By way of general information, consumers or businesses that receive
merchandise by mail which
they do not believe they ordered, should first double check to be sure it
was not ordered by a
relative or co-worker. If it was not in fact ordered, the following are
included in Federal Trade
Commission Rules relating to mail order: Generally it is only permissible to
send unsolicited items
which are clearly marked free samples or sent in conjunction with a
charitable solicitation. And,
recipients of unsolicited merchandise are under no obligation to pay for
items received. In
addition, the recipient is not obligated to pay to return items if they were
in fact not ordered.

The BBB suggests that a proper course of action is to write the sender and
ask for verification
that the merchandise was ordered. Also notify the sender that unless the
sender verifies that it
was ordered or makes arrangements to have the merchandise returned at their
expense, you will
consider it as an unconditional gift.

-----Original Message-----
From: tech-geeks-boun...@tech-geeks.org
[mailto:tech-geeks-boun...@tech-geeks.org] On Behalf Of mchonto
Sent: Monday, September 13, 2010 2:54 PM
To: Tech-Geeks Mailing List
Subject: Re: [tech-geeks] vendor


If you  or anyone else receives a item that was not requested  is that not a
"gift" ?  I personally would give them the opportunity to either pickup the
item(s) or supply return shipping.

Mike Chontofalsky
Sandoval CUSD501



Pam wrote:
> I know this topic has come up before.
>
> We received a couple of laser toners from a company called Innovative 
> Office Products that we did not order.  We subsequently received a 
> bill for the items we didn't order.
>
> I don't plan on using said toner.
>
> Thanks,
> Pam
>
>
>
>
>   

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