Jump to content

Advice please - sold item to a business who's now contesting the sale


Recommended Posts

Can anyone help / offer advice, please?

I just sold a fairly rare and quite valuable vintage knitting machine and accessories to a business as a private sale to a business. It's run a couple who specialise in repairing and reselling secondhand knitting machine parts.

I tested the machine and accessory prior to selling and both were working. The business has just texted me with a fairly aggressive message to say

'it can't be working as part of it is missing' and that the pattern reading accessory does not work. I know that both parts were working when I handed them over, so it is just their word against mine. (I haven't replied to ask what part is missing yet)

When they arrived to pick up, the owner said he needed to do 'due diligence' ie to open the case of the machine and check it was all there. He did all that and did not mention anything was missing at that point.

They paid by bank transfer on pickup. Unfortunately for me, I got them to pay into my business ac (even though I no longer run a business and am retired, I still have the account) and now they say because they paid to a business ac they can dispute the payment. I did get them to sign a delivery note with a list of items that they were buying  but I did not specify 'bought as seen' on the note.

How does it work when it's one person's word against another?

I originally found the business online and emailed them with the details and photos. They had good reviews for selling items (but no reviews re: buying items)

The owner always replied by phone rather than email so although I have notes of our conversations I do not have anything in writing from him.

I'm feeling angry at having trusted them and also upset - textile design was my career before I retired and I wish I'd just given the machine to a charity now1

Any helpful advice much appreciated!

 

what is the status of your company? is it formally closed, yet the bank account is open? How are you planning on extracting the funds from the company account? 

Do you have your emails from a personal email account? Is there any indication that it is a business sale, other than a business bank account - did you tell them it was a business bank account - does the bank account you gave them have a different name? 

 

thanks for your helpful PM with feedback, Angelina.

 So far the update is, going to do an affidavit or a Statutory Declaration signed by a solicitor regarding the fact that the machines were working when they picked them up and email that to them together with an offer of a full refund if they wish to return everything. My instinct is they are trying to call my bluff to get a discount as I know they were very keen to get hold of this particular machine which they then planned to refurb.

It would still be helpful to have more advice / feedback if anyone else would like to reply.

Edited by Naiada
added more info

I'd say sending them  the affidavit and offering them a full refund for the return of the machines is a great idea.

By far the least hassle for you, and will put them on the spot if they have been telling lies.

If you end up having to give them the refund, you will be no worse off than you were before the sale (assuming they don't damage the machines, of course).

But I know nothing about the legal issues (if any) around all this. Citizens Advice might help if you run into further difficulties?

Good luck! 

If you accidentally gave them the wrong account to send the money into, just transfer it into the account it should’ve gone to.

Any accountant will understand that mistakes can be made when you’re handling several accounts.

Done it myself loads of times and never had a problem with any accounting. Totally legit.

Is your business closed as recorded by Companies House or dormant ? 

If fully closed then you obviouspy wee not selling tje item as a business and it was a orobate sale ,(regardless where the funds were paid to) As a private sale of a second hand item there is no comeback. 

As the person who bought it from you is also a repair specialist, and they checked it over before buying then sounds like they are pulling a fast one. 

If you feel intimidated by their approach then simply report them to the police and as a business maybe also trading standards. 

 

 

51 minutes ago, Naiada said:

It does on their Facebook page….

Good, that opens up more possibilities for you. Hopefully it is not too far away so that you may have the possibility to collect it.

Acting promptly is important so that you get the matter resolved before they sell it on to someone else which is possible as all the parts they claim were missing were in fact there and functioning. 

Needless to say, it will be useful to monitor their F/B , Gumtree and Ebay listings. 
 

Thanks for your helpful replies, Vladi & Spartacus. Reassuring to hear your comments - I agree they are trying the intimidation route.

In reply to your  questions, Spartacus -  I was only ever a freelance designer/ sole trader so never needed to register with companies house. Have been retired & on state pension &  below the tax threshold for several years. 

This has certainly taught me to get absolutely everything in writing if I ever make a private sale again! 

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Calling All Private Chefs – We’re Looking for You! We’re currently looking for talented private chefs in and around East Dulwich (and across London) for a number of exciting upcoming bookings and events. If you’re a chef, or know someone who is, we’d love to hear from you. Please drop your name, contact info, and a quick intro below or message directly. Thanks! Anthony Bird & Co Events
    • Since you’re clearly not experiencing what we are I’m not sure I agree with any of your points. I also asked for anyone else having a similar problem… it’s absolutely fine if you’re not but I’d appreciate less of the “go live your life”. There is no need to comment with that tone, it doesn’t provide us with any help for the matter. Nor is it polite. We’re a very kind family simply not wanting damage and don’t find the actions necessary. It’s been the same driver/delivery for a while and this never used to happen. I wouldn’t post this on the forum if it wasn’t getting so frustrating. Again, the kids and myself have kindly asked for this to stop a few times with no success. We all work hard for our living and would never want (nor are we trying) to rid someone of their livelihood. But similarly, I don’t find it fair. Please feel free to PM me if anyone has any advise or shares the same.  
    • And now we have the worst labour government in many many decades who, by moving to your position on the right, are ushering in a far right reform government. Well done you.
    • You implied he did a good job in your first paragraph when you said you would have hated to see Corbyn lead the country through Covid - the alternative being Johnson, presumably? With the results we all saw. Unite - you have a problem with unions? Who work hard to see that their members get a fair deal in their workplace? How exactly are these people and groups "all as bad as each other"? In what way? Labour "purging their party of the far-left" has given us a weak prime minister who has apparently deserted any "left" (aka caring for other people and having decent moral principles) leanings he ever had. Which is why people appear to be leaving Labour in droves and voting, or intending to vote, Green or Lib Dem or for an independent Left candidate. Starmer has shot himself in the foot, in my opinion. But what would I know. What worked?! I don't know enough about what you are talking about to comment, but "believing" you know the reason someone did something does not make it true. I don't believe that Corbyn ever got "starstruck" or "forgot about his politics", but if you can provide evidence that those things are true, then fair enough. I don't think you can, though.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...