Re: Private sale gone so wrong
Hi
OK let’s turn this around.
In 2008 my wife and I bought a coffee table from a shop in town, we paid cash and arranged to collect it the following week.
At the weekend I was rushed into hospital where I had to undergo major stomach surgery. The consensus was that I would not be coming out.
Needless to say the coffee table was the last thing on anyone’s mind. Three months later I am pleased to say I was home again three stones lighter but anyway.
On contacting the shop I found that they had sold the table and refused to refund the money.
Needless to say I was not happy. They had not notified my wife that this is what they were going to do. I sent them a letter claiming breach of contract and threatening court action.
Shortly after I received a letter from there, “legal people” saying that I had committed regulatory breach of contract and they were entitled by contract law to do what they did.
I got a solicitor friend of mine to write them a letter which explained that it was impossible for me to repudiate the contract as I had already completed my part when I paid. Then they came up with the change of position defence you mention problem is that this was a contact, not an erroneous payment, they knew they were using money they were not entitled to as is the case here. They were not"innocent".
They should have notified me that they were not willing to store the item and give me a reasonable time to collect, and then they should have sought to rescind the contract by returning the money this would have left them free to sell the item. They could in principle have sold the item before returning the money but they must return it, as they did less a small fee for the inconvenience, which I suppose would equate to a contractual termination fee for damages incurred.
Peter
Hi
OK let’s turn this around.
In 2008 my wife and I bought a coffee table from a shop in town, we paid cash and arranged to collect it the following week.
At the weekend I was rushed into hospital where I had to undergo major stomach surgery. The consensus was that I would not be coming out.
Needless to say the coffee table was the last thing on anyone’s mind. Three months later I am pleased to say I was home again three stones lighter but anyway.
On contacting the shop I found that they had sold the table and refused to refund the money.
Needless to say I was not happy. They had not notified my wife that this is what they were going to do. I sent them a letter claiming breach of contract and threatening court action.
Shortly after I received a letter from there, “legal people” saying that I had committed regulatory breach of contract and they were entitled by contract law to do what they did.
I got a solicitor friend of mine to write them a letter which explained that it was impossible for me to repudiate the contract as I had already completed my part when I paid. Then they came up with the change of position defence you mention problem is that this was a contact, not an erroneous payment, they knew they were using money they were not entitled to as is the case here. They were not"innocent".
They should have notified me that they were not willing to store the item and give me a reasonable time to collect, and then they should have sought to rescind the contract by returning the money this would have left them free to sell the item. They could in principle have sold the item before returning the money but they must return it, as they did less a small fee for the inconvenience, which I suppose would equate to a contractual termination fee for damages incurred.
Peter
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