Didn't get charged for purchase, what would you do?

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winr

Diamond Member
Feb 17, 2001
6,081
56
91
I would treat them as I would wish to be treated.
I would keep trying until I got in touch with someone who could accept the merchandise back.



:)
 

Krugger

Senior member
Mar 22, 2001
820
0
0
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
Got Ethics? Send an e-mail with details including tracking # of the shipping to customer service. Make them pay for return shipping, but keeping it is theft even if you aren't caught.

if i put $300 in the mail, and send it to you, and you keep it, is it theft? so how the hell can u tell this guy he's committing theft? if may be morally and ethically wrong sure, but he's not stealing. they are the ones that screwed up. sure he should send it back, but would you? honestly? if you thought you would never be charged for it? i doubt most of you would. how many ppl here are willing to jump on a hot deal that is clearly a pricing erro.... plenty if HD is any indication.
-Krugger
 

iwearnosox

Lifer
Oct 26, 2000
16,018
5
0
Originally posted by: winr
I would treat them as I would wish to be treated.
I would keep trying until I got in touch with someone who could accept the merchandise back.

I'm sadistic so I guess I'd have to keep it.

 

Ness

Diamond Member
Jul 10, 2002
5,407
2
0
Originally posted by: Krugger
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
Got Ethics? Send an e-mail with details including tracking # of the shipping to customer service. Make them pay for return shipping, but keeping it is theft even if you aren't caught.

if i put $300 in the mail, and send it to you, and you keep it, is it theft? so how the hell can u tell this guy he's committing theft? if may be morally and ethically wrong sure, but he's not stealing. they are the ones that screwed up. sure he should send it back, but would you? honestly? if you thought you would never be charged for it? i doubt most of you would. how many ppl here are willing to jump on a hot deal that is clearly a pricing erro.... plenty if HD is any indication.
-Krugger


There is a difference on pricing errors. You are actually paying the price they set, not keeping something when you clearly didn't pay anything at all for it.

I don't see why there is such a big objection to sending it back. Come on. Yeah, it would be cool to have a free LCD. That's a no brainer. But you know it will catch up to you. That's a given. Just because Dell is a "large corporation" and people have resentment for corporate america doesn't mean that there isn't people with families working there. I mean, how would you feel if because of this one incident, someone got fired? Would you having an LCD somehow justify someone being out of work? Yeah, I sound a little extreme, but it's stupid that there is this much resistance to do what is right.

Good job for doing the right thing and sending it back. While it would certainly be a kind gesture of Dell to thank you somehow (although far from necessary), I'm sure that the feeling of doing the right thing was more gratifying than anything they could do.


BTW, tell me you popped that bad boy open and played with it for a day or two ;) hehehe

 

Cuda1447

Lifer
Jul 26, 2002
11,757
0
71
Originally posted by: Dizway
Originally posted by: Moralpanic
Originally posted by: 4Lclovergirl
Originally posted by: Roger
Am I the only motherfvcker that would send it back?

No, I would, apparently there are a lot of dishonest people here, company or not, it's not your property.

what if you had to pay for shipping? So now you not only got somehitg you didn't want, but you have to pay to give it back to them? Unless you didn't open it and put return to sender, shipping an LCD could be expensive.

Now you're just trying to justify keeping it. Dell always pay for shipping back.

The CSR was litterally arguing with me, she kept asking me if I gave her the right order number. She says she can't do a return because it was cancelled. I told her i'm just trying to return something I didn't pay for... she was rude, so I hung up after she bugged me about the order number for the millionth time.


I would say ship it back. But do not go to far out of your way to ship it back. If the company wants to give you a hard time about it then forget them. Your trying to do them a favor, don't go out of your way to do them a favor they don't deserve in the first place.
 

slag

Lifer
Dec 14, 2000
10,473
81
101
Originally posted by: Roger
Excuse me, this can be consider as gift and if under the law its says you don't have to pay for a gift then he is under no obligation to pay for this gift or send it back.

Post a link to that law please.

So far you have only posted conjecture.


