On 07/23/2015 2:15 PM, William Donzelli wrote:
That's just seller's remorse.

It's obviously up to you, but I'd have strongly considered disputing it with
eBay as a seller refusing to honor the auction results is every bit as
bad (or even worse) than a buyer refusing to honor the auction result.
I agree. Report him.

Basic Ebay auctions are extremely easy to do - any idiot can do it.

He had six days while he could review and make sure everything was OK,
and revise the listing if and error was spotted.

--
Will

I had a buyers remorse back in 2006 where a very rare (only one or two on the planet) vintage arcade game we were selling got something like $4000 at the close. The buyer (call him B/R) pleaded with me to cancel his bid as he said he accidentally typed the wrong amount in.

I agreed to cancel the auction.

The item ended up selling for around $750 to the person who was the other bidder (call him O/B) who had bid it up to around $3995. However O/B has since spent a fair bit of money at my shop and both participants are nice guys.

What was interesting is the buyer (B/R) who backed out, had a garage storage unit that he had forgotten about and the owner of the garage contacted me after not hearing from B/R for many months sold me the classic games at a very good price.

I ended up doing just fine as a result.

My 2 cents.

John :-#)#

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