Damn the BBC investigators! Now Tesco are going to check all their stores for out of date offer labels on their shelves. Some of us more canny shoppers rely on these, along with challenging the price rung up at the till, to keep our household bills down. It's not just Tesco either. Time and again I find short dated items in the local Waitrose supermarket 'reduced' to a price higher than the currently obtaining offer price!
Tesco out of date offers.
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message from jean, since deleted:
[QUIOTE]I don't understand - so long as you catch the reduced item before its sell-by date, you won't pay any more than if you left it too late.[/QUOTE]
Waitrose, like most other supermarkets, runs short term offers (usually initiated by suppliers rather than the supermarket). When items covered by such offers near their sell by or best before dates staff go round with scanners and hand-held printers to issue labels indicating a reduced price commensurate with the item's limited shelf-life. Often the programming of the scanners does not take into consideration the offer price but bases the 'reduced' price on the standard non-offer price. In such cases the affixed 'reduced price' label often shows a price higher than the currently obtaining offer price.
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I deleted it because I realised you didn't mean the sort of offer I was thinking of!
Then I thought you were talking about special offers that were past the date they were supposed to run until. That's what the item I've just seen on the TV news seems to mean, but you don't seem to be talking about that either.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostThat's interesting since, years ago, I challenged an out of date special offer price tag in Tesco and was told that since the date was clearly displayed, albeit in tiny writing, that it was my hard luck!
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostI don't get this, either: I always challenge at the counter if an out of date item doesn't have its reduction applied.
But I suppose some people live high pressure lives and don't have the time to quibble.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Bryn View PostThey can, I think, refuse to sell the item as the lower price, but if the transaction is completed, a challenge re. the shelf price is likely to succeed, and a refund made.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostA few years ago I was looking for a mini hi-fi system for my wife to use in her studio, and saw a £200 Philips one marked on the shelf as reduced to £100 in my nearest Currys. I took it to the pay point - and the young man, who turned out to be the branch manager, said the price was an error, the offer was finished and it was back to £200. I said he had to sell it to me at the marked price, he said he didn't have to sell it to me at all. Rather than argue with him I stepped out of the store and phoned Currys HQ. They said they'd phone the branch, and to leave it a few minutes, and try again. The young man, looking chastened, surly and generally furious, completed the transaction, under the gaze of two female members of staff (who had witnessed his earlier display). So full marks to Currys - I've bought more big-ticket items from this store, but I noticed the young man no longer works there.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostMy understanding is that the young man was right in law but not up to date with company policy in such matters. Until the transaction is competed the vendor has the right to withdraw the offer of sale.
The Curry's man was right & Head Office were unnecessarily generous.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostMy understanding is that the young man was right in law but not up to date with company policy in such matters. Until the transaction is competed the vendor has the right to withdraw the offer of sale.
The position is different in trading standards law. A misleading price indication is a prima facie criminal offence, a misleading trade practice, though the shop may be able to establish a diligence defence if they have done their reasonable best to prevent such errors. That is where Tesco has so singularly fallen down, all over the country it seems.
Forum members with powerful French, or with memories of previous consumer-law issues on this forum, may spot where I'm coming from in relation to the Tesco storyI keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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I do remember buying two sets of CDs from the much missed HMV in Princes Street and finding the second was mistakenly priced. The assistant asked the shop manager what he should do and I was delighted when the manager said that, normally, they would retract it from sale but, since I was such a good customer (!), they would honour it on this occasion. The first set was the Hyperion Schubert Song Edition and the mis-priced set was Frank Sinatra- The Capitol Years. £120 reduced to £60!
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostI do remember buying two sets of CDs from the much missed HMV in Princes Street and finding the second was mistakenly priced. The assistant asked the shop manager what he should do and I was delighted when the manager said that, normally, they would retract it from sale but, since I was such a good customer (!), they would honour it on this occasion. The first set was the Hyperion Schubert Song Edition and the mis-priced set was Frank Sinatra- The Capitol Years. £120 reduced to £60!
Around £11 if I recall correctly.Last edited by Bryn; 13-02-17, 23:33.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Bryn View PostMy understanding is that the young man was right in law but not up to date with company policy in such matters.
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