Ring":3n4lu49j said:
Just been a court case about a motorhome that someone bought but seller refused to part with it so it went to court and according to the judge ebay= no contract
Sadly, eBay and similar operations are NOT auction houses within the usual meaning in UK law. At least, that was the situation in eBay's early days over here, as there were several cases establishing this (I think Rafzetter is involved in the law and thus has better knowledge than me so i'm happy to be proven wrong).
One of the issues is that the contracts aren't the same as a normal auction: in the 'real' world, the auctioneer acts as the seller's agent (primarily), and a contract exists at the fall of the hammer: offer (the bid), acceptance (the hammer), and consideration (goods and money changing hands).
Ebay does not act in this way - both seller and buyer have contracts with the company, but there is no contract directly between the two of them. I'd be surprised if it could be successfully argued in court that eBay acts as an auctioneer, as it is not acting solely in the buyer's interest, being bound (albeit differently) to both parties. If it does anything, it's some sort of escrow.
It's even more complex because eBay operates in many different jurisdictions and allows cross-border purchases. The 'auction rules' - that the fall of the hammer is a binding contract - are specific to English law* (and inherited by the USA, I believe). There are other places where this doesn't apply, and there has been at least one big case recently (IIRC, about a very expensive Chinese vase), where the buyer backed out and suggested they weren't covered by English law. Can't remember what happened in that case, but the seller was trying to force the sale to complete.
The point being that, even if our law changed by statute to classify eBay and similar as auction houses, it's highly unlikely this could be applied globally. Ebay themselves have no incentive to do it anyway.
E.
*I think even Scottish law is different to an extent in this area. They have had timed auctions on property, for example, for centuries (pins stuck in candles, etc.). Aggain, happy to be corrected.