What is the name of your state? Tennessee
I purchased a $1500 PC from Amazon in November. 3 weeks later it died. Amazon's exchange policy states that they will send an advanced replacement and customers are to return the defective item w/i 30 days. But they refused to honor their own written policy because, in their words, "this doesn't apply to items over $1500." (This is despite the fact that I order $10k+ from them annually for my biz and this mysterious $1500 price limit is mentioned NOWHERE on their written policy.)
After arguing w/ foreign customer service for 3 days, I eventually just gave up and called Apple, who was able to repair it at their store in 24 hours. Problem solved? Not quite!
The next day (December 1), Amazon sends me a shipment confirmation and online receipt for $0.00 for a brand new PC--totally unprompted from me as the last conversation w/ Amazon was "Sorry, we can't help you." I get an e-mail the next day from customer service stating "We apologize for the inconvenience. We have sent you a new iMac. This replacement is FREE OF CHARGE."
In my head I was thinking "woohoo! Free PC!" My kids could certainly use it, but we were remodeling the playroom so I left it in the box. Plus w/ holiday travel, I didn't really give it a second thought.
Today, Amazon has charged my debit card $1500. I called their customer service who told me I was obligated to return either my defective unit or the replacement. I'm all for doing the right thing, and since it's still boxed up I don't mind returning it, but what does the law say in this instance?
I purchased a $1500 PC from Amazon in November. 3 weeks later it died. Amazon's exchange policy states that they will send an advanced replacement and customers are to return the defective item w/i 30 days. But they refused to honor their own written policy because, in their words, "this doesn't apply to items over $1500." (This is despite the fact that I order $10k+ from them annually for my biz and this mysterious $1500 price limit is mentioned NOWHERE on their written policy.)
After arguing w/ foreign customer service for 3 days, I eventually just gave up and called Apple, who was able to repair it at their store in 24 hours. Problem solved? Not quite!
The next day (December 1), Amazon sends me a shipment confirmation and online receipt for $0.00 for a brand new PC--totally unprompted from me as the last conversation w/ Amazon was "Sorry, we can't help you." I get an e-mail the next day from customer service stating "We apologize for the inconvenience. We have sent you a new iMac. This replacement is FREE OF CHARGE."
In my head I was thinking "woohoo! Free PC!" My kids could certainly use it, but we were remodeling the playroom so I left it in the box. Plus w/ holiday travel, I didn't really give it a second thought.
Today, Amazon has charged my debit card $1500. I called their customer service who told me I was obligated to return either my defective unit or the replacement. I'm all for doing the right thing, and since it's still boxed up I don't mind returning it, but what does the law say in this instance?