Walmart sold me a refurbished TV that was listed as new. Can I sue them in small claims?

FACEPALM.

You previously stated it was opened

I DID NOT state it was previously opened. I stated more times than you can count that I purchased a NEW item. I said AFTER OPENING IT that it is OBVIOUS it was previously opened and used by the fact that someone attempted to mount it.

I have a cell phone nat notifies me

Um, yeah, I saw the tracking. I could see it was delivered. Does your cellphone open the package and check the contents for you, too? You have no point.

that's kinda interesting considering the neighborhood you are in. Are you sure that's a good idea?

I live in Sunnyvale You'll see from the link that it is LITERALLY the safest city in America for its size. You're really on a roll here, lol. Also, I live in the nicer part of it, even, south of 101.

You're ordering from Walmart, right? You know there is an app for that.

Um, yeah.. I used it to order the TV, thanks.. Once again, you're not making sense.

Actually the point is completely valid.

No, it was not.

How do yo know? Because there are bolts in it? They do test to be sure that the mounting bolts fit and sometimes the people who don't make $8 an hour kinda skimp on the QA reports and ship things off. It happens

They do not test to make sure all mounting bolts fit. You obviously have no idea how these products are made. IF they were going to do this they would test the bolts BEFORE they sent them into a production line. Again, you have no point.

No. That doesn't mean an open box return. That means someone screwed up. Now you talked about open box returns and we can go down that rabbit hole if need be.

Open box return. USED ITEM... which is different from a NEW ITEM. Thanks for making my point.

"I'm going demand shit because I deserve it" attitude.

Never said that. I've stated SO many times here that I really just want them to stop an unethical practice.

And you can be as mad as you want. Sometimes legal advice is practical advice and sometimes people need some common sense.

Your advice has not been practical because you've been unable to comprehend what you've read or have just skipped it entirely. Perhaps if you actually read the posts you may have the capacity within you to offer reasonable advice, but few are capable of offering good advice when they aren't comprehending the problem.

/r/legaladvice Thread Parent