Dear Navin Ramiah,
On the xxx of xxxx I arranged through the Parcel Monkey website for you to collect and deliver an item for me. I paid for insurance and instructed you exactly what the items were. You agreed this contract, accepted payment and it is now presumed lost.
On contacting your customer services department by email you've informed me that you cannot be held responsible for your negligence in this case, as you have written in to your terms and conditions that you won't be held responsible for monitors.
The exclusions made in the terms and conditions were not made clear to me when arranging for the package to be sent, even after I arranged and paid for an enhanced level of insurance to cover the cost of the goods through yourselves.
Were you to refuse the insurance I would certainly not have sent the item, as a result of you accepting the contract for delivering what was clearly stated to be a Dell Monitor, and your subsequent loss of the item I am considerably out of pocket. It would make things simpler for both Parcel Monkey and myself if you were to refund me at this stage, before I take further legal advice.
On my initial findings I believe your terms and conditions would constitute an unfair contract term, which would be looked upon favourably for me if any proceedings were to be inititated.
I would greatly appreciate if your reply could reach me within two weeks of the date of the letter, as otherwise I will assume you wish me to pursue this through a solicitor.
Yours sincerely,
Crater Loads.
It's pleasing to see a few people who know what they are talking about to counter the sheep-like "it's in the T&C's so tough" responses.
I wonder if those people would accept a shop's T&Cs as gospel if it said they had to hop on one leg in order to qualify for a refund...
I think the changes you've made make the letter worse, not better.
Some of the wording changes are just because I don't like your style, other parts are because it comes across as a petulant child stamping their feet.
Out of interest, why do they exclude monitors?
Damage I would assume. When their drivers throw boxes around?
Now had a quick look through the web page linked to in their email and the actual T&C page. An important question leaps to mind - what did you tell them was being sent? Did you say it was a monitor when booking the service? If you did then their position is far from watertight.
You will note that the page to which they link mentions the "carried on a no-compensation basis" bit. However, it also says right at the top "IMPORTANT: This list is not exhaustive, it exists as a rough guide only. Please check our terms and conditions for more accuracy." The result of that is that you can completely ignore the contents of that page since they clearly indicate that it cannot be a part of the contract!
Looking at the full T&C, a monitor is an excluded item but will be carried by agreement. There does not appear to be any reference to a limit in liability in relation to an excluded item that has been carried by agreement. Therefore, if you told them in advance that the item was a monitor, there is no basis for them to avoid liability.
Style is subjective.
One week was for a reply, all they need to do is acknowledge.
A petulant child stamping their feet? I disagree, now it reads like a muddling fool admitting fault crossing their fingers and hoping.
I thought "fragile" on the box would prevent this?
A delivery driver told me this is the worst thing you can write on a box. It would be like telling someone who's making your food to wash their hands first. You can probably guess what they will do...
A delivery driver told me this is the worst thing you can write on a box. It would be like telling someone who's making your food to wash their hands first. You can probably guess what they will do...
I worked a temp job in a Royal Mail depot many years ago. 'Fragile' or 'Do not bend' means 'This item should be used to test your strength' to a typical RM worker.I thought "fragile" on the box would prevent this?