I politely let the buyer know he could return it, but didn't hear anything else from him. A few weeks later, I learned that he issued a chargeback with his CC company. I submitted evidence, including a screenshot of the original posting, as well as the messages, and my request for him to send the item back. I learned a week ago that the CC company approved the chargeback; and now eBay is telling me I owe them $1,000 or it will go to collections.
I feel like I've been scammed and I've lost my printer. I wonder if anyone has any advice for remedying this situation. I've read that I could go to arbitration over the chargeback, but I don't know if that will work with ebay's ecosystem and it seems like a pain.
Thanks for any advice.
> You and eBay each agree that any and all disputes or claims that have arisen, or may arise, between you and eBay (or any related third parties) that relate in any way to or arise out of this or previous versions of the User Agreement, your use of or access to our Services, the actions of eBay or its agents, or any products or services sold, offered, or purchased through our Services shall be resolved exclusively through final and binding arbitration, rather than in court.
> Alternatively, you may assert your claims in small claims court, if your claims qualify and so long as the matter remains in such court and advances only on an individual (non-class, non-representative) basis.
https://www.ebay.com/help/policies/member-behaviour-policies...
EDIT: If you happen to be in Michigan, hit me up, I am a lawyer and I enjoy helping with these sorts of things.
We need someone to disrupt this monopoly that these banks have where most disputes are won by consumers and not business owners. We had a guy use our SAAS for 6+ months and then charged back everything because he claimed it was "defective product" as per Stripe and we lost that dispute. Funny he raised tons of support tickets in the meantime but right at 6 months decided to take it all back (He knew what he was doing because I believe you can go back upto 6 months usually for chargebacks).
Coming back to you, you absolutely were scammed. Question is: Does Ebay care ? My guess: Not.
When I get the unit back it's in a completely different box covered in Korean labelling and customs forms. Turns out the buyer was a US drop point for a South Korean equipment reseller and the item got trashed while being reshipped over the Pacific Ocean.
The buyer used eBay's policies to literally make it my fault and there was no way to convince them otherwise. It was a free insurance policy for them. I got a worthless machine back and lost the money.
I'll never sell anything expensive or large with them ever again. You can't win.
Mine was only for $400 so I just let it go.
Usually having the tracking number will be a sure way to fight it.
Provide all communications, shipping/tracking numbers and all comms to ebay and/or CC company.
Fight until the end.