Roger, I haven't read the entire thread, only the first page, but wanted to post this url:

http://www.state.ne.us/home/ago/unordered.htm



And here: http://public.findlaw.com/nllg/CONSUMER/

"UNORDERED MERCHANDISE

Merchants who send unordered merchandise violate the Federal Trade Commission Act. Unordered merchandise does not have to be paid for and, in most states, does not have to be returned. Contact the local postmaster or the Federal Trade Commission in Washington, D.C., when you receive offensive, unordered merchandise. The FTC has nationwide jurisdiction over deceptive, unfair marketing practices. Contact a local Better Business Bureau for advice and assistance if you receive unordered or substituted merchandise."

This doesn't say if they send it through the mail, this just says if they send unordered merchandise, then its yours. This means USPS, UPS, AIRBORNE, FEDEX, etc.

Now comes the confusing part. The purchaser did order the merchandise, but cancelled before the merchandise was shipped, so this is clearly the shippers fault.

In response to the original post, I found this information as well..

"THE UNORDERED MERCHANDISE I RECEIVED WAS APPARENTLY THE RESULT OF AN
HONEST SHIPPING ERROR. WHAT SHOULD I DO?

Write the seller and offer to return the merchandise provided the
seller pays for postage and handling. Give the seller a specific and
reasonable amount of time (i.e., 30 days) in which to pick up the
merchandise or arrange to have it returned at no expense to you.
Inform the seller that after the specified time period has passed,
you reserve the right to keep the merchandise or to dispose of it as
you wish."
 

Shivatron

Senior member
Apr 9, 2003
342
0
0
I'm with slag. He recieved merchandise that he didn't order, which was apparently the result of an honest shipping mistake, and he offered the company "right of first refusal" to posession of the monitor. They denied it, and thus, the monitor is his legally. (As for writing a letter, I'm not a lawyer but I presume the phone call on his part would be just as effective.)

I would keep trying until I got in touch with someone who could accept the merchandise back.

With all due respect, that's not a very intelligent or practical idea. Why should he have to spend his time (and therefore his money, presumably) on a potentially fruitless search for someone who could authorize a return? It's not as though he hasn't tried to return the product; or hasn't spoken to someone with the authority to take the monitor back. Customer Service representatives are agents of the company they work for, and have the legal power to authorize sales and returns. They have refused the return in this case.

Enjoy the monitor.
 

KEV1N

Platinum Member
Jan 15, 2000
2,932
1
0
I have heard this too by hearsay but I haven't actually seen anny supporting documents.

Originally posted by: Roger
Excuse me, this can be consider as gift and if under the law its says you don't have to pay for a gift then he is under no obligation to pay for this gift or send it back.

Post a link to that law please.

So far you have only posted conjecture.

 

Atlantean

Diamond Member
May 2, 2001
5,296
1
0
Keep it if they said that they don't see what you want to return its their fault. Just make sure that next time you order something for your comp that it is from dell, cause then you have given them some money for something and they have just thrown in a free lcd to sweeten up the deal.
 

NogginBoink

Diamond Member
Feb 17, 2002
5,322
0
0
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
Got Ethics?




Send an e-mail with details including tracking # of the shipping to customer service. Make them pay for return shipping, but keeping it is theft even if you aren't caught.

Technically it?s his property. He got something from the company that he didn't request. Remember he cancel the order. By him canceling the order and the shipping it to him anyway it indicates that they want him to have it anyway as a gift there for he is under no obligation to send it back.


Really ?

Please provide a link to that particular law to back up your statement.

Actually, legally speaking, this is true. If a company ships you merchandise that you did not request, it is considered a gift.

However, the ethics of keeping this are quite different from the legalities. He did attempt to correct the problem, but obviously spoke to the wrong person.

I would call again, ask to speak to a supervisor, and explain the situation and ask how to proceed. Get names and phone numbers of everyone you talk to.
 

FriedToast

Golden Member
Apr 4, 2001
1,252
0
71
Originally posted by: Roger
Well one good thing came about this thread, I have added many people to my do not trade list.


