eBay Sellers Problem - Any Suggestions ?
Lori
Posts: 860
I had a few Silver Eagle Coins I sold on ebay. This AUCTION ended with the buyer paying right away. I offered free shipping but did not state anywere that the free shipping included insurance. I ship all my items first class mail (not coins). I have my mailing receipt showing it was shipped on Nov. 1st first class mail. The buyer stated it is the correct address. He still has not received his package. I am in WI and he in IL. Should have been a few day trip at the most. Today I get an email stating he wants me to refund his money because he did not receive the coin and he assumed I was going to send it insured. I told him no because it was his resonsiblity to ask if insurance was incuded with my free shipping.
I was wondering the boards opinion on this.
1. I have a receipt of mailing
2. My auction does not state I ship insured.
Am I in the wrong? Should he not have asked if insurance was incuded before paying?
Thanks for any opinions.
Lori
PS I am hoping he does not ruin my perfect feedback of almost 5000.
I was wondering the boards opinion on this.
1. I have a receipt of mailing
2. My auction does not state I ship insured.
Am I in the wrong? Should he not have asked if insurance was incuded before paying?
Thanks for any opinions.
Lori
PS I am hoping he does not ruin my perfect feedback of almost 5000.
0
Comments
Tom
Lori
I think you're in the clear, Lori.
JMHO
Cheers,
Bob
I would still wait. Once I bought a coin from a dealer on Ebay and it didn't arrive for almost three weeks. I politely emailed him weekly about the coin not arriving. He politely told me that the coin was shipped. He told me that we should wait at least 30 days before any action (30 days was the minimum amount of time that the USPS required prior to filing an insurance claim - that's what he told me). Sure enough, the coin arrived about 3 weeks late. I know he mailed it because he scaned a copy of the insurance receipt to my zip code that was mailed the day of the auction plus the package was postmarked 3 weeks old.
Another possibility is the address may have been written wrong. One seller got my zip off my 1 number and it took 3 weeks for the coin to arrive.
So, my advice is to politely tell him that you mailed the coin, send a scan of the receipt and ask him to please wait at least 30 days. If the coin doesn't arrive, then (gulp) I would refund his money. It would be hard to swallow, but maybe you could consider it "self insurance". If you don't refund his money, and he negs you, no big deal though - no one's perfect.
Good Luck
Endo
Tell the buyer to wait a bit.
Ray
If in doubt he should have asked considering it does not say anywhere that I ship insured.
Lori
I don't claim to know what the right answer is, though I suspect that each of you bears at least partial responsibility.
However, you asked for people's feedback and you are getting it, in the form of some very thoughtful replies. But, I feel like you are arguing with the very people trying to help you, if they don't agree with you. Try to stay cool, listen to what people suggest and keep an open mind. It's often worth the effort.
Lori
Jeremy
I had a shipment take 3 weeks as well. The seller shipped it when he said he did - It Just took that long.
I'd give it a month before I assume it is truley "lost"
<< <i>So I am suppose to be out the coin I shipped and out the money I have to refund him. >>
If it helps any, your only out the coins. You could only be out both if you paid him to take the coins.
I had sent an expensive fishing reel to Japan and forgot to get insurance. If it hadn't arrived, I would have refunded the money. It was the ethical thing to do. I was sweating it for TWO weeks. Fortunately he received it.
Always remember "The insurance is for me."
The buyer claims they did not receive the package and says it must the sellers fault (packaging?) so wants their money back RIGHT now. Someone has to push the insurance claim through (4 different entities have to fill out sections on claim form - sender/senderPO/receivingPO/receiver). If it has a value over $50 then it must go to Kansas city for the insurance claims division to disapprove it (they will want more information - like PROVE it was worth what you claimed it was worth) - if less than $50 the sending post office can pay from petty cash.
You should read other posts about people sending coins to PCGS that did not get delivered last March - and their attempts to get insurance claim paid.
Sorry, I don't have any great suggestions, someone loses even if insured (time/money/confidence/listing fees/paypal fees/shipping cost) when package not delivered/misplaced -> bump up your shipping costs and self-insure low valued items, but use delivery confirmation
I also require insurance for everythign over $50.00. Anythign under $50.00 I offer it, but with the tracking number that helps.
As for you problem, I do believe the buyer is correct in asking for a refund.
As a seller it is your responsibility to make sure he gets the coin ,i make no mention of ins in my auctions,BUT, every coin i ship is insured and Tracked , it is in your Best interest to do so, i was shipping every coin REGISTERED mail till i got scolded on the Board
1. Goods were paid for - no arguement.
2. Service (delivery of the coin) was not rendered - the buyer did not receive the item.
With that being the case, an "official" company doing business would pony up the dough, credit, or a like item - no matter who's fault it was. Best thing to do is cough it up and chalk it as a lesson learned, and don't give the option in the future. Send it insured regardless and charge the buyer for it making sure you explain that in the description - "my way or the highway".
The Lincoln cent store:
http://www.lincolncent.com
My numismatic art work:
http://www.cdaughtrey.com
USAF veteran, 1986-1996 :: support our troops - the American way.
<< <i>"The insurance is for me." >>
Mr. Lee nailed it Lori.It's an unfortunate situation.He sent payment, and if you didn't put a disclaimer in your auction about not being responsible for lost merchandise due to lack of insurance, I would say that the buyer should get the refund.On an $89 item, I would assume the seller would insure it, so I wouldn't bother to ask someone with feedback as nice as yours either.4000+ sales with 1 neg would make you a safe bet in my mind, so I would just assume that you knew better.(no offense, remember that you asked.)
https://www.ebay.com/mys/active
Lori
The Lincoln cent store:
http://www.lincolncent.com
My numismatic art work:
http://www.cdaughtrey.com
USAF veteran, 1986-1996 :: support our troops - the American way.
Mailing a $100 coin and failing to protect yourself and your buyer is wrong. You tried to save a little money by not insuring and now it's causing you problems. It IS NOT the sellers responsibility to ask you to ship it properly.
I see your a powerseller with great feedback and if you want to keep it that way you had better wait a little longer to see if the coin turns up and if it doesn't then refund the guy's money. True, he might have received the coin and be shanking you but you will probably never know.
The law Rampage refers to does indeed state that if you take someone's money you must provide them the product and just because they were nor offered or declined insurance does not let the seller off the hook. It was posted by the admin at ErrorWorld some time back.
Let me ask you this; just how did you ship this coin & how much did it cost you?
You could have shipped it insured for $100 using PS Form 3813, which is the blue form and requires a signature from the recipient, in a bubble mailer for $2.57.