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Home > Tag Archive: fedex

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Purchase from Buy.com, FedEx loses package; what can a consumer do?

Found in: Consumer Rights, Customer Service
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  • I’ve received an e-mail this morning from reader Eric who shares an unfortunate shopping experience with Buy.com. He ordered a hard drive which Buy.com says [...]
Thursday
November 6, 2008
2 Comments

I’ve received an e-mail this morning from reader Eric who shares an unfortunate shopping experience with Buy.com. He ordered a hard drive which Buy.com says was delivered on October 30th. Unfortunately for him, no signature was required and the package disappeared from his front porch. This is not surprising, considering it was delivered on Mischief Night. He’s contacted Buy.com and it seems they aren’t offering much recourse to him now.

I just thought I would write since I am chock full of anger, which unfortunately is not how I should be feeling the thursday after election night.

I placed an order (#XXXXXXXXX) for an external TB firewire LaCie drive from buy.com and waited for it’s arrival. Nothing came. Several days after the date that was indicated in my shipping email I tried contacting them and after several false starts- they have a terrible support system- my order was reviewed and I was told I already had the item. That it was delivered, and that since Buy.Com does not request a signature the item was “left outside”. Now my wife works from home, so she’s always home, so I’m not sure how she didn’t hear the delivery person ring the bell. Worse yet the “delivery” date was Mischief night, October 30th, so it’s hard to believe they would leave a 300 dollar item outside without getting a signature.

Buy.com “reviewed” my claim and denied me via an automated email with no option for appeal. After writing them back I was told this,

Per company policy: “Title to goods passes to you upon delivery to the common carrier.” (http://www.buy.com/corp/legal.asp). Basically this says that once a product is in transit via the shipping carrier, the ownership and responsibility of the product has passed from Buy.com to the customer. It is the customer’s responsibility from this point forward to make sure someone is at the delivery address provided to accept the package. If no one is available at this address at the time of delivery, the carrier is authorized to leave the package at the door and the order is considered completed at that time. Basically, the security of the delivery location provided by the customer falls under the responsibility of the customer.

So apparently when you make a purchase from Buy.com you are actually not buying it yourself, but rather purchasing the item for a delivery service that may or may not send you the item. So what is to prevent the delivery agent from keeping the item, giving it to a friend, covering it with glitter and making a puppet friend?

I have tried to file a claim with paypal (what I used to pay), but I was hoping you might have some more information on what my rights are as a purchaser? Also if nothing else, please let others know this policy.

Buy.com customer service has offered no assistance or alternatives in resolving this matter. Here they basically tell the consumer that he is shit out of luck from their end. At the very least, I would think that they should offer to contact FedEx on the consumer’s behalf to assist in the investigation.

Is it the responsibility of e-commerce stores to work with the carrier to ensure packages get to the customer? At which point should a signature be required for delivery? If the retailer is going to offer no assistance in making sure packages get delivered, what other rights do consumers have in this type of situation?

  • Read more about: bad retailer, buy.com, Consumer Rights, customer relationship, Customer Service, e-commerce, fedex, lost package, oops, shipping

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About No Turn On Red:

No Turn On Red is a blog about the customer experience in retail, both online and in-store. Through tips for e-commerce developers, inspiration for e-commerce information architects, advice for retail directors, and stories from real customers, our goal is to make the shopping experience better for all.

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