M
minskin
- Original Poster
- #1
Hi folks,
After 10 years trading online I'm pretty familiar with the DSRs but there has been one question that I've never quite found the definitive answer to.
A customer places an order for goods with an estimated despatch time of, say, 1 week.
At 10:20pm on the evening of day 4, the customer sends an email stating that they are cancelling the order.
On the morning of day 5 the goods are despatched before the email is viewed or the cancellation request actioned.
Whilst I accept that the customer has a right to cancel under the DSRs, who pays for the return? We include a clause stating that the customer must pay the return costs of cancelled items. We also request in our terms that attempts to cancel before despatch must only be done by person-to-person phone call to ascertain whether the goods have already been sent or if they can be stopped. But! Where a customer asserts that they cancelled the order according to the DSRs and before despatch, where do we stand?
In one recent incident, a customer refused the goods at the door which incurred a cost, almost double our outbound costs and what she would have paid had she taken receipt of the goods and then returned them herself, another way. We were invoiced by our carrier for the return costs.
Whilst it does say in the DSRs that customers have a right to refuse goods at the door it doesn't specifically relate to goods that have been cancelled between despatch and delivery. In fact, there is no mention of this scenario at all. there is, however, mention that normal Right To Cancel rules apply which suggests that if the 'customer pays return costs' clause has been included in the T&Cs then the customer should pay or be deducted from the refund.
I would appreciate any comments or thoughts on this.
Many thanks, Minskin
After 10 years trading online I'm pretty familiar with the DSRs but there has been one question that I've never quite found the definitive answer to.
A customer places an order for goods with an estimated despatch time of, say, 1 week.
At 10:20pm on the evening of day 4, the customer sends an email stating that they are cancelling the order.
On the morning of day 5 the goods are despatched before the email is viewed or the cancellation request actioned.
Whilst I accept that the customer has a right to cancel under the DSRs, who pays for the return? We include a clause stating that the customer must pay the return costs of cancelled items. We also request in our terms that attempts to cancel before despatch must only be done by person-to-person phone call to ascertain whether the goods have already been sent or if they can be stopped. But! Where a customer asserts that they cancelled the order according to the DSRs and before despatch, where do we stand?
In one recent incident, a customer refused the goods at the door which incurred a cost, almost double our outbound costs and what she would have paid had she taken receipt of the goods and then returned them herself, another way. We were invoiced by our carrier for the return costs.
Whilst it does say in the DSRs that customers have a right to refuse goods at the door it doesn't specifically relate to goods that have been cancelled between despatch and delivery. In fact, there is no mention of this scenario at all. there is, however, mention that normal Right To Cancel rules apply which suggests that if the 'customer pays return costs' clause has been included in the T&Cs then the customer should pay or be deducted from the refund.
I would appreciate any comments or thoughts on this.
Many thanks, Minskin
