Hi there, thanks for your upload. A quick question on the binding nature of warranties on the vendor. I recently heard a lady trying to use a warranty guarantee for an item she purchased from Aldi. The Aldi salesperson informed her she would have to apply directly to the maker of the product to have the warranty honoured. I think a certain amount of time had passed - several months perhaps. Is this correct or does consumer law mean Aldi must honour the warranty themselves? Thanks
Hi Michael, the ACL is pretty clear about this. Have a look at s.261. It is the supplier's problem, not the manufacturer or wholesaler. So in this case it is Aldi's problem. Many retailers try this dodge - essentially trying to make it hard enough that the consumer just gives up.
I'm not so sure. I do think there is a place for more localised legislation. However I'd be in favour of a far more substantial examination of which areas of law should operate federally, and which at the state or local level.
@@calmmeoriginalofficialchan9110 Well, that's always possible, but I'd need some actual evidence. If state authorities are ignoring federal law in circumstances where federal law applies, then the way would be open to challenge the state decision under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth).
One of the best lecturer out there, thanks.
Thanks so much!!
Any questions? Nope. ok good let's jump in. Love it Anthony! To the point and relevant. Great delivery!
*grins* Glad you're enjoying them, Hayden. Tell your mates!
We have made the law study so much easier to understand. 👏👏
Hey thank you :)
i wish you can be my lecture throughout my course :-)
Well, I hope my videos help anyway 😊
Hi there, thanks for your upload. A quick question on the binding nature of warranties on the vendor. I recently heard a lady trying to use a warranty guarantee for an item she purchased from Aldi. The Aldi salesperson informed her she would have to apply directly to the maker of the product to have the warranty honoured. I think a certain amount of time had passed - several months perhaps. Is this correct or does consumer law mean Aldi must honour the warranty themselves? Thanks
Hi Michael, the ACL is pretty clear about this. Have a look at s.261. It is the supplier's problem, not the manufacturer or wholesaler. So in this case it is Aldi's problem. Many retailers try this dodge - essentially trying to make it hard enough that the consumer just gives up.
Exams coming up. So much study to do!😟 Would you have any tips and trick Anthony?
Absolutely! Go here, and see tips 48 through 62
docplayer.net/64073861-Smoke-balls-and-caffeine-anthony-s-marinac-darrin-howie-howe.html
@@AnthsLawSchool Very helpful! Thank you!
Kind regards
amazing
Thank you for your video.
You're most welcome!
All legislation should be national.
I'm not so sure. I do think there is a place for more localised legislation. However I'd be in favour of a far more substantial examination of which areas of law should operate federally, and which at the state or local level.
@@AnthsLawSchool I find that Australian State authorities customarily, completely ignore federal law in favour of state law.
@@calmmeoriginalofficialchan9110 Well, that's always possible, but I'd need some actual evidence. If state authorities are ignoring federal law in circumstances where federal law applies, then the way would be open to challenge the state decision under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth).