A leading consumer rights lawyer wants it to be compulsory for retailers to
train their staff in retail law.
As Computeractive’s Fair
& Square campaign begins to gather momentum, Simon Halberstam, partner
in lawfirm
Sprecher
Grier Halberstam LLP, said something radical was needed. He said: “Something
does need to be done to get online retailers to comply with laws such as the
Distance
Selling Regulations (DSR) and
Sale
of Goods Act.
“I think the Office of Fair Trading
(OFT) has produced clear guidelines, especially regarding the DSR for retailers,
but the problem is most businesses do not bother to read them.” Mr Halberstam
said sometimes retailers just needed to be clearer in the information they give
out.
He quoted as an example of this an email we received from
Sainsbury’s during our
mystery shopper exercise, in which we asked 30 leading retailers about their
returns policy.
"It certainly looks as if Sainsbury’s is muddled up about the consumer rights
when shopping online. There seem to be mistakes on the website terms and
conditions and it seems odd that the terms regarding returns do not make a
sufficiently clear distinction between the return of faulty goods and the
cancellation rights under the DSR,” he said.
“Moreover, when the terms address the return of goods for reasons other than
defects, the company does seem to be imposing conditions about cancellation
rights that are inconsistent with the DSR. It can’t demand people return goods,
faulty or not, within seven days.
“Where it says that it won’t refund the original £19.99 delivery charge, this
is a breach of the DSR if the cancellation is made under this law. Also it is
not sufficiently clear to me how it handles faulty goods after seven days.”
A Sainsbury’s representative said the company would consider our questions
and send a response in due course, and added that it aims to comply with all
statutory consumer protection laws.
Mr Halberstam said the Government should take action. “I believe that there
should be some sort of regulatory regime – headed by the
Department
for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform and the OFT – to make sure
retailers comply with consumer rights. Education is vital and one way of
handling this would be for some sort of compulsory continuing professional
development for all retailers’ staff so they can comply with consumer law,” he
said.
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