Exactly, stolen phone is a stolen phone. If it doesn't get refunded, just do a chargeback with the email as proof
I would have thought this would come under unsolicited goods - you're original order was cancelled and a refund should have been issued. They've then sent the item after the order had been cancelled, one that you had not asked for after the cancellation.
No, the OP did order the phone and it's clearly a mistake that it has been sent out after they tried to cancel it. No judge is going to rule in the OP's favour if they try to claim unsolicited goods in this case
It isn't his problem in the slightest that they ****** up.
Where does that end though? Say for example there had been a gap of 3 months?No, the OP did order the phone and it's clearly a mistake that it has been sent out after they tried to cancel it. No judge is going to rule in the OP's favour if they try to claim unsolicited goods in this case
Where does that end though? Say for example there had been a gap of 3 months?
Or if you order 3 of something and afterwards they send a 4th?
Where does it switch between being an error with an existing order to being sent goods you didn't ask for? I assumed the contract ended the moment they cancelled it, hence why I thought it might come under unsolicited goods.
In this Act, unless the context or subject matter otherwise requires,—
- “acquire” includes hire;
- “send” includes deliver, and “sender” shall be construed accordingly;
- “unsolicited” means, in relation to goods sent to any person, that they are sent without any prior request made by him or on his behalf.
Where does that end though? Say for example there had been a gap of 3 months?
Or if you order 3 of something and afterwards they send a 4th?
Where does it switch between being an error with an existing order to being sent goods you didn't ask for? I assumed the contract ended the moment they cancelled it, hence why I thought it might come under unsolicited goods.
But if they did refund him and still send him it, it would surely be entirely on John Lewis to sort it all out, contact the OP and arrange a free collection when convenient for him.
It isn't his problem in the slightest that they ****** up.
By "that sort of thing", you mean "theft"? You can spin it as their mistake or whatever if you want to try and make yourself feel better, but if you've not at least informed them that they've made a mistake then it's still theft.
How often does that even happen? One time my partner made a clothes order, pretty cheap (probably less than £10 per item) and they sent an additional item which she didn't order. We did what was right and contacted the company to highlight and they asked us to return it. Honestly for such a little amount, I was expecting them to say keep it.i think they'll likely just let you keep it rather than them having to pay to get it returned etc etc
Theft? lol
Good one.
Well, that would be for a judge to decide really (if the retailer decided it was worth their while taking it to that stage).
There's obviously a difference between an admin error causing fulfilment of an order which was supposed to be cancelled, or sending out the same order twice, vs sending out a random item 10 years later, and there's definitely a grey area between those 2 extremes, but do you honestly believe that this situation falls under that grey area?
Precisely.If lawyers hate it, how are consumers supposed to deal with this crap!
Yes TBH. My cut off point would have been the bit where they had cancelled it as I originally said. If they'd sent it and then cancelled it - different story, but they didn't.but do you honestly believe that this situation falls under that grey area?
Interestingly there is a thread on reddit legaladviceuk where someone had a double delivery and CAB said it was unsolicited goods. But it caused a fair amount discussion whether it would or wouldn't be. This comment had me nodding though
Yea I think there were mixed feelings on the reddit thread about them too I suppose like with most things - it depends who you get.Not sure I'd trust the CAB's word much based on my dealings with them to be honest!