Author: | SylvainLS | Posted: | Mar 30, 2024 14:30 | Subject: | Re: EU Right of Withdrawal | Viewed: | 58 times | Topic: | Help | |
|
| (As usual: IANAL, I’m not talking for BL, nor for LEGO, and I may be a cat.)
In Help, 1001bricks writes:
| […]
It's BrickLink, it's an USA based company.
|
That doen’t absolve EU sellers to adhere to EU laws. OP seems to have only bought
from German sellers so far.
| […]
In short, at some extent and depending the case, an order on BrickLink can technically
be a service and not a sale of goods.
|
No. Goods are never a service.
What could be argued is that BL parts orders are “goods made to order or clearly
personalised.” Those are exempt from the “cooling-off” period.
Sellers can also:
— not refund shipping,
— have restocking fees,
if it’s clearly stated in the terms before the sale.
|
|
Message is in Reply To: Re: EU Right of Withdrawal - 1001bricks (52464) | [...] It's BrickLink, it's an USA based company. It has Terms you agreed with when you signed up. [...] Yes/no. This is fine for iPods, but here a single lot or [...] (2 months ago, Mar 30, 2024, to Help) |
Message Has 2 Replies: Re: EU Right of Withdrawal - yorbrick (1185) | [...] It used to be that lego.com PAB orders were not returnable. They have changed their rules so that they are now returnable so long as the whole PAB order is returned. [...] (2 months ago, Mar 31, 2024, to Help) |
63 Messages in this Thread. (Message tree supressed because there are more than 50 messages in this thread) show message tree
Entire thread on one page This message and all its replies on one page
|
|