For some of you guys replying that Im wrong. Sorry to disappoint you, you are wrong. I believe Im correct. I asked around and made sure if i m right. As long as I know it applies to Arizona state, it's by the law that they have to sell the price what the price sign or tag shows on the shelf if the item actually matches to the price tag number. If it's error price, they must remove before it gets out of hand as like people thought it was advertised. It covers at the stores only. It doesnt cover the internet for some reasons. You guys jumped over the conclusion as you thought it was appies to internet.
For CrazyRay, I m glad you made it. they knew they had to do that so you won the error price u wanted. I wish I could grab that chance but they pulled out at Compusa. I could have easily agrue with the manager if they still have the error price on it. See, it works. don't tell me it's absurb to file lawsuit. I do understand that some of people who have drove more than two hours hoping that they will buy what the price tag or price sign shows and found out that they are only mistake. It will make them real angry and emotional about being feel fool to drive a long way. It's not fair for them to get excited and hoped to buy them as long as it advertised the price tag. They must take them out of the shelf and correct the error. Use common sense...
Sorry, I tried to add qutoes but don't know how. I m sure you guys know what this is about. I m gonna try:
08/06/2002 9:00 PM (NEW!)
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Originally posted by: WoofyJr For those guys who went to the compusa to try buy cd burner priced (error) at $19.99. You guys shouldn't give up... If it shows the price sign or shelf tag $19.99 as error, they still are requried to sell ya at $19.99 by the law, even though, they said it's error. By the law, they have to sell it and fix the error, they can't agrue with customers. If they pull them out before people sees the price tag, they have the right to say it's error and not sell. If they don't realize that the price is error, they must sell at what the price tag shows or you can file lawsuit for fraud.. Next time, good luck.. ( I m not a lawyer but i can be wrong. corect me if u wish)
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you're wrong
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NO, actually he got it pretty much right at least under Kansas law: 83-219 Chapter 83.--WEIGHTS AND MEASURES Article 2.--STANDARDS AND ENFORCEMENT 83-219. Unlawful acts. (a) It shall be unlawful for any owner of a commercial weighing or measuring device: (16) to charge or attempt to charge, at the time of the sale of an item or commodity, a value which is more than the price which is advertised, posted or quoted; 83-201 Chapter 83.--WEIGHTS AND MEASURES Article 2.--STANDARDS ANDENFORCEMENT 83-201. Definitions. As used in article 2 of chapter 83 of the Kansas Statutes Annotated and K.S.A. 83-502, and amendments thereto: (a) "Weights and measures" means all commercial weights or measures of every kind, instruments and devices for weighing and measuring, and any appliance and accessories associated with any or all such instruments and devices and any point-of-sale system. (l) "Point-of-sale system" means any combination of a cash register or other devices, or system, such as a scanner, capable of recovering stored information related to the price or computing the price of any individual item which is sold or offered for sale at retail. A point-of-sale system may also include or be attached or connected to a weighing or measuring device. (m) "Scanner" means any electronic system that employs a laser-bar code reader to retrieve product identity, price or other information stored in a computer memory.
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Well, that's all well and good. But the store is not required to complete the ransaction. Just because you bring the item up to the register doesn't mean that they have to sell it to you. They could ring up the price, see the $19.99, and refuse to sell at that price. The law is not going to make a party have to sell an item at less than they want to, just because they put up a sign with an error in it.
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So, you have something to actually show Im wrong, or are you just asserting it as a priori truth? I doubt any officer of the court is really going to go after a store who has a pricing error in their system, unless you can show that the knew of it and didn't do anything to correct it.
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A price on a shelf is an advertisement. Failure to sell at the advertised price is very much considered the bait and switch. Plain and simple. The internet is a much murker place to assert this idea. It does not transfer.
dew.
Thank you for the simply answer. Those are right i agree with you, Dew. The officers will laugh about this issues and they don't care because it is not crime. However, the court will take fraud cases seriously. Just don't assume and go ask lawyers yourself and you will see how big the difference is...