ChatterBank2 mins ago
Deposit
My husband takes a 30% deposit on the wood burning stoves that he installs (to try and ensure he doesn't get lumbered with one that no one else wants if the original customer changes their mind). Well, a customer has changed his mind and we wondered if we can keep some of the deposit? Thanks.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks for your thoughts - I will pass them on to himself.
PS - I didnt mean to imply that I can make up the definition of words, but I asked some people at the school gates and they all thought that a deposit was non-refundable (none of us actually knows this to be true just that we would expect to lose a deposit if we cancelled something).
PS - I didnt mean to imply that I can make up the definition of words, but I asked some people at the school gates and they all thought that a deposit was non-refundable (none of us actually knows this to be true just that we would expect to lose a deposit if we cancelled something).
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Hi Bednobs - that's why he takes a deposit, there are so many different stoves, colours, different handles, sizes, etc. He could end up ordering a really ugly beast of a thing that the customer turns round and says they don't want and he will be lumbered with it - and some of them cost £000's. He will have to tighten up his paperwork and make sure the customers know that the deposit (or some proportion of it) is non-refundable. In this particular case, he had two men at the customer's house, with all the bits needed to fit the stove so he has lost out (don't know how ugly the stove is though!).
It might be worth himself reviewing his Ts&Cs to cover himself for the future. As this one has gone right up to the wire I'm fairly sure 30% deposit will not have covered his costs. Perhaps a x% deposit when the order is placed, a subsequent payment one week before installation that roughly covers the material costs and a final payment upon installation and acceptance by the customer that covers manpower and profit.
As others have said having water tight Ts&Cs covers your back against common (mis)understanding and assumptions and is a reassuring security blanket to fall back on when it all goes tits up. However you rarely know how watertight your contracts are until they are tested......
As others have said having water tight Ts&Cs covers your back against common (mis)understanding and assumptions and is a reassuring security blanket to fall back on when it all goes tits up. However you rarely know how watertight your contracts are until they are tested......
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