Originally posted by: broon
If you receive something in the mail that you did not ask for it is yours to keep.
Originally posted by: Nocturnal
He will have to give them back.
Originally posted by: czech09
I believe he said they called him and left him a message on his answering machine or via email I'm not sure. Pssh I wish I got lucky like that myself damn...
Originally posted by: broon
If you receive something in the mail that you did not ask for it is yours to keep.
Originally posted by: kranky
Originally posted by: broon
If you receive something in the mail that you did not ask for it is yours to keep.
I see this quoted ALL THE TIME when it does not apply.
The law says that you do not have to return or pay for items that someone sends you unsolicited. For example, a company you've never had contact with sends you a set of encyclopedias and says you can either pay for them or return them. In that case you can keep the stuff and tell them to take a hike.
It does NOT apply to errors such as this case, when you've ordered something from a company and an error was made in the delivery.
Originally posted by: broon
Originally posted by: kranky
Originally posted by: broon
If you receive something in the mail that you did not ask for it is yours to keep.
I see this quoted ALL THE TIME when it does not apply.
The law says that you do not have to return or pay for items that someone sends you unsolicited. For example, a company you've never had contact with sends you a set of encyclopedias and says you can either pay for them or return them. In that case you can keep the stuff and tell them to take a hike.
It does NOT apply to errors such as this case, when you've ordered something from a company and an error was made in the delivery.
The person solicited one thing but not the other and received both. I'd say the second UNSOLICTED item is his to keep.
Correct. broon[/]b is mistaking "soliciting" with "mistakenly sent". He's also dishonest. An honest mistake made in good faith does not lead to unjust enrichment.Originally posted by: kranky
Originally posted by: broon
Originally posted by: kranky
Originally posted by: broon
If you receive something in the mail that you did not ask for it is yours to keep.
I see this quoted ALL THE TIME when it does not apply.
The law says that you do not have to return or pay for items that someone sends you unsolicited. For example, a company you've never had contact with sends you a set of encyclopedias and says you can either pay for them or return them. In that case you can keep the stuff and tell them to take a hike.
It does NOT apply to errors such as this case, when you've ordered something from a company and an error was made in the delivery.
The person solicited one thing but not the other and received both. I'd say the second UNSOLICTED item is his to keep.
But in fact, the law says otherwise.
Originally posted by: tk149
Correct. broon is mistaking "soliciting" with "mistakenly sent". He's also dishonest. An honest mistake made in good faith does not lead to unjust enrichment.
Originally posted by: IndieSnob
While it may legaly be his, morality says return it.
Originally posted by: Keyvan
afaik, the things are his now. he doesn't have to make up for their mistake. let's say you pick up the same items at best buy, and the cashier mistakenly rings them through as the wrong product and you walk away, once you leave, they can't make you come back and fix their problem.
but if it were me, i'd probably send it back. but that's just me...