graduate_owner":33ukgyey said:
I bought some circular saw blades for the maiden bid of 99p which was ridiculously cheap but that was the price. The seller claimed he had sent them but they never arrived, and I suspect he just didn't want to sell them for the price. (I don't blame him but he should have put a higher starting price or a reserve). He claimed they were lost in transit. Anyhow he said he would refund my money, which he did, via Paypal, but not until I started a case against him. I didn't get a refund though because the day after I closed the case, Paypal emailed me to say the refund had failed due to insufficient funds in the seller's account. Having closed the case, ebay could do nothing, and I had no satisfaction from paypal either. It was only about a fiver including postage, but I was not pleased and I felt ripped off. Lucky it was only a fiver. Moral - don't look at your paypal account and expect it to be correct. If you have a payment, check it is still there in about 10 days time before you can be certain of it. And don't expect any help from paypal either.
K
I had something similar a few years back, but the value if the item wasn't that much higher than I paid - a scale model. I never got it, same sort of scenario - claimed he'd sent it etc etc.
Anyway a few weeks later I saw the same seller put the same item up using the SAME photo. I contacted him and said he'd committed online fraud (which he had) by falsely obtaining money for goods, I contacted these guys:
http://www.actionfraud.police.uk/report_fraud
Got a case number and emailed it to the ebay seller. About 20 mins later I got a full refund.
If you get a case number even ebay and paypal will suddenly be helpful.
DON'T be put off by the small sums of money - you have no idea how many people may have been taken that way by that seller.
For Andy T's scenario, when they put the item up for auction, they effectively entered into a law bound contract, and if they refuse to send the item and cannot otherwise prove it was "damaged", then they are law bound to send it to you - if they do not, again it's online fraud.
Unless things have changed it used to be that a seller could withdraw an item up to 24 hours before auction ended without problems. If they left it to run until the end, the contract has been made "live" and they are contract bound to sell that item for that price, regardless of it's "true" value. It's called an "Auction" for a REASON.
JohnPW":33ukgyey said:
I've won a few a few Ebay auction bargains where the seller didn't want to sell. I've given them a neg feedback which they deserve (gets remove after 1 year anyway), but are there any other consequences?
Does Ebay do anything else to deter it? Eg, suspend their account, put their listings lower down search results etc?
This is illegal. Final bid is final bid regardless - next time it happens follow my other post (now merged) for advice, and if they agree to send it tell them you expect it to be by recorded post and want to see the tracking numbers, otherwise you will involve the "fraud squad".