Legal Question in Business Law in California
Retail price mistake
I was on a vendors website which had one of their items for low price. however they canceled my order and said the price was a mistake. Does the vendor have to honor the low price?
3 Answers from Attorneys
Re: Retail price mistake
I agree with Mr. Whipple and I disagree with Mr. Rodriguez.
Re: Retail price mistake
Hello,
In internet transactions, online retailers usually get around pricing mistakes by having this language on their websites as part of the "conditions" for using the site:
"� Errors or omissions in descriptive, typographic, pricing and/or photographic representation are subject to correction."
Usually there is a disclaimer somewhere stating that, by using the site, users agree to certain terms and conditions which often include pricing mistake disclaimers. Court have found these to be binding contracts between the users of the site and the retailer. In most cases, the users of the site would be contractually bound to accept a pricing correction from the retailer.
In brick-and-mortar retail situations there are cases holding that retailers are liable for pricing mistakes, but only where the mistake is caused by the retailer and not by the fault of a third party.
This would make it hard to go after an online retailer even if they did not disclaim pricing errors on their website because often the website and pricing engine are run by third parties, not directly by the retailer. There are a few retailers that run their own sites such as Amazon but the vast majority of retailers subcontract with a website commerce provider to set up their retail website. Under these situations it is likely that the pricing mistake was caused by the third party and not the retailer themselves.
From a litigation standpoint it would be difficult (and expensive) to prove where the pricing mistake originated if the retailer blames the third party. In these situations the consumer has few realistic (cost-effective) legal options to force the online retailer to honor a website price.
Regards,
Re: Retail price mistake
I would say the answer is, quite simply, no.
The reason is that advertised prices in catalogs, newpapers, Web pages, store shelves or wherever are considered "solicitations for offers," not offers. This is what law students are taught in the first month of a contracts class.
There is also one rather famous case that illustrates the rule by making an exception. I think it was a Minnesota case. A store advertised a huge discount on a fur coat to the first person to show up Saturday morning. Someone showed up at 12:01 a.m. to buy the coat, but was turned down. The court ruled that the store was liable to the early bird for damages. The court's reasoning was that this case could be distinguished because the discount advertisment met the qualifications of a true offer because it required a "performance" (showing up first) from a single, although unknown, person, and thus was more than just a price posting.
This was an instance of the exception proving the rule; the judge's reasoning in the Minnesota (?) case makes it clear that he would have ruled against you in your situation.
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