So when a dealer says he won't refund me for a recolored Perry RC, what do I say?

I bought a 62 Perry RC raw, sent it in, came back recolored. Dealer has refunded me in the past for anything that didn't grade, now says "you've made plenty of money off me, so not this time." (I am not embellishing, he really did say that)
What should my response be? I expect some varied opinions here, so be as candid as you want.
What should my response be? I expect some varied opinions here, so be as candid as you want.

Ron Burgundy
Buying Vintage, all sports.
Buying Woody Hayes, Les Horvath, Vic Janowicz, and Jesse Owens autographed items
Buying Vintage, all sports.
Buying Woody Hayes, Les Horvath, Vic Janowicz, and Jesse Owens autographed items
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Comments
<< <i>"you've made plenty of money off me, so not this time." >>
wtf.
"Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind." Dr. Seuss
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Just an opinion
Jason
"Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind." Dr. Seuss
Sorta depends on what the sophisticated seller told
the sophisticated buyer at the time of the sale, AND
what the historical practices between the pair have
looked like.
IF all sales have been based on, "It grades or I refund,"
a refund is now in order, unless the instant transaction
was orally - or in a listing - excluded from that policy.
OTOH, it is pretty hard for a seller with a black/ultraviolet
light to "accidentally" sell a recolored card. Not impossible,
I guess, but hard.
.......................................
If a buyer who knows as much as I know becomes a chronic
sharpshooter/cherrypicker/lowballer - and complains when I
make a mistake in my favor, but never shares the spoils of
opposite circumstances - I will cut him off.
There is good biz and bad biz; if I don't make money and the
frequent buyer is a frequent complainer, I want rid of him.
Some buyers - no matter how much they spend - are simply
not worth the trouble and the mental aggravation.
If none of those conditions apply here, the seller should likely
refund upon the complaint.
............................................
Then, the other rub:
If a seller KNOWS the card could NOT have been altered AND
that the TPG made a "mistake," he may not feel compelled
to refund regardless of the quality of the buyer.
...............
.....................................
If the subject sale was via EBAY, and less than 45-days has
passed, obviously, PayPal would force the refund.
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2. how often do you buy from him?
3. what is the percentage? like I have bought 15 cards from him and returned 8 or I have bought 200 cards and returned 3.
4. if it is ebay deal and 45 days has not passed file a SNAD and get a refund.
not on anyone's' side. just curious.
<< <i>1.how many times has he given you a refund for something not grading?
2. how often do you buy from him?
3. what is the percentage? like I have bought 15 cards from him and returned 8 or I have bought 200 cards and returned 3.
4. if it is ebay deal and 45 days has not passed file a SNAD and get a refund.
not on anyone's' side. just curious. >>
I agree. Too many factors in life.
Raw: Tony Gonzalez (low #'d cards, and especially 1/1's) and Steve Young.
Steve
I thought this was another waverly82 thread. My bad...
I'm a pretty heavy buyer with this guy. I've gotten some great raw cards from him over the years. He can usually count on me for $1000-2000 per visit, show, etc. Lately his pricing has gotten worse, but I've still found cards worth buying. In 7 years of dealing with him, he has always refunded me (or credit) on cards that came back EOT, altered, etc. Not to say there were many - probably 3 or 4 times, max - but he's always done it without incident. Until now, which is baffling.
Despite my buying, he's historically been difficult to deal with from a personality level. Not just with me, but everyone.
Really, I don't care so much about the money spent on the Perry RC, it's just the sudden about face that's puzzling. I did tell him that if this is the way he's going to be in the future, I'll adjust accordingly, i.e., buy less and be a lot pickier about what I select.
Buying Vintage, all sports.
Buying Woody Hayes, Les Horvath, Vic Janowicz, and Jesse Owens autographed items
Buying Vintage, all sports.
Buying Woody Hayes, Les Horvath, Vic Janowicz, and Jesse Owens autographed items
sure.
