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#1
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Posted By: John V
I received 2 SGC graded T205s today in the mail. Bought from a dealer on the west coast, one of them didn't survive the trip across the country. Each was packed in a 5x7 bubble envelope inside a 7x10 bubble envelope. Not especially sturdy packaging in my opinion. The items were not insured. That was entirely my choice/my fault. I have a couple of questions, both of which have no doubt been asked in this forum previously: |
#2
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Posted By: Steve Murray
I think SGC charges a modest re-slab fee. $5.00 as I recall. |
#3
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Posted By: Jason Carota
Technically, isn't it the seller's responsibility to purchase insurance? |
#4
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Posted By: barrysloate
If the card isn't damaged then you are only out $5 plus some shipping fees. If it is damaged and you don't have insurance, you would need to work something out with the dealer if he is amenable. |
#5
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Posted By: James Gallo
I have NEVER seen anyone claim it would be the sellers responsibility to purchase insurance. Insurance is always the option of the buyer and at the buyer's cost. |
#6
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Posted By: Paul
In my opinion, its the sellers responsibility to make sure the buyer gets what they paid for. This stuff about the seller not being responsible is a bunch of crap. I don't know what the law/legal responsibilities are, & I don't care. Treat your customers with care & respect. |
#7
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Posted By: Chris Diaz
Ebay won't help you, but I think Paypal would if you opened a claim/dispute. Despite what sellers put in their auction description, insurance is the sellers responsibility. The seller is the one that files a claim should something happen and it is their job to get the item to you as described. I would contact the seller first to try and resolve it civilly and hope the person has good customer service. If that fails, I would say file a claim because I believe you would win. I have been on both ends of a situation like this. |
#8
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Posted By: Eric B
Sorry James. But it is always the shippers responsibility for an item to get to the buyer and have it undamaged. Ebay even states it in their terms of use. If you buy something from Amazon or JC Penney and it doesn't arrive or is damaged, do you accept that? |
#9
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Posted By: leon
When I ship anything, personal or from auction, it is always my responsibility to package carefully, or I pay. I have indeed had a few things damaged, when I shipped, and I always (only probably 2-3 times) have taken care of it. Now, if there IS insurance then I would go there first....but for any reason if my package contents gets damaged it's on me, imo. regards |
#10
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Posted By: boxingcardman
But stuff happens in transit. I once had a cracked PSA slabbed card returned to me with what were clearly tire tracks across the package. That's why there is insurance. |
#11
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Posted By: John V
The slab was damaged on the edge. Think in terms of the package being tomahawked in transit. The cracks spread from the edge to both sides of the slab. |
#12
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Posted By: Anonymous
Send the card in to SGC, pay their fee to reslab it, and next time purchase the insurance. It eludes me why you would be looking to SGC or ebay to make you whole. |
#13
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Posted By: John V
Geez. Don't be eluded. As stated previously, I am just curious about options or courtesies available for an unfortunate situation. |
#14
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Posted By: Robert Dixon
Maybe I'm missing something here, but why would a buyer pay for insurance when it is the seller's responsibility to deliver the card in the condition that it was purchased in? I don't think that offering insurance releases the seller of their liability. |
#15
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Posted By: Bottom of the Ninth
Ummm...the seller is responsible for properly packing and shipping the card. The reason insurance is offered is due to items being damaged or lost during shipping which in most cases will have absolutely nothing to do with the seller. |
#16
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Posted By: Joe Hunter
As a seller, I had this exact same thing happen a couple of months ago. A PSA card was damaged in delivery by USPS. After the buyer contacted me, I gave him the option of returning the card for a refund, or returning the card for a reholder. He chose to get it reholdered, which I did. I lost a little money on the deal, but the buyer was happy and left positive feedback. I usually offer insurance when I sell, but if it is a particularly expensive card, I will go ahead and purchase insurance, even if the buyer doesn't-just for the peace of mind. I have started putting slabbed cards between two pieces of rigid cardboard, then placing it in a bubble mailer. I think the cardboard provides the extra protection needed, in most cases. As far as who is responsible for damaged merchandise, if the seller offers insurance and the buyer declines, then it should, in principle, be the buyer's responsibility; whether this is the case legally or in the eyes of Paypal, I really don't know. |
#17
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Posted By: Jason Carota
