Question Regarding New Item Damaged in Shipping


It's been a while since I've been active on this forum, and in audio.  I will not name names, will not provide additional information, my goal is not to sling mud, merely to understand if the practices of the "maker" and the "dealer" I am about to describe are, as the dealer is telling me, common in audio sales.

Facts:

I spent low 5 digits on a pair of mono block amplifiers. Shipped, they are 2 boxes of identical size and weight, about 85 lbs each. 

I did not use a credit card.

It appears that one of the boxes was damaged in shipping, however from the outside, it didn't / doesn't look like much of anything, however once the item is opened, you can see a little damage to the box, a little damage to the foam packing "clamshell", but not much.  

A speaker terminal was contacted by something sufficient to bend the chassis, and it isn't thin.  There's no marks of impact anywhere, it just looks as if pressure was applied to the terminal and the frame bent. 

All of my contact has been with the dealer. The dealer obtained a RMA, and asked me to ship the damaged mono back to the maker, at my expense, who will rebuild on a new chassis and send back to me at their expense.

I am being told that, despite the fact that the item was new when shipped to me "this is the way its done" in audio.  In other words, it is common practice among dealers and makers of high end audio to handle items damaged in shipping this way, and the buyer would bear the expense of getting the item to the maker for inspection and/or repair.

 

Is this accurate?

I appreciate any input you can provide.

 

 

gthirteen

Showing 4 responses by deludedaudiophile

Read your sales contract especially the part of shipping. No, it is not the sellers responsibility to get it to you, not unless that was part of the contract. Now they may be negligent w.r.t. packaging, which I think you have a case for here, but unless your contract specifically includes shipping (of their choice), you may be on the hook once it leaves their dock.

@rsf507 ,

When you buy something, there are clear terms of service.  When I buy on Amazon, Amazon takes total responsibility for delivery. It is right in their terms of service. When you buy on Ebay, the seller is ONLY responsible for what they have stated, no more, no less.

We have no idea what the sales terms were the dealer (and buyer) agreed to. I have no seen the sales order. Have you?  If shipping was included in the price, then that is pretty much always on the dealer. If shipping was extra, then the dealers responsibility may end with good packing, which as I noted, is not clear hear. It is all in the fine print, and the buyer (op) has not provided that detail.

The golden rule appears it is always someone else's problem and I am never responsible. Read the contract, you may be responsible.

"Customer Service" went out when people stopped paying for it. Everyone expects the cheapest price possible, and cotton glove service.