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Next show if he comes to my table I am going to let him know that talking to other dealers who know me is not smart and that he is not welcome anymore at my table. I hope he makes stink about it because he is the most smug A-hole I deal with at shows.
Thing is the guy backed out of of a $5300 dollar deal after handing me over the money and leaving the show for 4 hours because "he couldn't make the numbers work after thinking about it".
So Ron how you treat and talk about this guy to other dealers maybe coming back to haunt you if he heard about it.
Steve
The guy accepted returns before and should honor a return this time.
Also, I have not heard Ron say anything bad about the dealer. He is just explaining the situation.
If the cards are good enough, I would eat the money. Sounds like a good avenue for good stuff. Ask nicely for a refund and then drop it. Then be more picky next time.
Mickey71
A wise coin/carddealer I knew once said: "Sell it to make a profit but always leave something on the table for the next guy to make a profit".
Keep everyone happy in the food chain of cards, but shoot the scammers and thieves.JMHO
<< <i>Here are a few more details:
I'm a pretty heavy buyer with this guy. I've gotten some great raw cards from him over the years. He can usually count on me for $1000-2000 per visit, show, etc. Lately his pricing has gotten worse, but I've still found cards worth buying. In 7 years of dealing with him, he has always refunded me (or credit) on cards that came back EOT, altered, etc. Not to say there were many - probably 3 or 4 times, max - but he's always done it without incident. Until now, which is baffling.
Despite my buying, he's historically been difficult to deal with from a personality level. Not just with me, but everyone.
Really, I don't care so much about the money spent on the Perry RC, it's just the sudden about face that's puzzling. I did tell him that if this is the way he's going to be in the future, I'll adjust accordingly, i.e., buy less and be a lot pickier about what I select. >>
That sounds logical, but if you become more selective, he'll probably just up his prices even further.
Sounds to me like the guy is jealous and will only be a pain to deal with in the future.
I guess my only thought is, "be consistent". If you won't accept returns, fine. I'll buy accordingly (less). Don't do an about face with the reasoning that because I made money on X, you won't take a return on Y.
Buying Vintage, all sports.
Buying Woody Hayes, Les Horvath, Vic Janowicz, and Jesse Owens autographed items
I would probably give him one more, super friendly, opportunity to do right by you. "Hey, you sure you won't give me a refund on the Perry... in the past you have given me a few refunds and it's one of the reasons I like buying from you.... "
<< <i>I would probably give him one more, super friendly, opportunity to do right by you >>
And if that fails you always have that rock......
Steve
From a different prospective Ron..... You say you drop a good amount of coin at this guy's shop.... How many deals over the years has this guy cut you break on a card(s) you really wanted? Once? Twice? I am going to guess several times whether vintage or new product. If not, he's a poor business man. And how many of those cards did you flip for a huge profit with that nice PSA Label on it? I'll guess a few. Now you know where the owner stands; and by his words has placed the ball squarely in your court. You can continue to get those "great deals" or you can move on.
You should however take the oppurtunity to advise the card shop owner of your decision if you depart ways and was it really worth it in the long run for him not to refund?. And wish him the best.
When a low/mid-tier broker picks up a packet of diamonds in
Antwerp, he is usually not allowed to look at the contents.
If the buyer, for example, pays $500K for a small packet, he
and the seller assume that the buyer will make a profit, but
not always a handsome profit.
If the seller has favorite buyers, he can give them nice packets
from time to time. But, he is under no obligation to do so. And,
buyers do not expect it.
It is a privilege to have access to such sellers AND that privilege
can be lost forever at the whim of the seller. A weak parting
handshake or thank you, a weak parting smile, the wrong tone
of voice can excommunicate a buyer from the trough forever.
Any complaint about a past purchase will preclude any future
purchases.
......................
While none of that protocol is in play with cards, there might
be some elements there to consider when contemplating
having words with anybody who can guarantee you make
some money OR simply not deal with you anymore.
.