Legal Question in Consumer Law in Australia
Goods sold are not returnable
I purchased a pair of jeans at a sale. Due to long queue at the fitting room, I bought it without trying (for size).
It did not fit.
There were 2 notices affixed near the cash register. First, ''goods sold are not returnable'' (without a grace period mentioned). Second, ''all customers are to check the conditions of the merchandise''.
I went back to the store and I was refused a change (for appropriate size) or refund.
Am I bound by the notices?
1 Answer from Attorneys
Re: Goods sold are not returnable
You made a choice to purchase those jeans without trying them on.
The shop has an obligation to give you a refund or credit or exchange if the goods were not fit for the purpose for which they were purchased or not of merchantable quality - that refers to manufacturing defects rather than size.
I am somewhat surprised that the shop did not offer a credit or exchange (as a goodwill/PR gesture) but as a matter of law, in your situation, there is no obligation to do so.
The notice saying that goods are not returnable is not correct because, as a matter of law, in some circumstances the trader is obligated to do accept returned goods.
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