
11-22-2015 02:32 PM
Hi there eBay community! I sold a used Apple Mac Pro and shipped it, when the buyer received it he requested a return claiming the item reeks so much of cigarette smoke it is hard to be in the same room. I find his claim to be quite exaggerated, if not completely false. We're not talking fabrics here but a computer with an aluminum casing, which I cleaned before putting it back in it's original packaging (which had been stored in a closet) and has been on the road (for delivery) several days before he received it. Apart from the power cord that had yellowed I don't believe there was any sing of cigarette smoke. So, I'm what I'm asking does is it seem like a reasonable claim for a return/refund to you?
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11-22-2015 02:59 PM - edited 11-22-2015 03:01 PM
Do people in your house smoke? Have you had this item for its entire time? Can you vouch for certain it doesn't reek?
You're probably not going to want to hear this but you'll have to take it from a former smoker who still loves and I mean passionately loves the smell of cigarette smoke more than ten years after quitting: plastics and cardboard suck it in like anything else. They are porous, especially the box and keyboard and whatever packaging material you used. If you smoke anywhere inside the house where it was kept, it will reek. If you live in the house where smoking takes place, you will not be able to tell. A couple days in the truck won't have altered that smell.
You don't have to offer the buyer a partial refund but you will have to pay return shipping if you ask them to return it for that reason. Smelly (good or bad) is Significantly Not As Described.
There are buyers who won't mind but this one does and that is acceptable. Mention the aroma issue in your relist. Call it an aroma and not stink. If I were in the market for another computer, the smell of cigarettes would be a selling point for me.
Also, the buyer has a right to be ruddy since the tar can get into places the smoke has settled.
I used to smoke at my desk during the long long hours I worked, and my bosses hated it for that reason alone: gumming up the equipment.
11-22-2015 02:59 PM - edited 11-22-2015 03:01 PM
Do people in your house smoke? Have you had this item for its entire time? Can you vouch for certain it doesn't reek?
You're probably not going to want to hear this but you'll have to take it from a former smoker who still loves and I mean passionately loves the smell of cigarette smoke more than ten years after quitting: plastics and cardboard suck it in like anything else. They are porous, especially the box and keyboard and whatever packaging material you used. If you smoke anywhere inside the house where it was kept, it will reek. If you live in the house where smoking takes place, you will not be able to tell. A couple days in the truck won't have altered that smell.
You don't have to offer the buyer a partial refund but you will have to pay return shipping if you ask them to return it for that reason. Smelly (good or bad) is Significantly Not As Described.
There are buyers who won't mind but this one does and that is acceptable. Mention the aroma issue in your relist. Call it an aroma and not stink. If I were in the market for another computer, the smell of cigarettes would be a selling point for me.
Also, the buyer has a right to be ruddy since the tar can get into places the smoke has settled.
I used to smoke at my desk during the long long hours I worked, and my bosses hated it for that reason alone: gumming up the equipment.
11-22-2015 03:13 PM
If I may, again.
Don't take the buyer's request personally. I'm not one to vilify smoking but every person has their 'thing'. Another buyer might demand a return because something arrived with a cat hair taped to the exterior of the box.
For me, despite the fact I would gladly lick any dirty ashtray I could find, I cannot tolerate any kind of artificial fragrance whatsoever. Soap, detergent, perfume, scented anything. It's a pretty miserable existence, to be honest. I bought LEGO from someone on ebay, used LEGO, and they washed it before sending it to me and you'd expect a buyer to be grateful for that because dirty LEGO is super gross but when i opened the box, i almost passed out from the stink of the soap they used.
Like I said, anyone else would be happy they got clean LEGO.
I thought I was going to perish.
The point here is that you can't expect to please everyone.
11-22-2015 04:32 PM
11-22-2015 05:14 PM - edited 11-22-2015 05:15 PM
I would have to say it is. Some people are allergic to tobacco smoke, after all. But if you want to wait until other members join the conversation with their opinion, that's okay too. Just keep those lines of communication with the buyer open and friendly.
11-22-2015 08:39 PM
Tell him to return the item for a full refund.
Try not to get eBay or Paypal involved.
If you or anyone smokes in the house, the computer does smell. Smokers can't tell how easy it is for a non-smoker to spot a smoker. Also the smell of Nicorette gum.
I wouldn't go for a partial refund, since in my opinion if it's good enough to keep it's good enough to pay for.
And yes, you may have to pay for return shipping. That's a business expense and deductible. You do realize that your earnings from eBay should be declared on your tax return, eh?
11-23-2015 12:21 AM
Hello 'michelxav',
<< the item reeks so much of cigarette smoke it is hard to be in the same room. I find his claim to be quite exaggerated, if not completely false.>>
That's because you smoke. To the extent that you notice it at all, you think it smells good. Fair enough. But if you did not reveal the cigarette smoke odour in the listing, the buyer has something he did not expect and would not have ordered.
Imagine an odour you can't stand. There must be something, even if you like cigar smoke, diesel fuel, perfumes, vinegar, camphor, fabric softener, and so on, -- maybe just the cat's litterbox. But imagine that horrible smell wafting up your nostrils constantly as you try to work. That is how your buyer feels about this item.
<<does is it seem like a reasonable claim for a return/refund to you?>>
Yep. If you did not mention the scent, it is indeed Significantly Not as Described. He has an item he cannot use because of an issue you did not disclose. Be gracious about accepting it back.
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