100,000 Card Lot: Refund Controversy

The listing that is the subject of the linked-post was previously discussed here.
It could end up an ultra-cautionary tale about PayPal and high-dollar transactions.
Refund Please
Original Card Listing
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How would a seller know that the thing had not been looted? He wouldn't.
Not saying the buyer is bad, just that the seller has no protection.
It could end up an ultra-cautionary tale about PayPal and high-dollar transactions.
Refund Please
Original Card Listing
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How would a seller know that the thing had not been looted? He wouldn't.
Not saying the buyer is bad, just that the seller has no protection.
Folks Who Bite Get Bitten. Folks Who Don't Bite Get Eaten.
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Comments
payment method to accept. I feel bad for the seller here since he did post scans of all the key cards.
Definitely buyer's remorse...
Don't you just love when sellers sticker their gd, vg, & ex cards with mint prices??
The 54 Bowman Duke Snider card is stickered $250, which is 10x VCP price for that grade.
The 53 Topps Eddie Mathews is stickered $185 ... avg. VCP for a 4 is $40
Wonder what other surprises there are in this lot?
Sad thing is that he'll probably take anything good that wasn't pictured and maybe a few that were pictured, then return the rest when paypal gives him his $ back. Then the seller has to relist and anybody who saw the lot before will figure it's been cherry picked.
I wouldn't be surprised if the buyer suggests he could "settle" for a partial refund.
Considering the seller did not know that Paypal and pickup do not mix I doubt they followed the SPP in protecting themselves in the first place.
ebay i.d. clydecoolidge - Lots of vintage stars and HOFers, raw, condition fully disclosed.
<< <i>Doesn't the buyer protection only cover up to $2000? So wouldn't the seller only have to refund $2000 when he got his cards back? Shouldn't the other $7100 be safe? >>
Nope, the seller is responsible for it all, All Paypal guarantees to pay the buyer back is 2000.00. They will attempt to recover it all for the buyer and will put a hold on his account for the full 9,000 if he removes the money..
<< <i>This is why I posted in frankhardy's post that it is a bad idea to accept paypal on high dollar items. >>
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The fear has some merit, in all cases.
BUT, in a deal with 100,000 cards vs. 1-card, the risk seems to expand of the charts.
There is NO way the instant seller can possibly know if his stuff has all been returned.
Based on FB, the buyer is not unsophisticated.
And, as it turns out, the seller was indeed FORCED to accept PayPal because of his
registration date.
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I agree.
Further, I suspect that much of the lot is carp.
BUT, when you buy such a lot there is an assumption of risk........... UNLESS you pay via PayPal.
PP turns every EBAY seller into an "approval service."
He appears honest and did his best to represent what he was selling - though due to the enormous size - probably didn't have a handle on what true % were commons?
Selling something like this on ebay just seems to have too much potential grief.
From the pics, one can't tell anything about the true condition of the star cards IMO.
My take is ya can never allow returns on lots of this size.
Happy 4th!
mike
joe
Out of the question when Paypal is involved.
The seller is the only person to blame for this problem here. He asked for this headache by selling the cards as one lot and by his own listing and actions did not fully understand the Paypal SPP. If you are going to sell on Ebay and take Paypal you need to FULLY understand the problems that can arise and how to protect yourself.
This holds true for everything sold on Ebay. Remember there are more buyers scams on low cost items than high ticket items. Its the big ticket items that get the attention though. I have 2 CC chargebacks right now on 2 diffferent items sold to the same loser in a 3 week period for a grand total of 26.00.
I still think there is alot more to this story that the seller has not disclosed. Would love to hear the other side.
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Hi Mike
That is correct.
BUT, PayPal is now the sole decider about refunds.
While PP is only on the hook for $2K, they will come after
the seller for the additional $7500. The seller may have
no choice but to refund or CLOSE his PP account.
In this case, the seller is not allowed to sell on EBAY w/o
a PayPal account.
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The more I look at the cards, it seems that the seller may have
gotten lazy. He could have had a better chance at a clean deal
that stuck, if he had busted the stuff into MUCH smaller lots.
I am all for listing lots, but maybe 100K cards is just too many
to put on EBAY when PayPal is in the mix.
I gotta ask why did he list like that. He has good established feedback as a card seller. With the cards pictured he would have probaly come close to the amount the entire auction made. What is really going on?
<< <i>Storm that is the biggest problem here is the sheer volume of the lot not the dollar amount. It could have sold for 100.00 and that many cards the seller would still be on the crap end of it.
I gotta ask why did he list like that. He has good established feedback as a card seller. With the cards pictured he would have probaly come close to the amount the entire auction made. What is really going on? >>
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I suspect he was overwhelmed by the volume of cards, and tried
to take what looked like the "easy" path.
It's VERY true that the $9K is not the problem I see here. The
seller would be in MUCH better shape if he was fighting over a
single $9K card. If a refund was forced, he would at least get
the item back. NOW, he has no idea what he is going to find
in the returned lot.
One of the EBAY-board pot-stirrers will likely invite the buyer to
respond. If he's smart, he will not.
seller would be in MUCH better shape if he was fighting over a
single $9K card. If a refund was forced, he would at least get
the item back.
Unless the buyer tells paypal that you sent a different card and then returns that card to you.