05-28-2020 10:39 AM
A buyer of one of my items went to the PO to pick up a package that I sent and the box had an item that was broken, The package was fully insured and the buyer showed the box to the Postal clerk as soon as she found the box to have a rattle. The postal clerk told the buyer to contact me??? What would I do that this bozo could have done when it became apparent that there was indeed a broken item in the box. He had the box, the tracking label, the broken item and both parties name and address and the insurance info. What else could he possibly need besides a kick in the pants for being so stupid. Pushing the claim off to me or anyone else is only going to delay the process and prolong the claim if indeed it's ever paid. The PO wants 25 billion $$$$$ of tax payers money and I paid to have the contents delivered in one piece and that's not enough, now they want to delay or scam me out of the insurance money paid. I forgot to add there is no "Process Claim" in the drop down box under the "Shipping Label" entry on my SELLING page for this item????. bubba
05-28-2020 10:45 AM
You file a claim at usps.com.
The buyer can ALSO file a claim under eBay's buyer protection policy (which they call the Money Back Guarantee) and get BOTH payments, leaving you with nothing. So it makes more sense for you to be the one to file the USPS claim.
05-28-2020 10:57 AM
05-28-2020 11:33 AM
@bubbapeaandme8178 wrote:
Why would an employee of the PO that has all the information right at hand not file a claim for the customer??
Because, that's not their job.
It's the sellers job to file the claim.
05-28-2020 12:22 PM
No offense but good luck. At the beginning of the year the post office changed the way they pay out claims. It's like pulling teeth now to get a payout even with insurance that is paid. You have to file it online and provide all pics and info and invoices however in about 10 days you will get letter stating you or the customer needs to bring it to the post office for inspection. They will keep the item and depending on that post master and how it was packaged such as it had proper padding or if the outside of the box is damaged things like that it will be up to him/her to send the decision and paperwork to the main postal offices to either approve or deny the claim. So in other words you should be super nice to whomever looks at it. It took 4 months and an appeal to try and get my money back that I had to refund the customer and even with the box being heavily damaged and the inside item broken they still denied my claim. That's why I only use Fedex now for anything that can be damaged.
05-28-2020 12:47 PM
05-28-2020 12:50 PM
05-28-2020 12:53 PM
I think you should refund the buyer now and take the loss. The only way the post office will honor a breakage claim is if the package has a tire track on it and you can prove the track came from a USPS vehicle.
Your rants about the USPS are falling on deaf ears here.
05-28-2020 01:00 PM
05-28-2020 01:05 PM
If you don't refund the buyer, you will soon see the item jammed up your patootie by the ebay MBG process.
05-28-2020 01:12 PM
05-28-2020 03:35 PM
05-29-2020 04:04 AM
"Why would an employee of the PO that has all the information right at hand not file a claim for the customer??"
In order to file a claim one needs the purchase value of the item (eBay invoice). Don't think any USPS employee has that info. Plus the seller packaged the shipment - many damage issues are caused by poor packaging by the sender (aka seller).
It is the the sellers responsibility to file insurance claims as they have all the information and they arranged for insurance coverage - maybe none at all or just the basic amount of coverage offered by the carrier e.g. Priority shipments.
05-29-2020 10:44 AM
@alcoforever wrote:I think you should refund the buyer now and take the loss. The only way the post office will honor a breakage claim is if the package has a tire track on it and you can prove the track came from a USPS vehicle.
Your rants about the USPS are falling on deaf ears here.
Not always, I filed a claim last week with pictures from the buyer that showed the damage to the box, the bubble wrap in the box and item. Was paid out within the week, so I think it more depends on the individual at USPS handling the claim.
05-29-2020 10:51 AM
Unless the box had obvious shipping damage, a 'rattle' inside simply means the seller did not package correctly. Filing a claim would be a waste of effort and time.
Claims are always filed by the seller, as the insurance (added or given with Priority) is for the seller, not the buyer. The buyer buys, and if it's damaged, you pay them then you worry about filing a claim and getting paid back. The tricky part is the item cannot be 'reshipped' and must be available for inspection, once a claim is made- so the buyer has to 'help you out' if they're willing.
This is all just how claims for damages works. Basically, except for a 'lost' package that tracking show USPS received and then never delivered, there really is NO insurance for 'damaged'.