Gordon Gekko
Registered User
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Do we know that no issue was made when list was sent in and no dresses available?
Pugmister might be able to inform us of the dialogue that took place.
Marion
I think the basis for the refund is that no dresses were available to try on despite the fact that a list had been sent after the deposit was paid initially.
Contract broken.
How long did it take for the dresses to appear in the shop so that she could try them on?
Doesn't matter.
Marion
How much was the dress going to cost? Am staggered at a €2,000 deposit for a dress!!
Is the deposit owed to the consumer?
After some googling I have found that this is a sales tactic used quite a bit by wedding dress shops. The discount is in fact being offered by the shop and not the design house.
So who exactly was the money paid to, the shop or the design house ? Who is our contract with ? Who is giving us the discount ?
The time in which we got to try on the requested dresses was a the next trunk show. How can the shop prove that no other brides to be did not try on the same dress during this time ? If they did surely they should contribute to these shipping costs?
Additionally when we first asked for our money back we were told by a member of staff that this money had been paid to the design house. If that is the case how can we now use the deposit to purchase a dress from any designer the Irish shop stocks ?
I disagree and believe that if we were told that the design house was the one offering the discount when in fact it was the shop then we were lead into entering a contract under false pretenses. If not unlawful certainly unethical practices.
Also while it be may be considered a "romantic" notion I do believe the circumstances of this purchase have to be considered.
Yes we have a moral obligation also and the shop should not be out of pocket due to us changing our mind.
We do have an email from the shop explicitly stating that the design house is offering this discount and will never be offered again.. Anytime we have contacted the design house they have been very forthcoming with information and really were not happy that the dresses we requested were not relayed on to them. I might email the design house to confirm if they were offering a discount. If they confirm the weren't and it was indeed the shop would this give cause to the contract being void ?
Ultimately I just want her to be able to make a 100% independent decision on her dress.
The water is being muddied but the agreement remains the same. A wedding dress was being bought. A large down-payment (even call it a deposit) was made and as a result a discount offered against the overall price of the dress. Perhaps it was a sales ploy by the shop? These days shops have to do all they can within the law to attract customers. Businesses cannot survive without customers. I reckon the shop behaved well in this case. The customer did not.
Bottom Line:- There is no evidence that the shop reneged on the deal; the purchaser did break the agreement. There is such a thing as an agreement and the spirit of the agreement. Both were broken by the purchaser. Time for the purchaser to man-up, I believe.
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