Curious...How much did you pay for it? What kind of computer is it?
I paid 550 after he lowered it from 600. Relatively cheap considering the specs on it. Apparently it is one of those gaming pcs.
Curious...How much did you pay for it? What kind of computer is it?
You knew something wasn't right with it.no I didn't know it had problems. That was just one minor problem...
You have learned your lesson that everyone who is selling things on that website is not honest or trustworthy.
How much money did you lose? You could file a small claims court case against him but you lack the evidence to actually prove that he was the party that you dealt with and you have no receipt from your purchase.
New computers are relatively inexpensive these days. Spend the $500 or less to get a great computer from a retailer or from a pawn shop.
You knew something wasn't right with it.
Enjoy your new computer.
You could have purchased a decent NEW computer for the same amount.I paid 550 after he lowered it from 600. Relatively cheap considering the specs on it. Apparently it is one of those gaming pcs.
Agree with PayrollGuy about meeting. Meet in a public place (a Starbucks would have been ideal for that), and the lack of transparency of where the seller lives doesn't indicate they are fraudulent.
I would have thought that any kind of purchase like that would be "as is".
You could have purchased a decent NEW computer for the same amount.
You had plenty of opportunity to see if had any problems. I wouldn't have invited you over my house either if I was selling it. That's called being safe, not a scam.
Sounds like you already replaced the memory. That shouldn't have cost too much. Even if you have to replace the hard drive - they're really cheap too.
Here is the bottom line.
Whether he allowed you to go to his home or not, he brought the computer to you, you saw that it had trouble booting, you did not do further testing, you agreed to buy the computer.
The computer is yours and you have no grounds to take any kind of action against him. Use it as a door stop if you want to, but that's the ball game. Yes, I hear you saying that you have texts and emails from him. Since you made the decision to buy the computer AFTER seeing the computer itself, they don't give you any kind of leverage.
That doesn't change anything. If you had bought it sight unseen, those texts and emails might have meant something. Since you had the opportunity to see the computer and made the decision to buy it AFTER testing, they don't.
And if it was working fine until hours later, who's to say that something YOU did to it didn't cause the problems? That's sure the argument I'd use if you brought me into court on this kind of a complaint.
I did further test it.. there wasn't anything wrong with it until like hours later, things started to fall apart real quick.
I literally just turn the power on and these problems started to happen.
Make up your mind. Did the problems all manifest themselves while he was there, or did they not show up till hours later? You can't have it both ways.