I have to disagree, James G. Buy putting the responsibility of insurance on the buyer, you are basically saying that they (the buyer) are responsible for getting the package to themselves in a safe manner. |
#18
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Posted By: Mike Navarro
If you bought the items on ebay AND paid via paypal and meet the necessary time deadlines, then you can file a Significantly Not as Described claim through paypal, you will be responsible for shipping back to the seller, and you will receive your money back from paypal (but not your return shipping). |
#19
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Posted By: boxingcardman
By offering an insurance option and stating that the risk of loss passes to the buyer if the item is shipped uninsured, the parties are allocating the risk of loss in transit. If the buyer wants to take on the risk, he doesn't buy insurance. If he wants to pass the risk of loss to the seller or carrier, he takes the insurance. It hardly seems fair to me to make the seller buy the insurance at his expense every time or absorb the risk of loss in transit, unless you also accept that a seller will then have the right to mandate insurance in every listing, which is something I know a lot of buyers hate on lesser cost cards. |
#20
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Posted By: Steve
Paypal would if you opened a claim/dispute. Despite what sellers put in their auction description, insurance is the sellers responsibility. |
#21
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Posted By: Robert Klevens
Shipping a slabbed card in an envelope is too risky. I bought these boxes that measure 6x6x1. They work great for sending a couple of slabbed cards. |
#22
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Posted By: boxingcardman
is a normal part of commercial life. I do not understand why applying the same model to bsaeball cards is problematic, but since it raises such hackles, let's assume it out and see what happens. Let's assume that the card gods decree that sellers must accept all risks of transit, as many here suggest is the golden rule. I think it is only fair to then require the buyer who insists on that rule to pay the real cost of compliance. The seller will have to demand a trackable, sturdy package with full value insurance for all items sold, yielding a system where shipping a $50 card costs you eight bucks for an insured, sturdy boxed shipment. If that is not an attractive prospect and you would prefer to have the opportunity to allocate the risk and reduce your costs of acquisition for the 99%+ of times that the USPS does a good job and gets the card to you intact in the bubble holder for three bucks or less, that's great too, but that requires the buyer to accept the risk of loss and bear it when something happens, especially if the seller leaves the decision to the buyer. Again, I come back to freedom of choice: if you choose and lose, you should bear the loss. I had this recently happen when I won an auction at the dead minimum $5 bid and the seller tried to charge me $8+ to ship the card boxed, insured, tracked, etc. I emailed the seller and told him no way, accepted the risk of loss, and was charged a reasonable cost for packing and mailing. Had the card been lost or damaged I'd not have been here whining about the unfairness because I decided not to pay for a boxed, insured shipment. |
#23
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Posted By: leon
I should clarify that my shipping scenario above (shipper is responsible) would be if shipping wasn't mentioned at all. I feel it is then encumbent on the shipper to get the goods to the buyer in the shape they were contracted for. I don't think I have ever (knock on wood) had a problem in this area that wasn't worked out satisfactorily to both sides. |
#24
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Posted By: barrysloate
I'm looking at "encumbant" but remaining silent. |
#25
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Posted By: James Gallo
We are on the same page, and I agree 100%. There are few industries that I have been in when someone so often cheapens out on the shipping. You buy a $50 card and instead of paying 6 to ship it in a box, you pay 3 to ship in a bubble mailer. Never makes sense to me. |
#26
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Posted By: Bilko G
"So lets say in this case the card was damaged, who is responsibile for that loss the buyer who refused insurance or the seller that did everything "right"." |
#27
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Posted By: Mike Navarro
Boxingcardman, |
#28
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Posted By: Steve F
Being the 'Sellers' responsibility to get their widgets to our homes is the easiest policy to enforce. I just filed a dispute. My new gps mount, cracked during shipping -no padding whatsoever. Ain't no way I'm eating this one. |
#29
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Posted By: Steve
Adam it is only the golden rule because paypal says it is. |
#30
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Posted By: boxingcardman
I get it now...the unfair, constantly complained of Paypal rules mandate that a seller bear all risk of the transaction. Fine with me. I'll just jack up my shipping to match. |
#31
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Posted By: Steve
No, the buyer can pay for it. Instead of charging 3.00 to ship a 50.00 card |
#32
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Posted By: Anonymous
Independent of the whole insurance thing, which several posters in past years stated that the shipper files the claim and that it is not worth the price paid, I think |
#33
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Posted By: Steve
M Mac |
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