Dark wrote:My understanding, there are three stages to agreeing a contract of sale, no difference between a real or virtual shop.
1) the shop offers to sell something ie: the bed advert on the website or could be in the shop window.
2) you offer to buy the goods ie: you put the bed in your shopping basket and go to the checkout to pay
3) the shop accepts your offer to buy by accepting your payment ie: you pay cash, credit card, etc.
If the shop refuses to accept payment then the contract hasn't been concluded and you don't have a leg to stand on.
However if they have accepted your payment then they have agreed a contract of sale and should, in theory, have to honour the sale.
Saying that there is bound to be some vague condition in their T&Cs (that you accepted at checkout) that gives them a get out clause in case of mistakes, unavailability, etc, etc.
Lots of good stuff on the Citizen Advise website.
Mark
I think this doesn't quite work with online retail simply because they automatically take your payment (whilst in store they physically do it and hand you the goods).
I've ordered plenty of things online that turn out to be mis-priced items and had refunds automatically processed, some get honoured, some don't.
Do some google searching of "invitations to treat” and “offers to sell"
I reckon Mark describes the latter, but online sales are the former.