That's exactly what I was going to say to all your posts that've went unheeded, Roger. We moan and complain about trolls in AT, but y'know, w/o posts like this, we'd never realize that the "trolls" that we despise are ppl that we wouldn't otherwise think were that way.

Weak, weak weak, people. I'd tell you all to grow a backbone and do the right thing, but apparently no one's had parents that could teach them what the right thing was. What a sad commentary for our country.

And sad that the people that want to do the right thing are in the minority. Oh, someone mentioned parallels with Iraqi looting as was taken to task for it. Well, this is just about as close morally as you can get. There's no difference- it's thievery, black & white.


edit: Hadn't read all of the posts when I posted. For the law, yes, I'd contact them once again like was suggested. Speak to a sup'v. Tell them the situation. Then tell the sup'v that they've got X amt of time to get the LCD, otherwise you will dispose of it at your discretion. Then you've tried your best and they've failed to make good on their end. Just my 1/2 cent worth.
 

chrisms

Diamond Member
Mar 9, 2003
6,615
0
0
Even if the item was not an LCD monitor that I wanted, but instead a Mary Kate & Ashley video game, I would not send it back in this situation. You cancelled the order, you tried to contact the company about returning it, but both failed to keep Dell in ownership of the item. It is not your obligation, morally or legally, to waste your time to give something back to a company who has rudely refused to accept it.
 

Kanalua

Diamond Member
Jun 14, 2001
4,860
2
81
I would continue to try and get a hold of a non-idiot at Dell, and try to get them to pay for shipping back to their warehouse, because I would send it back.
 

chrisms

Diamond Member
Mar 9, 2003
6,615
0
0
Originally posted by: Roger
I am really saddened by all the responses in this thread, apparently having material items is way more important than having morals, ethics and a clear conscience to most of you people, I personally would not call any of you friends because there would be no trust what so ever.

This is the end of the conversation for me, I refuse to argue with people that could care less about doing the right thing.

Your only evidence to back up your arguement is your definition of "the right thing." You refuse to acknowledge any reasoning, because your definition of "the right thing" apparently is more valid than ours.

 

styelers

Senior member
Apr 16, 2003
259
0
0
Ill keep it and sell it on ebay. you didnt get charged for it, plus you'll get money for it double the bonus:)
 

Dizway

Senior member
Oct 24, 2000
533
0
0
Airborne is suppose to pick it up on Monday. However, what used to show my tracking number on their status page now officially shows that it has been cancelled. I still have the monitor! :Q:Q


Order Number: xxxxxxxxx
PL150-BK 15IN BLACK LCD, 450:1 CONTRAST

Where is My Order?
Your order has been cancelled. If you feel this is an error, please reenter your order number to confirm this status. Please contact your Dell Sales Representative for additional information regarding this order.

 

Ylen13

Banned
Sep 18, 2001
2,457
0
0
Originally posted by: Dizway
Airborne is suppose to pick it up on Monday. However, what used to show my tracking number on their status page now officially shows that it has been cancelled. I still have the monitor! :Q:Q


Order Number: xxxxxxxxx
PL150-BK 15IN BLACK LCD, 450:1 CONTRAST

Where is My Order?
Your order has been cancelled. If you feel this is an error, please reenter your order number to confirm this status. Please contact your Dell Sales Representative for additional information regarding this order.


roflol. So if they don't pick it up on monday what will you do call them back or keep it?
 

Pepsi90919

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
25,162
1
81
Originally posted by: Roger
I have gotten things in stores lots of times where people forgot to charge me, and came back and paid for it. Same as if someone gave me extra change.

And, btw, keeping something a company sent me when I didn't want it hadly qualifies as having no morals and being sent to jail. You are taking a single circumstance and applying it to my whole character.

