- Joined
- Feb 6, 2000
- Messages
- 30,801
So, if I post online that I'll sell a specific car to you, you pay, and I deliver a different car.....that's not fraud? I'm not dissatisfied, I was told I could sell it somewhere else for a higher price and get my money back. I was told they were so confident that they could sell it, that if I did sell it, that my money would be refunded. When I got the offer, they said I had to wait till I got a proof of sale, only then did they say...,nope, it wasn't at that price 90 days ago. (I didn't even list it 90 days ago).
See that may be the problem. You have to give them a reasonable amount of time to perform before you can claim "they didn't sell it." Otherwise, you could list it, sell it a week later through someone else, and demand out of the contract. This is likely how they get a court to side with them, as 90 days is a reasonable amount of time to give them to perform the service, and they in essence "promised" it to you in 90 days, and you agreed.
Now, that said, there also has to be a "meeting of the minds" for a contract to be enforceable. You can claim you misunderstood, and since it was they who drew up the contract, a court may side with you even though you clicked agree. Especially if it is basically unreadable.
So the only way to know would be to contact an attorney and get their take on the situation. Contract attorneys generally have a good feel about whether a court will rule for or against you once they look at your case. But, was the amount substantial enough to be worth the time and energy to try to recover?
That is my best Judge Judy advice....LOL