SaltyBalls
*Kyle Thompson*
Oh, that's slightly disheartening. Thank you for your reply!
Did I rectify my first impression? I am really sorry, I make horrible first impressions on forums a lot... Could someone change my name for me, I can't?
Also, if anyone could tell me what happened I would be grateful because I have a horrible headache and horrible measles and I'm only on page 15...
Thanks
Kyle Thompson
Jeez, that's sad...
Thanks WebSlave and don't worry, it's cool, i'll earn credibility the hard way.
Did Brian ever respond?
Please tell me if i'm just bringing up bad vibes and memories and i'll shut up.
3rd person transaction nothing to do with Brian period!
I back my hets to my buyer...not to the person my buyer sold too...just sayin
By backing the buyer do you mean that you would refund the buyer in the event that he sold it to someone and it didn't prove out (and let him deal with compensating his buyer)? Or do you mean that once the buyer that you sold to sells it, you won't compensate anyone?
One of those answers is unethical.
A long time ago, people bought hets from good individuals. These people used the "het paperwork" to sell their imports as het. How does the good individual know exactly what has transpired once the snake leaves his hands? How does he know what has transpired once the snake leaves his customers hands? I know, keep records. but computers crash and files get lost in a move or what.
If you can't keep track of your documents you shouldn't be selling goods or services to people, period. It's not that hard or expensive to create a backup of information. What would you say if you bought something from Amazon today and tomorrow they told you they lost all of your info, had no record of your previous orders, and you were basically on your own? No different with someone selling ball pythons.
Also, analogous to this is a car. When you buy a new car it comes with a warranty from the manufacturer. You can sell it or trade it in 100 times, but each subsequent owner inherits the warranty until it expires. It holds the manufacturers feet to the fire. If you sell a ball python to John Doe and he sells it to Jane Smith, your obligations and responsibilities don't suddenly end. You may choose to deal with John Doe rather than Jane Smith to remedy the problem; however, the fact that your original buyer has since sold the animal to someone else by no means absolves you of any wrong or misinformation you may or may not have given to the original buyer.