Having no morals and breaking the law are two completely different things, you have no morals if you do not send that back, you did not pay for it, therefor it is not yours even if you get away with it, it is morally wrong in the first place to keep something you did not pay for unless they intentionally gave it to you as a gift.

how about you let him decide what is 'morally right' and 'morally wrong' and get off your soapbox. :evil:
 

ultimatebob

Lifer
Jul 1, 2001
25,134
2,450
126
Originally posted by: Krugger
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
Got Ethics? Send an e-mail with details including tracking # of the shipping to customer service. Make them pay for return shipping, but keeping it is theft even if you aren't caught.

if i put $300 in the mail, and send it to you, and you keep it, is it theft? so how the hell can u tell this guy he's committing theft? if may be morally and ethically wrong sure, but he's not stealing. they are the ones that screwed up. sure he should send it back, but would you? honestly? if you thought you would never be charged for it? i doubt most of you would. how many ppl here are willing to jump on a hot deal that is clearly a pricing erro.... plenty if HD is any indication.
-Krugger

Your analogy doesn't match the situation mentioned here. A more fitting one would be "I sent you $300 in the mail BY ACCIDENT. If you know that what I did was an accident, and you decide keep the money anyway, is it theft?"

I'm not a lawyer, but ethically speaking the answer seems to be yes.
 

Ylen13

Banned
Sep 18, 2001
2,457
0
0
Originally posted by: ultimatebob
Originally posted by: Krugger
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
Got Ethics? Send an e-mail with details including tracking # of the shipping to customer service. Make them pay for return shipping, but keeping it is theft even if you aren't caught.

if i put $300 in the mail, and send it to you, and you keep it, is it theft? so how the hell can u tell this guy he's committing theft? if may be morally and ethically wrong sure, but he's not stealing. they are the ones that screwed up. sure he should send it back, but would you? honestly? if you thought you would never be charged for it? i doubt most of you would. how many ppl here are willing to jump on a hot deal that is clearly a pricing erro.... plenty if HD is any indication.
-Krugger

Your analogy doesn't match the situation mentioned here. A more fitting one would be "I sent you $300 in the mail BY ACCIDENT. If you know that what I did was an accident, and you decide keep the money anyway, is it theft?"

I'm not a lawyer, but ethically speaking the answer seems to be yes.

Guess you haven?t gotten it, ethics are irrelevant in this citation, people are talking about if it?s legal or not. Each person has his own ethics so u can't say something is ethical or not because everyone have there own ethics standards.

 

FriedToast

Golden Member
Apr 4, 2001
1,252
0
71
Originally posted by: Ylen13
Originally posted by: ultimatebob
Originally posted by: Krugger
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
Got Ethics? Send an e-mail with details including tracking # of the shipping to customer service. Make them pay for return shipping, but keeping it is theft even if you aren't caught.

if i put $300 in the mail, and send it to you, and you keep it, is it theft? so how the hell can u tell this guy he's committing theft? if may be morally and ethically wrong sure, but he's not stealing. they are the ones that screwed up. sure he should send it back, but would you? honestly? if you thought you would never be charged for it? i doubt most of you would. how many ppl here are willing to jump on a hot deal that is clearly a pricing erro.... plenty if HD is any indication.
-Krugger

Your analogy doesn't match the situation mentioned here. A more fitting one would be "I sent you $300 in the mail BY ACCIDENT. If you know that what I did was an accident, and you decide keep the money anyway, is it theft?"

I'm not a lawyer, but ethically speaking the answer seems to be yes.

Guess you haven?t gotten it, ethics are irrelevant in this citation, people are talking about if it?s legal or not. Each person has his own ethics so u can't say something is ethical or not because everyone have there own ethics standards.

Yes, ev'one has their own personal ethics. That is exactly why we have invented those things known as laws- to save the honest ppl from those that have less morals than the rest of us. And, as the situation is, Dell clearly did not send the LCD monitor as a gift. If they had, he would know so and wouldn't be asking ev'one what to do in this situation. Amazing how something so simple is so difficult for some to understand. And it's thinking like this that backs up my point about problems with trading in AT right now. Going through this thread, it seems that there's only a handful of people with any sense of moral obligation. Makes me scared to buy anything off of here.
 

Marauder-

Platinum Member
Nov 29, 1999
2,248
0
0
I wouldn't just send it back if they don't want it yet. What happens if they charge you later for it after you return an item that they can't credit your account with. If you feel guilty about it, just let it sit in the corner and wait till they fix their mistake, then return it.