Hera
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2007
- Messages
- 2,405
Re: HELP! dumb newbie bought M color round represented to be
I still think it's misrepresented and the buyer should go for a refund. Depending on how it was bought, here's some course of action:
Ebay:
1. Contact seller and tell them you want to do a return, try to work it out nicely.
2. If they say no, open a Ebay buyers protection case (do it quickly, there are deadlines). Ebay protection overrides any return policies so it doesn't matter if you're out of the return period.
3. If that doesn't work, contact your credit card company. Hopefully, you used AMEX.
Non ebay:
1. Contact seller and tell them you want to do a return, try to work it out nicely.
2. Contact your credit card company
We obviously have differing opinions on this. Ultimately, it's either up to ebay or to the credit card companies to make that final determination.
AN0NYM0US|1383593174|3550279 said:GemFever|1383592532|3550275 said:AN0NYM0US|1383591635|3550264 said:Hera|1383534981|3549859 said:A stone being advertised as a G/H and then coming out to be an M is flat out sellers misrepresentation. They need to give you a refund! If they don't, then you need to start a ebay buyer's protection case. If that somehow doesn't work for you, then you need to also contact paypal and your credit card.
Btw, what type of stone is this? Is this a modern cut or an old cut?
Not really. The seller called it a g/h and it still is by the sellers standards. There is no universally accepted standard for grading. If you bought a stone with a EGL report and then sent it to GIA and it received a different grade was the seller lying? Is EGL lying? No it's just different standards. This is why it is important to buy a diamond already graded by a reputable lab.
Interesting perspective. I personally have faith in GIA's authority and accuracy. My impression is that most people in the industry recognize GIA in the same way. Though when I bought a stone represented (mounted) as K color and GIA graded it (loose) S-T, the seller's position was that GIA made a mistake and the stone can't be that warm. So I guess there are people out there who will argue with GIA.
And yet, I think most people in the industry accept and respect the GIA cert. If this was an ebay purchase and the buyer filed a claim, I think ebay would side with the GIA cert over "the seller's standards." There is some science to the color grades after all, no?
GIA is accepted because of their consistency. That is irrelevant to this situation.
The point is I can sell a diamond. I can call it whatever color I want. Grades are opinions. The seller didn't lie. In their (or who ever graded it) opinion was it was a g/h colored diamond. Now if the seller said the diamond was a g color based on GIA's standards then op might have a case.
I still think it's misrepresented and the buyer should go for a refund. Depending on how it was bought, here's some course of action:
Ebay:
1. Contact seller and tell them you want to do a return, try to work it out nicely.
2. If they say no, open a Ebay buyers protection case (do it quickly, there are deadlines). Ebay protection overrides any return policies so it doesn't matter if you're out of the return period.
3. If that doesn't work, contact your credit card company. Hopefully, you used AMEX.
Non ebay:
1. Contact seller and tell them you want to do a return, try to work it out nicely.
2. Contact your credit card company
We obviously have differing opinions on this. Ultimately, it's either up to ebay or to the credit card companies to make that final determination.