
03-30-2022 12:00 AM
03-30-2022 05:24 AM
Don't change your plans because of 1 in 1000. I don't know what your loss is on this transaction but whatever it is divide that amount by the number of sales you've made in the last year, I'd speculate the amount per sale is pretty low m aybe at the insignificant level.
When buyers want to return stuff it's usually best to be agreeable and as you found out you can cut your losses dramatically.
What exactly was the stated reason for the chargeback?
03-30-2022 05:29 AM
Forgot to mention.........
I had a buch of credit card chargebacks in the 2006 - 2010 period, most were covered by PayPal (which at the time had the very best protection of any processor) but a few were not.
Since 2010 I've had exactly zero, lower volume than in the early days but still.....zero!
03-30-2022 07:37 AM
I agree with recped, for less than 1% of your transactions to be bad that is not worth stopping over!
In regards to the buyer claiming dispute after 383 days that is just crazy! Anyone knows there is a window that closes (anywhere) for returns. eBay's window closes after 60 days, PayPal's after 180 days. Many retail stores are 30. There is no way to access the transaction information here as it disappears after 90 days. To threaten legal action is just a scare tactic.
I wouldn't even respond to him at this point. I don't know how he still had your information to contact you after so long which is too bad. I once had a buyer contact me after 4 months saying they never received their package. I panicked at first but then when I realized I couldn't even track down his information any more I just told him so....and said sorry but he should have contacted me sooner since the information leaves eBay after 90 days and I couldn't even access it anymore to look anything up. I was lucky and never heard back.
Just think of the 99.9 % of the "decent clientele" you have and try not to worry about the odd weirdo!
03-30-2022 02:45 PM
Not only that the “gentleman” that opened the claim had wanted to return the t-shirts when he first got them because he “couldn’t use ‘em”, that’s all he said, gave no explanation and said that if I didn’t take them back that he would take legal action.
You are allowed to have a No Returns policy, but you cannot have a No Refunds policy.
Threatening legal action is a strong sign that you are dealing with and angry and possibly mentally ill person.
Hindsight being 20/20, asking for and even paying for return of the shirts for a full refund would be a sensible move.
But again: 20/20.
I do have the tracking slip from when I sent it and the emails he sent me but who do I send them to?
Good.
Attach it as a pdf to the response you make to the chargeback announcement.
While most cards (and Paypal) allow 180 days (three months) for claims, I think American Express is more lenient with some customers.
Note that this is not actually an eBay dispute. EBay only allows claims for 30 days from delivery.
03-30-2022 02:51 PM
The reason why "legal action" is a stupid threat, is that there are three easy automatic processes in place for eBay disputes.
EBay's Resolution Centre for up to 30 days from delivery.
Paypal's Resolution centre for up to 180 days from payment.
The customer's credit card. Chargeback policies differ from card to card, with most being 180 days from payment, but AmEx does have some cards with longer dispute allowances.
The customer who does not know how to use any of those is not going to be easy to deal with.
03-31-2022 11:48 AM