Legal Question in Technology Law in California

Email Law Suite

ok i wanted some tickets on ebay so i emailed a guy to get them and he decided to close his auction, but due to a problem in my family i couldnt pay him for tickets that i was gonna buy from him,now he says i was in an email contract with him to pay is this true? and he said before that he got another offer and i didnt respond, doesnt that void the idea of losing money? i am under 18 he is saying he is gonna send me a lawsuit, how would he do that over the internet would ebay give him my phone and address?


Asked on 7/06/02, 8:23 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

Edward Hoffman Law Offices of Edward A. Hoffman

Re: Email Law Suite

I presume that this is the same transaction I discussed in another post earlier today (since both involve remarkably similar facts and both refer to Minnesota and California).

If you had agreed to buy a *particular* item, like a set of tickets, the seller would ordinarily have a good claim against you. The fact that he lost out on another buyer helps him and not you, because it shows that he could have been paid if you hadn't put him in this spot.

As I said in my other reply, the fact that you are a minor should get you out of a breach of contract claim, since minors can void their contracts. However, the seller may have a fraud claim against you if you led him to believe you were an adult. In particular, eBay probably doesn't allow minors to bid, and you may have claimed to be an adult when you set up your account with them. This might be construed as a fraudulent representation, since it led the seller to reasonably conclude that he could enforce a contract against you.

Will eBay give him your phone number and address? I don't think so -- not unless he subpoenas that information (in which case they surely would). However, eBay has an insurance program which the seller might invoke to get paid, and then eBay and its insurer might come after you to get compensation. Then again, if your purchase was a private sale and not the result of winning an eBay auction, then eBay and the insurer will probably refuse to get involved.

You don't say what type of tickets these are (Airline tickets? Concert tickets? Amusement park tickets? Movie tickets?) but some kinds of tickets are non-transferrable -- which means that only the original purchaser is authorized to use them. If this is true of the tickets at issue here, then he was acting wrongfully in trying to sell them and that could prove a viable defense. If he acted improperly in closing his auction, then that might be a defense as well.

If the dollar amount involved is small, no one may bother with this -- especially once they realize that you are a minor. Then again, insurers don't like to lose their money and they are often willing to spend more than a case seems to be worth in order to deter others from doing something similar down the road.

Keep in mind also that, in most states, parents are responsible for paying the damages caused by their children's torts. They may be dragged into this mess depending on how things go.

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Answered on 7/06/02, 9:49 pm


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