ParcelMonkey did it again, lost laptop worth 370 pounds!

I have never used these people but all I seem to read about them on forums is computers and monitors getting lost, which are two items they dont seem to allow, very odd.
They must be sitting somewhere
 
Which they are, up to the value you agreed with them that they would be liable for.

It is your mistake that means this value isn't sufficient to cover the value of the item, so why should they be liable for anything more?

Yes but how can you explain that you are still able to pay insurance for the items which are apparently on Prohibited & No-Compensation Items in the first place. Is this right? There should be a system preventing this but there isn't.
Anyway this is not fair, this is a cowboy style company.

They must be liable for the contract which is obviously was completed. If there is a maximum liability 1000 pounds so why should not go for full value of my lost item? If I did not pay anything would I accept 20 pounds as a basic cover? No
 
Yes but how can you explain that you are still able to pay insurance for the items which are apparently on Prohibited & No-Compensation Items in the first place. Is this right? There should be a system preventing this but there isn't.
Anyway this is not fair, this is a cowboy style company.

They must be liable for the contract which is obviously was completed. If there is a maximum liability 1000 pounds so why should not go for full value of my lost item? If I did not pay anything would I accept 20 pounds as a basic cover? No

Yes, you should. If you agreed for £20 cover, then that's what you should get.

I agree, they shouldn't accept money for things that can't be insured, but they're offering to pay out. I don't see how, in this case, they're doing anything wrong
 
Yes but how can you explain that you are still able to pay insurance for the items which are apparently on Prohibited & No-Compensation Items in the first place. Is this right? There should be a system preventing this but there isn't.
Anyway this is not fair, this is a cowboy style company.

They must be liable for the contract which is obviously was completed. If there is a maximum liability 1000 pounds so why should not go for full value of my lost item? If I did not pay anything would I accept 20 pounds as a basic cover? No

If it's on the prohibited list then it's in dodgy ground to sell it, however they have honoured your claim despite this and agreed to pay out, arguably going beyond what their own terms and conditions oblige them to do as a goodwill gesture.

If they had refused to pay out at all on the grounds the item was prohibited then you would have a case IMO. However this isn't the case, they've happily agreed to pay out in accordance with the cover you purchased.

The £1000 is presumably a maximum liability regardless of cover type - if you had chosen to not pay anything and £20 is the stated level of basic cover then yes, you should accept that.
 
That doesn't excuse their negligence or stop the OP from claiming the amount he is out of pocket. The policy was mis-sold under their own T & C's.

In this case, PM seem to be doing everything they are required to do under their contract with the OP.
 
Yes, you should. If you agreed for £20 cover, then that's what you should get.

I agree, they shouldn't accept money for things that can't be insured, but they're offering to pay out. I don't see how, in this case, they're doing anything wrong

Simply because they want to avoid paying extra, I just checked my previous shipments and my 3 TV were insured up to 400 pounds and 2 laptops up to 300 pounds, that's mean I paid my insurance for nothing
 
That doesn't excuse their negligence or stop the OP from claiming the amount he is out of pocket. The policy was mis-sold under their own T & C's.

They've met the terms of the contract that was agreed to by going over and beyond what their own T&Cs oblige them to do.

The policy was mis sold and their own terms state they would not honour such a policy, however in this instance they have clearly waived such a term and chosen to honour the policy.

It is nobodies problem but the OPs if the policy he chose was the incorrect policy for his requirements.
 
Simply because they want to avoid paying extra, I just checked my previous shipments and my 3 TV were insured up to 400 pounds and 2 laptops up to 300 pounds, that's mean I paid my insurance for nothing

Yes, although if they got lost, you'd have a case to still claim compensation, just not for damage.
 
You have been offerd £58 £8 more than you insured it for
It was a mistake on your part to not insure the laptop to it's full amount , take the loss and insure to the full amount from now on
 
They've met the terms of the contract that was agreed to by going over and beyond what their own T&Cs oblige them to do.

The policy was mis sold and their own terms state they would not honour such a policy, however in this instance they have clearly waived such a term and chosen to honour the policy.

It is nobodies problem but the OPs if the policy he chose was the incorrect policy for his requirements.

It's true that selecting the incorrect amount works against the OP - he'd need to prove that he selected £500 as he claimed in his OP but their T&Cs are a joke.
 
Interestingly, their prohibited list doesn't exclude personal computers, computers or PCs, just notebooks or laptops.

Given the OP described his item to them simply as 'comp' then arguably, they didn't even have reason to suspect they would be mis-selling the insurance.
 
You have been offerd £58 £8 more than you insured it for
It was a mistake on your part to not insure the laptop to it's full amount , take the loss and insure to the full amount from now on

£8 was a shipping cost so it is nothing extra just to clarify.
 
Interestingly, their prohibited list doesn't exclude personal computers, computers or PCs, just notebooks or laptops.

Given the OP described his item to them simply as 'comp' then arguably, they didn't even have reason to suspect they would be mis-selling the insurance.

But does include monitors which a laptop has. Its the likelyhood of a damaged screen.
 
Interestingly, their prohibited list doesn't exclude personal computers, computers or PCs, just notebooks or laptops.

Given the OP described his item to them simply as 'comp' then arguably, they didn't even have reason to suspect they would be mis-selling the insurance.

to be specific it is desktop replacement 18.4'' screen so this is not really notebook not really desktop computer, large mix between
 
What makes you say that?

It's easy - both DHL and Citylink are guilty of stealing, in my 7 years of being a tech. Usually done by temps in the depot because they can get away with it. What they do is slit the parcel along the bottom, remove the laptop then re-seal. From the top, the box still shows as sealed as originally sealed except that it is much lighter now. Cue disgruntled supplier or customer at receiving end.
 
It's easy - both DHL and Citylink are guilty of stealing. Usually done by temps in the depot because they can get away with it. What they do is slit the parcel along the bottom, take the laptop back and re-seal. From the top, the box still shows as sealed as originally sealed except that it is much lighter now. Cue disgruntled supplier or customer at receiving end.

Still, no proof this is what happened.
 
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