you are prepared to fight for it. If you have paid for it and agreed for them to deliver then it's legally yours. Maybe you can arrange to get it collected privately and send the shop the bill, or pursue via small claims. Either way, you're in the right, despite the questionable taste in clocks..
A mate told me that a computer shop had a graphics card on sale on their website for £26.50 instead of £265.00. I ordered the item and had the money taken out of my account. But before it was shipped I had an e-mail telling me that this item was no longer in stock and refunded the money. I was convinced that this was just so they could get out of selling at the price I paid. There were plenty is stock when I ordered it. I took the matter to trading standards but there was not much they could do (they said) and the shop refused to send the product I had paid for and just refunded my card. I had written to them to state that I had made an offer, which they excepted by taking payment, and that this was therefore a contract, but in the end I was getting no where and dropped it. Some days later the item was on their website at £265.00
I suppose it depends on how much you want the item and how much you are prepared to fight for it. If you have paid for it and agreed for them to deliver then it's legally yours. Maybe you can arrange to get it collected privately and send the shop the bill, or pursue via small claims. Either way, you're in the right, despite the questionable taste in clocks..
#30
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Whoever has bought this thing (god knows why as I had one left me in a will once, and it was UGLY) should just hire a van and go and collect it.
Legally it has been sold, and as highlighted by pjamie it is now yours.
I hired a van to go and pick up a 300l fish tank 2 years ago as it was much cheaper to do so.