I purchased an item from an item online retailer for £3500 having spotted what I thought was good deal as the item normally retails for between £5-6k. Order confirmation received straight away and payment has been taken from my credit card. I’ve now several days later had an email from them saying it was a misprice and giving me the chance to either purchase the item for £5300 or to cancel the order and receive a full refund.
Their T&Cs seem like a set of generic ones (googling them throws up hundreds or retailers with the same terms) - which I think are a 'Off-premises (doorstep) consumer goods, services and digital content terms and conditions' which can be purchased from somewhere like Thomson Reuters Practical Law website.
These say:
How we will accept your order. Our acceptance of your order will take place when you complete the checkout process and pay for your order, at which point a contract will come into existence between you and us.
They have one T&C covering mispricing which states
What happens if we got the price wrong. It is always possible that, despite our best efforts, some of the products we sell may be incorrectly priced. We will normally check prices before accepting your order so that, where the product's correct price at your order date is less than our stated price at your order date, we will charge the lower amount. If the product's correct price at your order date is higher than the price stated to you, we will contact you for your instructions before we proceed with your order. If we accept and process your order where a pricing error is obvious and unmistakeable and could reasonably have been recognised by you as a mispricing, we may end the contract, refund you any sums you have paid and require the return of any goods provided to you.
In my view it wasn’t an obvious and unmistakeable pricing error (for example where they get the decimal point wrong and sell something for £500 instead of £5000). During a January sale I think it’s reasonable items could be heavily discounted (~35% in this case). They were also called before placing the order to confirm some details over the size and finish, and the price (the one I paid) was confirmed by their staff over the phone.
I plan to write to them to state that I consider we have a contract and I want them to uphold their end by supplying the item to me.
But other than getting a refund, do I have any other options? I’ve seen mention of small claims court for ‘specific performance’ and ‘loss of bargain’ but is that viable?
Their T&Cs seem like a set of generic ones (googling them throws up hundreds or retailers with the same terms) - which I think are a 'Off-premises (doorstep) consumer goods, services and digital content terms and conditions' which can be purchased from somewhere like Thomson Reuters Practical Law website.
These say:
How we will accept your order. Our acceptance of your order will take place when you complete the checkout process and pay for your order, at which point a contract will come into existence between you and us.
They have one T&C covering mispricing which states
What happens if we got the price wrong. It is always possible that, despite our best efforts, some of the products we sell may be incorrectly priced. We will normally check prices before accepting your order so that, where the product's correct price at your order date is less than our stated price at your order date, we will charge the lower amount. If the product's correct price at your order date is higher than the price stated to you, we will contact you for your instructions before we proceed with your order. If we accept and process your order where a pricing error is obvious and unmistakeable and could reasonably have been recognised by you as a mispricing, we may end the contract, refund you any sums you have paid and require the return of any goods provided to you.
In my view it wasn’t an obvious and unmistakeable pricing error (for example where they get the decimal point wrong and sell something for £500 instead of £5000). During a January sale I think it’s reasonable items could be heavily discounted (~35% in this case). They were also called before placing the order to confirm some details over the size and finish, and the price (the one I paid) was confirmed by their staff over the phone.
I plan to write to them to state that I consider we have a contract and I want them to uphold their end by supplying the item to me.
But other than getting a refund, do I have any other options? I’ve seen mention of small claims court for ‘specific performance’ and ‘loss of bargain’ but is that viable?
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