gkisystems
Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Wisconsin.
I sell items online on Amazon's website and I made an error on how I listed a product for sale. I listed for sale several pallet loads full of ink pens when in reality I was only selling pens by the case, not by the pallet. One pallet of pens is 40 cases. It was an honest mistake on my part.
A customer ordered 3. I thought he was ordering 3 cases (because that's how I thought I listed it) and I shipped him 3 cases, but now the customer is upset and he wants me to ship the other 117 cases. I told the customer that he can mail me back the 3 cases and I'll pay for return shipping and give him a full refund, but he doesn't want to return anything or get a refund. He wants the other 117 cases because he is adamant that he ordered and paid for 3 pallets, not 3 cases. While he's technically right in that the product listing did say pallets, he should've known that based on the price I was charging it was only for 3 cases, not 3 pallets.
Can I tell the customer to go pound sand because it was an honest mistake and it's not my problem? Does he have any recourse to actually sue me and force me to send him 117 cases? If he did, would he win or would I win? If I have to send him more pens, it would be about $35,000 worth.
I sell items online on Amazon's website and I made an error on how I listed a product for sale. I listed for sale several pallet loads full of ink pens when in reality I was only selling pens by the case, not by the pallet. One pallet of pens is 40 cases. It was an honest mistake on my part.
A customer ordered 3. I thought he was ordering 3 cases (because that's how I thought I listed it) and I shipped him 3 cases, but now the customer is upset and he wants me to ship the other 117 cases. I told the customer that he can mail me back the 3 cases and I'll pay for return shipping and give him a full refund, but he doesn't want to return anything or get a refund. He wants the other 117 cases because he is adamant that he ordered and paid for 3 pallets, not 3 cases. While he's technically right in that the product listing did say pallets, he should've known that based on the price I was charging it was only for 3 cases, not 3 pallets.
Can I tell the customer to go pound sand because it was an honest mistake and it's not my problem? Does he have any recourse to actually sue me and force me to send him 117 cases? If he did, would he win or would I win? If I have to send him more pens, it would be about $35,000 worth.