
09-13-2019 07:12 AM - edited 09-13-2019 07:29 AM
09-13-2019 08:41 AM
Call PP again. That's not the way it works. If tracking shows that the package arrived at its destination and the buyer refused the package for some reason you are off the hook. Buyers do not have the option of refusing packages and filing claims for refunds.
09-13-2019 09:11 AM - edited 09-13-2019 09:15 AM
09-13-2019 12:25 PM
09-13-2019 12:50 PM - edited 09-13-2019 12:53 PM
@luckylegend wrote:
... I don’t think anybody will ship international after such a burn, never again!
That's why American Sellers like the Global-Shipping-Program, all taxes/duty are paid upfront by the Buyer at time of purchase for foreign sales.
One of the risks of Selling (online or directly) -- there are always bad guys/gals out there who want their gain to be your pain.
If it had been me, with that amount of money involved, I would have given a partial refund (using the exact customs/VAT the buyer owed, not a round number like 20 pounds) with note (paypal has that option) giving the reason for the partial refund, then blocked the buyer and reporting them to eBay as a problem buyer. Small loss versus big loss.
-..-
09-13-2019 01:04 PM - edited 09-13-2019 01:07 PM
09-13-2019 01:11 PM
09-13-2019 01:36 PM
There is something wrong with the scenario you've described.
If tracking shows that the item was delivered to the PP address and the buyer does not pick it up for whatever reason, then the seller is not required to reimburse the buyer.
I've had expensive items returned to me when buyers did not pick them up and was never required to refund these buyers in any way.
09-13-2019 01:47 PM - edited 09-13-2019 01:47 PM
09-13-2019 01:54 PM
The buyer did not pay customs and does not have the shoes.
The seller is not required to refund until the shoes are back in his hands.
Which with return/refused will be very slow since Return To Sender is not a postal system priority.
Did the buyer open a Paypal Dispute?
If not, do not refund.
If he did, insist on the return. And with PP the buyer pays the return.
If the buyer opened an eBay Dispute, the seller would (probably) be paying for the return.
With a refusal, it is possible that the seller will be paying return postage on delivery.
Did the seller opt for return or destroy when he bought the shipping label? The return doesn't cost anything up front, but might if the item is returned.
09-13-2019 01:57 PM
When opening a case with PP one has to give a reason for the case and there are several options to choose from.
Did your buyer actually open a PP case and win? If so, what was the buyer's reason for the case? A buyer can't just file a case with PP without giving a valid reason for the case.
In fact, I had to open a PP case recently and they've made it quite a bit more difficult to file a claim than it used to be.
09-13-2019 02:18 PM - edited 09-13-2019 02:22 PM
09-13-2019 02:20 PM
09-13-2019 02:25 PM
@luckylegend wrote:
It’s not exactly that.
In my case, buyer indicated he will reject and open PP dispute
Yes, I understand that they buyer threatened to open a PP case, but did he actually open the case and win?
(What you're posting completely contradicts everything I've known and experienced with this type of situation so I'm finding it very hard to buy.)
09-13-2019 02:39 PM
09-13-2019 03:00 PM
Those discussions are just speculation............... exactly what you're doing.
Why not come back when your buyer actually opens a PP case and report what happens.
Until then I wouldn't worry about it.
09-13-2019 03:03 PM - edited 09-13-2019 03:07 PM
Are you sure that the cases you won were opened through PP rather than through ebay? As luckylegend mentioned, ebay does protect sellers if there was attempted delivery. With PP, a seller only wins an inr if there was actual delivery. If you've experienced the opposite, then that's
something that I've never heard about happening through PP before.
09-13-2019 03:07 PM - edited 09-13-2019 03:10 PM
09-13-2019 03:09 PM - edited 09-13-2019 03:09 PM
No PJ, I'm not sure, but I'm just not fully buying that PP will refund a buyer who refuses delivery.
As far as CC chargebacks go, have you ever tried to do one? UNBELIEVABLY difficult!
09-13-2019 03:10 PM
You should still wait for the buyer to open a claim through PP before you refund. As long as you refund voluntarily without making PP step in, you will be able to receive credit for all PP and ebay fees other than the PP .30 fee.