whilst in the supermarket earlier i picked up a box of crunchy nut cornflakes that were displayed on the end of an aisle on offer, the price on the side of the display was £2.33 per box. my receipt showed £2.88 so i went back to the display to chekc the price. on reading the small print i realised that this price referred to teh cornflakes stacked next to teh ones i chose and when i looked at teh side of that display sure enough the price shown was £2.88 and it was for the crunchy nut not the cornflakes. i went to the cs desk who checked it out and said that the signs had been mixed up but i was not due a refund of the difference as the price had been displayed. i argued that the price was attached to the wrong product and they eventually gave in but weren't happy. what are my rights here? as the items were adjacent to each other but mispriced should i have received a refund or should i just have accepted that it was a mistake?
it was a mistake but they're not obliged to sell you anything at any price. most large supermarkets would probably refund you as a gesture of goodwill but hey, they're not all that kind :o)
it was a mistake but they're not obliged to sell you anything at any price. most large supermarkets would probably refund you as a gesture of goodwill but hey, they're not all that kind :o)
Grandad grump - ex Tesco checkout manager says that he would have let it go - no questions asked and then put the prices right; however he does say that they can just refuse to sell them
The others are right. They have no obligation to sell any goods at the price displayed. However, it could be an Advertising Standards issue if it was intended to mislead. They should have been more gracious though!!
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