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butterflychaser

Should I Leave Negative Feedback or Let it Go?

butterflychaser
17 years ago

In June I bid on and won a battery recharger with 12 rechargeable batteries. The batteries are usually $1 each and I won it all for $10. I was pretty happy. Well a week later the guy tells me the batteries were "stolen". Batteries were stolen?? How's that happen?

I think he didn't like the price the auction sold for, and I stressed to him that I really wanted the item. But he simply refunded my payment and said "Sorry, couldn't replace." I haven't left feedback yet because I don't know if I should just move on, or tell the truth. I personally think he should have bought new batteries and sent the unit, even if he lost money. I don't see how some batteries could be stolen after I submit payment. And they are easily replaced. I think he should honor the sell.

I've been watching his auctions to see if he relists the item, but he hasn't so far. For all I know, a friend of his may have offered him $15 for the set.

It doesn't make sense to me. Does it to you? The seller has a 98% rating. So there have been other problems along the way, but mostly just him taking so long to ship or sending an item that doesn't work. When he gets negative feedback, he responds to it rather hatefully. But most of his customers seem to really like him. I could leave a neutral instead of a negative just to let people know what happened but not hurting his rating.

What do y'all think?

NancyAnn

Comments (14)

  • teresa_ohio
    17 years ago

    Hi NancyAnn,

    It's always so hard deciding to leave negative or neutral feedback, isn't it? I'm assuming he hasn't left feedback for you yet. If not, he'll probably retaliate and leave you negative in response. That's what always bothers me. If you tell the truth and go ahead and leave a neg or neutral, you risk your own feedback in the process. I know alot of people that have 2 different accounts, one for selling and one for buying. So that way if you leave a negative for a seller, it doesn't affect your own seller ID.

    Personally I think he should have bought the new batteries also and replaced them. If he's unwilling to do that, then I'd at least leave a neutral. Sounds like he just didn't get the money he'd hoped for it. Can you file a dispute on it? I've only filed disputes on non paying bidders, so I'm not sure how it works when a seller backs out.

    Just my 2 cents! :) Teresa

  • woodthrush
    17 years ago

    That's what bugs me about the feedback system. Give a bad rating and you get one in return. As long as you didn't lose any money, I would let it go. Leave him bad feedback, and he's sure to leave you one too. And you are selling too. So you don't want that glaring out at your customers.
    Pam

  • zozzl
    17 years ago

    I would let it go and go buy yourself a new plant for being such a decent person!

    Pat

  • earthlydelights
    17 years ago

    legally, he was obligated to you. how convenient that the batteries were stolen as the auction/bidding closed. why wasn't the charger?

    i would leave neutral with the remark along the lines of
    ..after bid xcptrd/clzd, Slr lost items but refunded my $.
    something along those lines (i was trying to abbreviate as i know there's only a set amount of characters.

    best to you.

    maryanne

  • PRO
    Business_Name_Placeholder
    17 years ago

    Hi Nancy Ann

    I agree with Maryanne, leave neutral feedback and be honest. Feedback is for other buyers to look at and see if they want to take a chance with this seller. I have been selling for years now and I try to be very careful with feedback. As long as he refunded your money (although he should've replaced them) he didn't take your money and run.

    Good luck,
    Nina

  • aka_margo
    17 years ago

    As an auction seller myself I know that things can go wrong. Once I put something up for auction and when I went to ship it, found out my husband had thrown the box in the recycling bin and it was already taken away with the garbage. Mistakes happen. Just be happy that you got your money back already, we all know there are sellers out there that will take your money and run. Perhaps the guy lives with roomates and someone took the batteries. I'm not saying the guy isn't lying, he very well could be. 98% is still fairly good for feedback, and if he hasn't relisted this item yet it shows he probably doesn't have the item. I agree that you could leave neutral feedback and say Promptly returned money after he lost item.

