Dilemma of Warped LPs - is seller liable?


I have bought a few LPs, mostly on e-bay, which were advertised as Mint or Mint minus and they arrived so severely warped that they couldn't be played, as they hit the suspension of the cartridge. I have not claimed a refund from the sellers, since they were Mint in appearance in one plane:) - question: should the seller refund the purchase amount in these circumstances? I have assumed that the seller did not know and sold the records in good faith. The seller obviously did not play them, I assume, of course. I guess my philosophy is if you buy a used item, you take a chance.
springbok10
Mint most certainly does NOT mean warped - would you accept a new album in such condition? The seller owes you a refund, plain and simple.

-RW-
Believe it or not, there are several Ebay workshops on this subject.

Basically, you can insist on the seller taking it back for a refund under one or both of two criteria:

1.) If it's obvious that the record was poorly packed (didn't arrive in a proper "box type" media mailer.)

and/or

2.) If the seller graded it using the Goldmine system, in which case the seller should have given it an "F" which is the "trash" category. If it received anything higher, the seller was misrepresenting.

Most sellers, especially large volume sellers don't want negative feedback, and would just as soon take it back (some just say keep it and give you a refund anyway!) This is especially true if the total cost including postage was under $25 -- it's just not worth the bad press to them. Additionally, most sellers don't test-play records, and it's sometime not obvious visually that a record is warped, so they'll give you the benefit of the doubt.
Dear Springbok10: If those LPs are a hard to find then keep it and try to disppear those warps. You can do this putting the LP between two plate glass and be warm through a heater ot through the sun.

Regards and enjoy the music.
Raul.