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-   -   eBay Buyer Sued For Leaving Negative Feedback on $6.44 Item (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=152292)

michael3322 06-10-2012 05:45 AM

eBay Buyer Sued For Leaving Negative Feedback on $6.44 Item
 
Couldn't believe it when I read it, so thought I would share it.

Orange County man sued over negative eBay feedback
May 23, 2012

esd10 06-10-2012 07:23 AM

that's crazy

Jay Wolt 06-10-2012 09:19 AM

Buyer waited over 30 days w/o receiving item before posting his negative feedback.
It wasn't like he left it after 48 hours.

3-2-count 06-10-2012 09:34 AM

Man I gotta become a lawyer.

Leon 06-10-2012 09:36 AM

This should go back to the absolute defense of libel or slander being the "truth". As long as the guy that gave the negative is being 100% truthful then he shouldn't have anything to worry about. It's still a hassle and in some states the loser of particular lawsuits has to pay both legal fees (I believe). Hopefully that is what will happen there. The only negatives I have ever given on ebay were for a few small items I bought that were just out and out theft. I think the 2-3 sellers I neg'd got booted quickly afterwards.

It is worth repeating that everyone is legally liable for what they say on this board too. Believe me, there have been threads on this board used in court cases already. I will be happy to work with any authorities on these issues. I have had calls from Postal Inspectors, USPS Special Agents, FBI and local authorities. It is always my pleasure to help them in their investigations.

yanksfan09 06-10-2012 09:54 AM

The world keeps getting crazier.....uh oh hope Mother Earth don't sue me now....please delete

brickyardkennedy 06-10-2012 10:45 AM

Not the best way to attract customers.

Big Ben 06-10-2012 10:57 AM

Just when I thought I head everything.....:eek:

novakjr 06-10-2012 11:42 AM

The fact that the courts even let something like this happen shows that there's something majorly wrong with the system. There's no excuse, it's all about money to them, and there's no accountability.. Something needs to change.

jimq 06-10-2012 11:45 AM

It would only be fair if he sued everybody and not just that one buyer who thought he was a bad seller

http://toolhaus.org/cgi-bin/negs?Use...ed+by&ref=home

novakjr 06-10-2012 12:09 PM

Maybe someone should take a closer look at the seller, selling bootleg copies of tv shows. He had at least 2 negs for "The Wonder Years" and "Batman" being bootlegs instead of official copies..

drc 06-10-2012 12:15 PM

You can give a negative if you want. That's just your opinion, and opinions, even if not entirely lucid or rational, are generally perfectly legal. Now, if you purposely lied in the comment that could be different. Like if you lied and said the seller purposely did something really bad, and perhaps illegal, like made and sold you a forgery or stole the money.

If this case is as the buyer says (I said if, as I take local news reports with a large grain of salt-- especially when the article interviews just one side in a dispute), his comments sounded reasonable. I suspect most sellers would view them as reasonable.

smotan_02 06-10-2012 12:49 PM

His responses only make it worse for him.

Exhibitman 06-10-2012 01:04 PM

Ebay's feedback system has become a bad joke I don't even bother with. When I have a problem with a seller I just file a paypal claim and leave it at that.

Remember, just because someone has the $ to file a lawsuit doesn't mean he will win it. "Mere opinion" is not a basis for a defamation or trade libel claim and truth is a defense. The plaintiff still has to prove a case.

What's really going on when a business targets a critic often is a strategic lawsuit against public participation--we call it a SLAPP suit--which is litigation filed to scare people into not expressing views that might damage a commercial interest. The theory is that if you sue a vocal critic and subject him to ruinous attorneys' fees and costs you can scare everyone else into not commenting. A case like that filed in CA is subject to a motion to dismiss on the basis of CA's anti-SLAPP law, which provides for an award of attorneys' fees to the prevailing defendant. I handled a case like that some years ago for a N54 member:

http://articles.nydailynews.com/2005...lifornia-judge

drc 06-10-2012 01:18 PM

If you are a restaurant owner, beating the crap out of a random customer might prove a point, but it won't help your business.


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