Episodes
- My So-Called Life (Pi... - #1 »
- Dancing in the Dark - #2 »
- Guns and Gossip - #3 »
- Father Figures - #4 »
- The Zit - #5 »
- The Substitute - #6 »
- Why Jordan Can't Read - #7 »
- Strangers in the Hous... - #8 »
- Halloween - #9 »
- Other People's Daught... - #10 »
- Life of Brian - #11 »
- Self-Esteem - #12 »
- Pressure - #13 »
- On the Wagon - #14 »
- So-Called Angels - #15 »
- Resolutions - #16 »
- Betrayal - #17 »
- Weekend - #18 »
- In Dreams Begin Respo... - #19 »
Cast
Forum
Has anyone who cancelled got a set of DVD's?Has anyone who cancelled got a set of DVD's?Has anyone who has cancelled (and received verbal confirmation from AU) received the set???
I cancelled and if those asses try and send me the set I will return it. If they think they can make me go away by sending the set, they are sadly mistaken. So I was just curious ... "It can't rain all the time" I live in an apartment building, and all packages get delivered to the office and signed for there, while the residents get slips in their mailboxes saying "you have a package in the office." So how would I go about refusing delivery if I get a set sent to me? I have officially cancelled and recieved email confirmations to prove it, not to mention a verbal (phone) conversation with Wade. But just in case...
Kristin, I'm in the same boat. I get all packages delivered to my work address, but I'm on vacation! I love how I have to worry about this crap from AU when I'm on vacation. Anyways, I notified the receptionist to reject all packages from AU (I'm hoping the From: address does indeed say AU). Does anyone know if UPS will return packages that have been accepted? I'm not paying a single red cent to ship that thing back. If you've cancelled then, depending on your state's law, the shipment should be treated as a free gift:
http://www.consumer.state.ny.us/clahm/C ... erchandise Unordered Merchandise • General Business Law § 396(2)(a) Where merchandise is sent although not ordered or requested by the consumer, the merchandise is deemed a gift which the consumer may use or dispose of without any obligation whatsoever. To avoid the consumer’s assumption that unordered goods must be paid for, New York law requires the goods to include a conspicuous notice stating that payment is not required. If the sender continues to send bills or demand payment, the consumer may sue for an injunction, costs and attorney fees.[2] The FTC’s Negative Option Plan Rule[3] requires the consumer’s prior consent as a prerequisite to liability for subsequent shipments not separately and affirmatively ordered (see below). Also, New York Law prohibits the inclusion in retail installment agreements of any provision by which the “buyer consents to receive goods or services on a regular or irregular basis.” Who is onlineUsers browsing this forum: No registered users and 15 guests |