penegal
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JD Cellars deals are via his email list. They have a website were you can signup
That's interesting that a vendor can unilaterally cancel an order under ACL - I find that rather surprising. That said ACL isn't contract law - you can't (in general) unilaterally cancel contracts, though I guess the T&Cs are accepted as part of the contract formation.
Lemeeseee… The Item is a normally stocked item ; they accept the order and reject final payment with a no stock notice.
ergo , the order and the price structure was ok.
So the Item remains in my cart as a validated and approved purchase unfulfilled because they ran out of stock (or pretended to)
I think that I will just email them and say ; happy to wait as it's a regular stock item , please advise when it is restocked and accept payment for the valid offer already accepted.
I everyone did that (and also added a footnote about publicising unconscionable business practices ) , it might force some honesty.
How about a new thread… orders rejected by CM to try to welch out on a marketing mistake… that might hurt….
JD Cellars deals are via his email list. They have a website were you can signup
Putting an item up on a shelf is merely an "invitation to treat" - it's not an offer per se.
I'm more concerned about the case where the shop has already taken your money, and then unilaterally cancels your contract afterwards. They've wasted your time, taken your money, and potentially induced you to take actions you wouldn't have otherwise (e.g. offering to supply the champagne to a party or wedding or something).
Upon Log in this morning , I see that the cart has been cleared.
I think this kind of behaviour stinks , but have more to do with my life than start a war with them.
I will just tell anyone and everyone that the org is dodgy and that there are better merchants around.
After some initial concerns I had it now appears all 4 orders I placed to CM for Veuve yesterday are being packed today - excellent result.
Putting an item up on a shelf is merely an "invitation to treat" - it's not an offer per se.
I'm more concerned about the case where the shop has already taken your money, and then unilaterally cancels your contract afterwards. They've wasted your time, taken your money, and potentially induced you to take actions you wouldn't have otherwise (e.g. offering to supply the champagne to a party or wedding or something).
A typo or a bargain? Anyone want to split a case of 6 (6 ways)
View attachment 81852
It's now saying $5700 per case of 3 - I wonder how many slipped through before that error was noticed?
I'm surprised that you feel that they are obligated to honour all orders when clearly additional orders were placed because of a quirky website loophole after it was already showing as out of stock.
When you thought enough was enough... CM code still working this morning with Wynn's up. Michael at $78 after usual...picked up V&A shiraz at $32 so happy with that..
AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
Any decent system will check the stock level at the point when payment is taken.
In any case, quirky website/coding issues shouldn't be the consumer's problem - if the merchant takes your money, it should be the merchant's problem finding the stock. At that point, a contract for the supply of goods and services is formed between buyer and seller. Inability of a merchant to get their website working properly shouldn't be an excuse to void contracts, otherwise most contracts won't be worth the paper they're figuratively written on.
As a consumer, I might not even know that the product is supposedly "out of stock" - I might not even have looked at the product page, but simply clicked on the "recommended for you" picture, then happily checked out, being none the wiser.
So, if you and I sign a contract, then there's nothing legally to stop me unilaterally cancelling the contract and just giving your money back? I don't remember anything like this when I studied Contract law.there is no legal obligation that prevents them from cancelling and refunding an order.
So, if you and I sign a contract, then there's nothing legally to stop me unilaterally cancelling the contract and just giving your money back? I don't remember anything like this when I studied Contract law.
You are trying to lump signing a settlement contract on a property in the same category as pushing a 'buy' button on a website. Apples and oranges. If you disagree, then best of luck to you.
Any decent system will check the stock level at the point when payment is taken.
In any case, quirky website/coding issues shouldn't be the consumer's problem - if the merchant takes your money, it should be the merchant's problem finding the stock. At that point, a contract for the supply of goods and services is formed between buyer and seller. Inability of a merchant to get their website working properly shouldn't be an excuse to void contracts, otherwise most contracts won't be worth the paper they're figuratively written on.
As a consumer, I might not even know that the product is supposedly "out of stock" - I might not even have looked at the product page, but simply clicked on the "recommended for you" picture, then happily checked out, being none the wiser.