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| QUOTE (AnThRaX @ Jul 10 2003, 11:09 AM) |
| Maybe hes having money problems. Who knowz |
| QUOTE (justtaint @ Jul 10 2003, 01:59 PM) |
| Stop focusing on the $200 insurance claim. Unless he regularly sends merchandise to Canada, or you specifically told him why its a big deal, he wouldn't know any better. I regularly get more insurance than necessary in case anything happens. In this situation it cost you, but you should have told him to put "gift" or "repair parts" on the declaration. Either way its an honest mistake. * My apologies if you did tell him...in that case he's an idiot. |
| QUOTE (randomdef @ Jul 10 2003, 02:05 PM) |
| stop crying like a little bitch. |
| QUOTE (justtaint @ Jul 10 2003, 03:48 PM) |
| My point was that if you lived in the US (as most of the people on this board do) and the shipment was lost, you'd be reimbursed $200. Someone who has never shipped to Canada would not know that tax is charged on the declared value of the shipped items. If I hadn't shipped to Canada before it would never have dawned on me to think of an import tax. It was fortunate that the seller told me to put "Gift"on the declaration. It was an honest mistake of the shipper to put $200 instead of $50, not some attempt to screw you out of $35. Living in Canada you should have told the shipper to mark the items as a gift and/or declare a lesser $$$. You still have every right to be pissed about not receiving all the merchandise you paid for. |