Crosswords2 mins ago
Returning An Item Which Is Now On Sale
24 Answers
Hi, I'd like some advice please. I bought a jumper from Sainsburys for £14. After trying it on at home it wasn't for me so I returned it, 17 days after the date of purchase. I was told that because the jumper was now in the sale at half price I would only be refunded £7. I sucked it up at the time but I am not sure if it was right. I paid full price, so surely I should get full price back? I would have preferred £14 store credit. I appreciate it'a not a big deal in the grand scheme of things but am curious to know if this is correct. Thanks in advance for any help you can offer.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Their refund policy states :
"What if I change my mind?"
"We’ll be happy to exchange or refund it for you. As long as it’s within 30 days, it’s in the original condition and you’ve got your proof of purchase."
So as long as the item was 'as new' and you had the receipt, they should have refunded the full purchase price.
"What if I change my mind?"
"We’ll be happy to exchange or refund it for you. As long as it’s within 30 days, it’s in the original condition and you’ve got your proof of purchase."
So as long as the item was 'as new' and you had the receipt, they should have refunded the full purchase price.
For 'in-store' purchases (unlike online ones) your right to a refund or exchange only exists when the item is either faulty or 'not as described'. (e.g. if you bought a dress marked as Size 16 and it turned out to be Size 12).
For all other goods you have no rights whatsoever to either a refund or exchange. (The only exception might be where the store advertised that it would accept returns within a specified period, as such an advertisement could be deemed to be part of your contract of purchase).
So any exchange or refund offered by a store (for non-faulty items) is purely an act of goodwill. The store can (and in my opinion should) simply say 'Tough luck pal. You bought it. You're stuck with it. Go away!".
So Sainsbury's weren't obliged to offer you anything at all back. If they did so (purely as an act of goodwill) then they were left with an item that they could only put back on sale for £7. If they gave you £14 for it they'd be making a loss, so you could hardly expect them to do so!
For all other goods you have no rights whatsoever to either a refund or exchange. (The only exception might be where the store advertised that it would accept returns within a specified period, as such an advertisement could be deemed to be part of your contract of purchase).
So any exchange or refund offered by a store (for non-faulty items) is purely an act of goodwill. The store can (and in my opinion should) simply say 'Tough luck pal. You bought it. You're stuck with it. Go away!".
So Sainsbury's weren't obliged to offer you anything at all back. If they did so (purely as an act of goodwill) then they were left with an item that they could only put back on sale for £7. If they gave you £14 for it they'd be making a loss, so you could hardly expect them to do so!
Thanks all, I appreciate the whole 'I shouldn't get anything for just changing my mind' but as sunny dave says, they are happy to refund under such circumstances, just not what I originally paid which I don't think is right. Yes, I could buy it at the sale price but even so they'd still make a profit, albeit smaller, so that argument doesn't stack up .
sunny dave, there will be small print about sale price items.
Otherwise you could buy an item £100 then when it was reduced to £50 in a sale take it back, get a £100 refund then buy it again for £50.
I have seen 'designer' clothes at say £500 full price then down to £100 in a sale. Do you actually think they would give you £400 back just by saying you have decided it was 'not for me' and returning it at sale time?
Otherwise you could buy an item £100 then when it was reduced to £50 in a sale take it back, get a £100 refund then buy it again for £50.
I have seen 'designer' clothes at say £500 full price then down to £100 in a sale. Do you actually think they would give you £400 back just by saying you have decided it was 'not for me' and returning it at sale time?
A bit off topic but, back when people had cheque books but not cheque guarantee cards there was a trick to cash a cheque at M & S .
They would accept a cheque for an item as long as you had ID. Refunds were always in cash. So if you wanted to cash a cheque for £20 you bought an item for £20 by cheque, then went to the service desk and returned it.They gave you the £20 back as cash! Very useful a couple of days before pay day, as you knew it would take 3 days for the cheque to
get back to your bank.
They would accept a cheque for an item as long as you had ID. Refunds were always in cash. So if you wanted to cash a cheque for £20 you bought an item for £20 by cheque, then went to the service desk and returned it.They gave you the £20 back as cash! Very useful a couple of days before pay day, as you knew it would take 3 days for the cheque to
get back to your bank.
IMO regardless of the legal position, a stated store policy should be upheld. I suspect the person you dealt with didn't have a clue. But as you accepted the offer you'd be on sticky ground correcting it now.
Best thing you can do is buy a few dozen in the sale and return them after the sale pointing out it was store policy to refund the existing price not the price paid at the time, and now that there is no sale on, you have to be refunded the full present price.
Best thing you can do is buy a few dozen in the sale and return them after the sale pointing out it was store policy to refund the existing price not the price paid at the time, and now that there is no sale on, you have to be refunded the full present price.
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