R
ROLtd
- Original Poster
- #1
I would appreciate a comprehensive site that outlines the legal responsibilities for sellers and not for buyers. We must have some rights somewhere when posting goods.
We use Royal Mail and considering the number of parcels we send out a week its not too bad, but getting compensation for lost parcels is virtually impossible to do effectively.
The burning question at the moment is a parcel sent Special Delivery to a customer that arrives not the next day as promised but the day after. ie. Royal Mail did not hold up their end of the bargain.....(rarely happens with Special Delivery).The customer was not in when delivered and so it sits at her local post office.
The customer says it no good to her now as the event has passed and will not pick it up from the post office. She wants a full refund.....and also says our customer service is s**t and will be writing this on our Facebook page. I cannot retrieve the parcel from the post office as only the customer can get it sent back before the standard three weeks. She refuses to ring them as all of this is our fault.
What are the sellers legal rights? As far as I can see we fulfilled our end of the contract and the intermediate party (Royal Mail) have wrecked the transaction as well as potentially our reputation, at least for that customer.
How do I resolve this?
To save reputation we can just refund and wait for the post office to send the parcel back........but i would still like to know legally how we stand as a seller.
many thanks for any help and direction.
Lizzie Carr
We use Royal Mail and considering the number of parcels we send out a week its not too bad, but getting compensation for lost parcels is virtually impossible to do effectively.
The burning question at the moment is a parcel sent Special Delivery to a customer that arrives not the next day as promised but the day after. ie. Royal Mail did not hold up their end of the bargain.....(rarely happens with Special Delivery).The customer was not in when delivered and so it sits at her local post office.
The customer says it no good to her now as the event has passed and will not pick it up from the post office. She wants a full refund.....and also says our customer service is s**t and will be writing this on our Facebook page. I cannot retrieve the parcel from the post office as only the customer can get it sent back before the standard three weeks. She refuses to ring them as all of this is our fault.
What are the sellers legal rights? As far as I can see we fulfilled our end of the contract and the intermediate party (Royal Mail) have wrecked the transaction as well as potentially our reputation, at least for that customer.
How do I resolve this?
To save reputation we can just refund and wait for the post office to send the parcel back........but i would still like to know legally how we stand as a seller.
many thanks for any help and direction.
Lizzie Carr