ChatterBank1 min ago
Bidding in Auctions
When you bid in an auction, it is often the case that you don't want to bid the next 'increment' ( £10 or £20 for instance) and the auctioneer won't accept a inbetween bid. I seem to remember that the law on auctions is very old and legally very bound. If you bid (eg.) £193.50 and the reply is "no £200 please". What's the position? I ask this because £200 is too much on, say some 9ct gold when you've added the buyers premium. £193.50 + buyers premium is all its worth. No more. Thank you if you can cast an opinion.
Answers
Auctions, even down to ebay have fixed increments which increase as the price rises.
For example it may be £1 increase up to £50 then £2 to £100 etc. After the bidding gets to say £1000 the increase may be £20 or £50 each time. If bidding is sticking the auctioneer has discretion to take an increase lower than the official increment.
For example it may be £1 increase up to £50 then £2 to £100 etc. After the bidding gets to say £1000 the increase may be £20 or £50 each time. If bidding is sticking the auctioneer has discretion to take an increase lower than the official increment.
21:41 Sun 01st May 2011
There are actually very few statute laws relating to auctions and none of them relate to the circumstances you describe.
An auctioneer has a duty, under his contract with the vendor, to achieve the maximum sale price for the item. However he has no duties whatsoever (other than to ensure that doesn't misdescribe items offered for sale) to bidders. He is free to determine the bidding increments which he'll use and accept.
Chris
An auctioneer has a duty, under his contract with the vendor, to achieve the maximum sale price for the item. However he has no duties whatsoever (other than to ensure that doesn't misdescribe items offered for sale) to bidders. He is free to determine the bidding increments which he'll use and accept.
Chris
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
I've had an auctioneer accept a winning bid from me when I wasn't even at the auction. (Either the purchaser deliberately quoted a false account number, or the auctioneer wrote his number down incorrectly. I still ended up getting a bill, for a lot of chickens(!), when I didn't even attend the auction!)