O
OldGoat
Guest
I don't know what to think about this transaction:
I sold a dagger to a woman in Atlanta. She received it and said there were a couple of hairline cracks in the edge of the blade. She wanted a third off the price of the knife. I said 'no', return the knife within five days (undamaged and unused) and I'd refund her money (as stated on the first page of my web page). She said "no, she would not return the knife until I sent her the refund." I told her that there probably wasn't a business in the country (or the world) that was going to give her her money back until the item was retuned. So, I got another (huffy-sounding) e-mail from her saying that I was not honest and not to ever contact her again.
OK. I can do that. Now I'm wondering if this is a scam just to get reduced prices on knives (or whatever else). I certainly do not want any knife with my name on it and flaw in it sold to anyone. Not that my knives are perfect - there's no such thing - but I try to keep quality high. I certainly didn't see any cracks when it left my shop.
The fact that she refused to return the dagger after I offered her a full refund kind of makes me suspicious. I'm wondering if there really were any cracks. No matter now. An important thing to consider is whether it's smart to give anyone a discount for a flaw. This could lead to buyers claiming flaws on everything. So, I figured I'd better just get the piece back if she wasn't satisfied with it.
I thought I'd spread the word about this type of "scam", if it is one.
I sold a dagger to a woman in Atlanta. She received it and said there were a couple of hairline cracks in the edge of the blade. She wanted a third off the price of the knife. I said 'no', return the knife within five days (undamaged and unused) and I'd refund her money (as stated on the first page of my web page). She said "no, she would not return the knife until I sent her the refund." I told her that there probably wasn't a business in the country (or the world) that was going to give her her money back until the item was retuned. So, I got another (huffy-sounding) e-mail from her saying that I was not honest and not to ever contact her again.
OK. I can do that. Now I'm wondering if this is a scam just to get reduced prices on knives (or whatever else). I certainly do not want any knife with my name on it and flaw in it sold to anyone. Not that my knives are perfect - there's no such thing - but I try to keep quality high. I certainly didn't see any cracks when it left my shop.
The fact that she refused to return the dagger after I offered her a full refund kind of makes me suspicious. I'm wondering if there really were any cracks. No matter now. An important thing to consider is whether it's smart to give anyone a discount for a flaw. This could lead to buyers claiming flaws on everything. So, I figured I'd better just get the piece back if she wasn't satisfied with it.
I thought I'd spread the word about this type of "scam", if it is one.