
11-06-2023 01:12 PM
11-06-2023 01:44 PM
Phone support does NOT = qualified customer service...there is NO such thing as good phone customer service here on eBay and sellers need to realize and understand that this so-called customer service via phone conversation is totally useless.
Sellers also need to understand that they MUST follow the eBay process for returns and refunds.
NO return DOES NOT mean NO refund.
Your only recourse is to follow the eBay process for an appeal.
11-06-2023 03:58 PM
If you have Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook, try contacting the AskEbay page. https://twitter.com/AskeBay
Assuming Twitter still allows relatively easy sign ups, you can make a throw away account. It doesn't have to have your personal info linked to eBay.
Direct message that Twitter account. You have to assume the person you're talking to knows nothing of what happened. You have to be concise and to the point with what you want them to do.
It would help if you had chat logs or something in writing from the previous CSRs.
Since this seems like a unique case with a buyer faking a screen shot, what I suspect is that someone manually was going to close the case and they made a mistake. Then the case was able to be escalated for a refund. If you can clearly show eBay what happened, they might give you a courtesy refund.
Normally how returns work is that once a return has been opened, you have to provide a label regardless of whether the buyer is wrong. You can report the buyer after the fact, and eBay may take action on their account, but you don't get your money back. Otherwise, eBay doesn't arbitrate individual cases. If you don't provide a label, the buyer can have the return escalated, and eBay will refund them without requiring a return.
If at any point eBay offered to close the case for you without you providing a label, either the CSR had no idea what they were doing, or there was a very strong and unique reason that eBay felt the buyer was violating the TOS of the site. I think I have only seen it once that eBay manually closed a case and deleted the account of the buyer. It is very uncommon, even with blatant scams.
In short, take 30 minutes to prepare a concise and clear write up of what happened between you, the buyer, and the previous CSRs. Take screenshots of any supporting evidence. Then contact Ask eBay on one of the social media sites. They MIGHT give you a courtesy refund, but it isn't a guarantee.
11-07-2023 08:11 AM
Those threads are such a classic.
When a buyer open an item not as described case, you must accept return or refund. It's part of the ebay money back guarantee system you are agreeing to by selling on ebay. You can offer a partial as you did but buyers are in rights to decline. You must accept return or refund. It's once returned that you can take actions and do appropriate reports.
Ebay tell sellers to wait because they contact them with clear intentions to fight the case instead of providing a solution. Ebay support is trash and should always suggest sellers to accept returns here. Those are always closed in buyer's favor. It's straight up a case closed without resolution.
I think you can appeal but i would have no expectations. Especially here that you tried to fight a case based on condition subjectivity.
11-07-2023 11:20 AM
You are mostly right that what people need to know about how eBay (or most other online selling platforms work) is that they do not arbitrate individual cases. If a buyer states an item was not as described or flawed, you have to provide a refund or return label by the specified date. If the buyer acted in bad faith, you can choose to take appropriate action like reporting the buyer to eBay, or in more extreme cases filing the appropriate police or mail fraud reports.
The big take away is, you have to provide a return label or a refund (if cheaper than a return).
With that said, there are cases where a CSR will report a buyer to the security team and the buyer's account will get removed, which effectively closes the case (or leaves it in limbo until it times out). This is very rare. I have only seen it happen once with a buyer who seemed to be on Paypal and eBay's radar for repeat fraud. OP should check the buyer profile and see if it says No Longer A Registered User. Based on the description of the interaction with the CSR, their account may have been turfed after the case was closed.
Assuming what OP said was accurate, there may have just been something lost in translation or a mix-up because a CSR manually closing a case for the seller is very unusual. So either, they never intended to do this for the seller, or they did intend to do this but something was done wrong. Who knows. I would contact eBay help page I provided in my previous post with details, and there is a chance they may cover the refund as a courtesy (which they sometimes do in cases of obvious fraud).
11-07-2023 11:56 AM
Basically a human told you no need to return, and a bot auto refunded. It does happen. I would call back eBay and cite the previous calls and direction provided by eBay and request the refund be reversed. When I call support, I request the ID number for the call for reference and ask that they put a note on the file.
As suggested, contacting through social media is good, and it provides you with a written response from eBay.
It is worth calling again to give it a shot.
11-07-2023 01:19 PM
"Don't have to accept" is not the same as "you will win the claim".
You can accept the return and refund.
You can refuse the return and refund.
You can allow the customer to keep the item and refund.
And never trust what a phone rep tells you.
The longer the conversation the more they want to get you the h e double hockey sticks off the phone.