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I think auctions are exempt
I've never been to an auction that has a return policy. You bid on it and win the bid you pay and you get what you bid on. Now if there is fraud involved as in putting up a product for auction and trying to boost the bids with lies about product warranty, who owned it previously and such then you can sue. For example if Guitar comes up for sale and they claim it was owned by Elvis in the 50s when that type of guitar was even manufactured in the 50s well you have case. I read about that one in the new a few years back.
Posted by: voska   Posted on: 05/29/06 You are currently: a Guest | Members login | Terms of Use

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The judge made the right call...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/26/06
You get what you pay for....  itanalyst | 05/26/06
Depends on your point of reference I suppose.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/26/06
I have to agree  John Zern | 05/26/06
That's what you get...  el1jones | 05/26/06
First Thing We Learned In Business Law  itanalyst | 05/26/06
Suffers, like the rest of us veterans  DarbyOhara | 05/26/06
So all ebay sellers are jerks? Not this time  buran | 05/28/06
never mind that....  rock06r | 05/29/06
I think auctions are exempt  voska | 05/29/06
No, it's not illegal  buran | 05/29/06
A Fool is a Fool,!!!  stanj.miranda@... | 05/27/06
Stupid buy  mobrien_12@... | 05/29/06
Bought a 2nd hand E Class Benz online  BanjoPaterson | 05/30/06

What do you think?

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