Jamie Pillers
Skeptic
We here in the U.S. tend to want simple rules to trust our lives to, probably because since our lives are so complicated otherwise we want to simplify as much as possible. A couple of examples that come to mind are "Let the market determine the price" and "Caveat emptor" (Let the buyer beware).
I think we've all come to see that if the marketplace is left to its own devices, greed can muck things up to no small degree. Hence regulation.
"Caveat emptor" - I looked it up in the dictionary. It says "the principle that the buyer alone is responsible for checking the suitability of goods before a purchase is made." So I'd like to offer up a couple of scenarios and let you puzzle out the ethics of this principle.
First scenario: Imagine you purchase a used car from a dealer and the dealer claims its in perfect running order. You drive it around the block a couple of times and it seens to be as the seller says. Then, a month later the transmission starts making serious growling noises and you take it into a shop. They find the transmission filled with a concoction of heavy grease and sawdust... the perfect recipe to keep a damaged transmission quiet for awhile. Now.. what would you do? I'd take it back to the seller and say "you sold me a defective car, I want my money back". The seller says "I don't know anything about that stuff in the transmission, and you've had the car too long to bring it back now. You could have been racing the car for all I know. Tough luck!"
So is the naive buyer to blame here? Why didn't the buyer have a thorough inspection done first? Or should the dealer have inspected the car first and then sold it under an honest description of its problems?
Second scenario: Buyer (me) buys a camera advertised here at RFF. Advertisement says "previous owner stuck a finger through the shutter curtains, but I had it repaired and the camera operates perfectly." Buyer (me) receives the camera about a week later. Buyer doesn't have a lens yet, so can't run film through it. However at that time buyer notices that every fourth or fifth time he cocks the shutter, he has to double-cock it to get the shutter to fire. Buyer doesn't think much about this, assuming he's either not advancing the lever properly or that with film in the camera, the tension will take care of it. (The naive buyer is still trusting that the seller's statements were true.) Now, a month later with lens mounted and film installed, buyer (me) notices that the cocking problem has in fact not gone away and he's concerned that this could deteriorate into something worse. He (I) contact a repairman familiar with this camera and he says it could indeed be a problem with the shutter requiring complete replacement of the shutter mechanism at a cost of as much as $350! (More than buyer paid for the camera!)
Now a month after the sale, buyer (me) contacts the seller and asks if camera can be returned for a refund. Seller responds with a flat no and suggests buyer (me) took too long to uncover the problem. So... does "caveat emptor" clearly apply? And what's too long of a trial period? Is the buyer (me) to blame here? Or did the seller have some responsibility?
What do you think?
P.S.: If you think PayPal protects you from such things, think again. They don't accept complaints if the seller/buyer conversation doesn't take place through eBay.
I think we've all come to see that if the marketplace is left to its own devices, greed can muck things up to no small degree. Hence regulation.
"Caveat emptor" - I looked it up in the dictionary. It says "the principle that the buyer alone is responsible for checking the suitability of goods before a purchase is made." So I'd like to offer up a couple of scenarios and let you puzzle out the ethics of this principle.
First scenario: Imagine you purchase a used car from a dealer and the dealer claims its in perfect running order. You drive it around the block a couple of times and it seens to be as the seller says. Then, a month later the transmission starts making serious growling noises and you take it into a shop. They find the transmission filled with a concoction of heavy grease and sawdust... the perfect recipe to keep a damaged transmission quiet for awhile. Now.. what would you do? I'd take it back to the seller and say "you sold me a defective car, I want my money back". The seller says "I don't know anything about that stuff in the transmission, and you've had the car too long to bring it back now. You could have been racing the car for all I know. Tough luck!"
So is the naive buyer to blame here? Why didn't the buyer have a thorough inspection done first? Or should the dealer have inspected the car first and then sold it under an honest description of its problems?
Second scenario: Buyer (me) buys a camera advertised here at RFF. Advertisement says "previous owner stuck a finger through the shutter curtains, but I had it repaired and the camera operates perfectly." Buyer (me) receives the camera about a week later. Buyer doesn't have a lens yet, so can't run film through it. However at that time buyer notices that every fourth or fifth time he cocks the shutter, he has to double-cock it to get the shutter to fire. Buyer doesn't think much about this, assuming he's either not advancing the lever properly or that with film in the camera, the tension will take care of it. (The naive buyer is still trusting that the seller's statements were true.) Now, a month later with lens mounted and film installed, buyer (me) notices that the cocking problem has in fact not gone away and he's concerned that this could deteriorate into something worse. He (I) contact a repairman familiar with this camera and he says it could indeed be a problem with the shutter requiring complete replacement of the shutter mechanism at a cost of as much as $350! (More than buyer paid for the camera!)
Now a month after the sale, buyer (me) contacts the seller and asks if camera can be returned for a refund. Seller responds with a flat no and suggests buyer (me) took too long to uncover the problem. So... does "caveat emptor" clearly apply? And what's too long of a trial period? Is the buyer (me) to blame here? Or did the seller have some responsibility?
What do you think?
P.S.: If you think PayPal protects you from such things, think again. They don't accept complaints if the seller/buyer conversation doesn't take place through eBay.
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