This information comes from the
Consumers Association website, which you can access by clicking
here.
Under the Sale of Goods and Supply of
Services Act 1980, anything you buy from a retailer must be:
- of merchantable quality
- fit for its normal purpose, and reasonably durable
- as described, whether the description is part of the advertising or
wrapping, on a label, or something said by the salesperson.
When you buy goods from a retailer,
you make a contract with him. He agrees to provide certain goods to you
for a certain price. If your purchase turns out to be faulty, the
retailer, not the manufacturer, is responsible to you and must sort out
your complaint. You are entitled to a refund, a replacement or a repair.
You do not have to take a credit note
if your complaint is covered by the Sale of Goods Act. You can insist on
a refund, a replacement or a repair.
If you have a genuine complaint about faulty goods, you can ignore shop
notices such as 'No Refunds' or 'No Exchanges'. Such notices cannot take
away any of your statutory rights under the Sale of Goods Act see
Retailers' responses.
You have no rights under the Sale of Goods Act if you simply change your
mind about wanting the goods. You also have no rights if faults are due
to misuse of the product after purchase, or if faults should have been
obvious or were pointed out at the time of purchase.
The person who purchased the goods holds the rights under the Act. If
you receive the goods as a gift, you have no contract with the retailer
and don't have the same rights. In practice, most retailers will oblige
the user of the goods but this is a gesture of goodwill, not a legal
requirement.
Your rights under the Act also apply to goods purchased at sale prices.
They must be of merchantable quality, fit for their particular purpose
and as described. If goods are being sold as seconds or shop-soiled,
however, you cannot expect the same standard.
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