ChatterBank1 min ago
i need some help with a book I wanted to buy
6 Answers
I went into a shop the other day. they had a book for sale for 14.99 sealed in plastic. they had the exact same one not in plastic for people to look at. This had a price on it for 2.99. I took it to the counter and the woman went into the back, brought one out in plastic and said it was 14.99. I disagreed because the one I wanted had a 2.99 sticker on it, probably because it is unwrapped and shop soiled. She said it was 14.99 because the others were 14.99 and this one had the wrong label stuck on. I think Im in the right. Surely a shop has to sell you the item at the price labelled on it, even it was a mistake.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm sure someone who can explain it properly will come along and do just that.....but as I understand it, then no, the shop doesn't have to sell the book at the marked price.
By having the books out in the shop for sale they are inviting you - the customer - to make an offer to buy, which happens basically when you take the book to the counter to purchase it. It is only when the seller then accepts your offer to purchase the book that a contract is formed. The seller has the right to not accept this offer. There are a few acceptions to this, but this is the basic way it works I think.
By having the books out in the shop for sale they are inviting you - the customer - to make an offer to buy, which happens basically when you take the book to the counter to purchase it. It is only when the seller then accepts your offer to purchase the book that a contract is formed. The seller has the right to not accept this offer. There are a few acceptions to this, but this is the basic way it works I think.
Its contract law. You have to have an offer and an acceptance of that offer to form the contract. The shop is not offering to sell to you, it is inviting you to make an offer which they can then decide to accept or not. There is no contrct betwen you until you offer to buy and they offer to sell at whatever price is agreed. Here, no price was agreed so, no contract.
But I dont think thats fair if the book had 2.99 on the price label to then change it at the till to 14.99. I always thought that if the item was advertised at a certain price, that is the price you pay. It's happened before in a bigger store where they sold it to me at the price I saw even though it was a mistake.
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