Honor. Mistake or not, they set thier prices at this, and they claimed they were not out of stock, therefore they are required by law to honor those contracts. even if the money didnt went though in time, as long as you can prove you sent the money (bank, paypal history) at the time the thing was on thier site and you got listing on the site for buying it, they are required by law to honor your purchasing contract. buying stuff are contracts like any other, its just that they are simplified to need no signatures usually.
TWRule said:
If you went into a brick and mortar store and some clerk mistakenly labeled something in the same way, would you make a big stink when the cashier informed you it was a mistake, or would you just pay the new price or put it back?
Here it is considered a breach of law to mislabel the products bellow their actual selling price and if you were to find one like that and they asked for more they would be forced by law to sell you for smaller price or give you a compensation (not sure if size is specified, i heard they give 50 LTL, which is a bit less than 20 USD worth)
Little Woodsman said:
Well before you think too badly of the store, ask this question of yourself. Have you ever been in a situation where after having paid for your items from a store you discovered that something you bought rang up at significantly lower than the listed price, or you just weren't charged for something?
If you have had that happen, did you point out the mistake to the store and offer to pay the difference or pay for the item you weren't charged for?
Would you in those circumstances?
I had a situation where the machine reading bar codes did something wrong and printed wrong item up, which was cheaper. i did point that out to the cashier, she called in her supervisor and the item was switched back. the actual document actually read that i buyght 1, then "-1" of these wrong products, and then went on as usual, i ended up paying more than if i were to stay silent.
So what was your point again?
Lieju said:
I'm assuming the person making the mistake would have to pay for the loss? Because otherwise you'd have a situation where employers move stuff to give discounts to friends.
I worked at a store similar in fashion to wallmart. Costumers would grab stuff, change their minds and then put things back wherever they found space. by the time you notice it the costumer is long gone from the store, there would be noone to blame.