  • butterflychaser
    Original Author
    17 years ago

    Well, the item he lost was batteries--Every Walmart has 'em. So they're not a hard thing to replace. He didn't lose the charger, just the batteries, so he says.

    I will definitely not be leaving positive feedback. And I don't fear negative feedback. With 500 unique positive feedbacks, one negative won't hurt me much. And I can respond to his feedback and folks reading my feedback will know the seller was clearly wrong.

    I do think I'll leave a negative and state "Seller says AA batteries were stolen, can't replace them?? Refunded money." It took him about 2 weeks to refund the money, so that's not really "prompt".

    There's no guarantee that he hasn't already sold the item. Maybe a "roommate" offered him $15 instead of the $10 I was gonna pay. Or maybe he sells under another name or on another site. Who knows? He did refund my money so I won't leave him a negative.

    Thanks for the input, y'all.

    NancyAnn

  • wanna_run_faster
    17 years ago

    Also, it seems the only (maybe) way around retalitory negative feedback is for you to leave negative (or neutral) feedback at the last possible moment. I think that would be as late as possible on the 90th day after the auction but maybe someone here knows exactly when the opportunity for feedback expires.

  • sunshine98
    17 years ago

    NancyAnn,
    According to the rules and regulations of the auctions which are VERY clear, unless the seller has a Reserve posted for the item it is to go to the highest bidder. The seller can sell the item to someone else PRIOR to the start of the bid but once bidding has started he is bound by the rules of Yahoo or ebay (wherever his auction is located) to sell to the highest bidder. If he should cancel the sale AFTER the bidding has ended and there is NO reserve, you can turn him in to the auction site (again yahoo, ebay or wherever he has his auction site) There they will either kick him out(if he has prior history of doing this), charge him a fine, etc. and he'll be forced to give you the item won. I would definitely contact the auction site and tell them about it. I would also definitely leave negative feedback. Just my 2 cents and hope it helps.
    Sincerely and respectfully,
    Nancy aka sunshine98

  • woodsidetrader
    17 years ago

    just one of the reasons I gave up on e-bay. too many problems, too much wasted time and money, too few good results.

  • butterflychaser
    Original Author
    17 years ago

    I've decided to leave a neutral, not a negative. He did refund my money. So he didn't steal from me.

    Ebay is like any other place; you'll have good and bad experiences. I get great bargains on most items, like a new external 200 gig hard drive for $80, ink cartridges for my printer at a fraction of what I'd pay locally, and a particular brand of clothing I can't buy locally.

    Over the years I've done 100's of transactions and only occasionally did I have any problems. I guess it depends on your expectations and what you are looking for. I'm almost always pleased with everything I've gotten from Ebay sellers.

  • butterflychaser
    Original Author
    17 years ago

    I ended up leaving a neutral and stated that the buyer refunded my money but claimed the AA batteries were stolen and he couldn't replace them.

    Today he left me neutral feedback that said TRIED TO RIP ME OFF!!!!!

    How does he figure that??? I paid immediately and then he reniegged on the deal! It seems he has done something similar to this once before. So I may just report him. I hate to, but how can he say I tried to rip him off?? That just makes no sense. Because he began the auction cheaply and I was the only bidder so he didn't get as much as he wanted for it? It makes no sense to me. If you don't want to settle for $10, then start your auction at the lowest price that will make you happy.

    I think I'll go see where I can report him. Thanks Nancy for reminding me of that.

    NancyAnn

  • nhhoney
    17 years ago

    Nancy,
    You have a chance to reply to feedback left for you.Go reply to his feedback witht the truth.
    I've bought many things from ebay and only had 2 bad experiences,but no money was lost.

  • paty99
    17 years ago

    Nancyann,
    You have to open a dispute with square trade to try to get his feedback removed. He had no right to leave feedback like that for you. You might even be able to use his statement to suggest he might still have the item and just didn't want to sell it to you for the bid price. He wouldn't have made a statement like that unless he was very dissapointed with the sale price. I wish you good luck with this.
    Pat

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