Deliveries
Broken delivery appointments are a common cause of
complaint. For example, you buy some furniture and arrange
with the shop to have it delivered on a particular
morning. You take time off work on the delivery day, but
nobody appears.
One way to give yourself some rights is to make time of
the essence when you are buying the goods. When you make
the initial contract with the shop, specify that they must
be delivered on or by a certain date. Write this date on
your receipt and on the order form in the shop. If the
time or date is broken you can cancel the contract and
claim back the money you have paid.
Even if you have not done this, you are not expected to
wait forever for delivery. If your goods do not arrive on
the specified day, write to the shop immediately to inform
the manager that unless he arranges delivery within a
specified period of time, you will cancel the contract.
Online
Just like buying from normal ‘bricks and mortar’ shops, if something goes wrong first complain to whoever sold you the product, and with whom you have a legal contract.
If you paid by credit card, and the goods never arrived, contact your credit card company. They may be able to intervene with the seller and resolve the dispute.
The European Consumer Centre (ECC) may be able to help if you have a dispute with a retailer in the EU. Econsumer.gov may be able to assist if you have a problem with a retailer outside the EU. It is a worldwide venture to gather and share cross-border ecommerce complaints and provide information to consumers shopping online.
Mail order
If you buy goods through mail order, your rights are the
same as when buying from a shop. If goods are faulty, send
a letter by recorded delivery to the firm before returning
the goods. In the letter, describe the defect and say you
are returning the goods within the next few days and would
like the postage reimbursed. Say what you want the firm to
do about the goods (refund, replace or repair). You should alway keep a copy of the letter. Writing in
advance covers you in case the company later claims that
the defect was caused when you sent the goods back. Pack
the goods carefully and send them also by recorded delivery.