Seamus Haley
Big Game Hunter
Admittedly this is an issue that came to mind based on a recent BOI thread but I have been wondering more about the abstract.
Would people who sell animals that are more prone to tail dropping consider a dropped tail during shipping a health/quality issue of sufficient importance to be addressed with the buyer?
To narrow down the hypothetical... consider it a non-wholesale situation where the buyer picks the animal(s) they wish to purchase based on photos and lists of the individual animals that are actually going to be sent. They pay, the seller packages the animals in the same condition in which they were photographed.
Sometime during shipping, one or more of the animal(s) purchased drops it's tail. The box and packing materials are all intact, it appears to have been a stress related tail dropping as a result of the shipping.
Would a buyer be justified in asking for some form of compensation? Either return/replacement or some kind of partial refund based on the animal they received not being in identical condition to the one which was ordered and paid for?
I've got a few of my own opinions on the subject but am really curious to hear the viewpoints of some others- especially those who sell or keep species which are particularly prone to tail dropping- to see how closely my opinion lines up with the opinions of those who are more likely to have experienced that kind of scenario before.
Examples that have actually happened and how it was dealt with (without using names please, this is the GBD forum, not the BOI) would be great to hear about. Policies from people who deal with species that are particularly prone to the issue would be of interest to me. And of course the opinions of anyone else, although if you're in the same boat I am- mostly looking at it with the detached eye of someone who doesn't really keep a lot of geckos, lacertas or small agamids- please be clear about that too.
Would people who sell animals that are more prone to tail dropping consider a dropped tail during shipping a health/quality issue of sufficient importance to be addressed with the buyer?
To narrow down the hypothetical... consider it a non-wholesale situation where the buyer picks the animal(s) they wish to purchase based on photos and lists of the individual animals that are actually going to be sent. They pay, the seller packages the animals in the same condition in which they were photographed.
Sometime during shipping, one or more of the animal(s) purchased drops it's tail. The box and packing materials are all intact, it appears to have been a stress related tail dropping as a result of the shipping.
Would a buyer be justified in asking for some form of compensation? Either return/replacement or some kind of partial refund based on the animal they received not being in identical condition to the one which was ordered and paid for?
I've got a few of my own opinions on the subject but am really curious to hear the viewpoints of some others- especially those who sell or keep species which are particularly prone to tail dropping- to see how closely my opinion lines up with the opinions of those who are more likely to have experienced that kind of scenario before.
Examples that have actually happened and how it was dealt with (without using names please, this is the GBD forum, not the BOI) would be great to hear about. Policies from people who deal with species that are particularly prone to the issue would be of interest to me. And of course the opinions of anyone else, although if you're in the same boat I am- mostly looking at it with the detached eye of someone who doesn't really keep a lot of geckos, lacertas or small agamids- please be clear about that too.