Barnes & Noble Cancels Free Beats by Dre Headphones Orders After Promo Code Fiasco

Barnes & Noble Cancels Free Beats by Dre Headphones Orders After Promo Code Fiasco Hero Image

Twitter exploded on Friday, July 28 when a subsidiary of brick-and-mortar book giant Barnes & Noble reportedly canceled hundreds of orders for Beats by Dre headphones after a glitch in its system made the trendy headphones practically free.

Barnes & Noble College released a promo code “MACBEATS” this week that allowed shoppers to order a pair of Beats headphones — which normally retail for approximately $300 — for just the cost of shipping and handling, according to a consumer petition against Barnes & Noble.

After a number of orders for the headphones, Barnes & Noble College announced on Twitter that the promotion only applied to those who had purchased a MacBook, and that “unqualified” orders would be canceled.

However, consumers are alleging that Barnes & Noble College did not qualify the promotion with any terms or conditions when they placed the orders for the headphones. Furthermore, some are saying that because they received an “Order Confirmation” for the headphones, Barnes & Noble College needs to honor the purchase or provide reimbursement for their mistake.

As Twitter users continue to rage over the cancelled headphone orders through the hashtag #MACBEATS, consumers are wondering what their legal rights are in this situation, and if Barnes & Noble College is legally obligated to ship the headphones to those who received an “Order Confirmation” under the Uniform Commercial Code.

It turns out that Barnes & Noble may have breached contract.

“When the consumer takes the item to the register to check out, the consumer providing payment is making an offer to purchase. If the mistake in price is caught at check out, the consumer cannot take advantage of the mistake,” explained Morgan & Morgan attorney John Yanchunis.

“What is different here is the consumer actually completed the purchase. Payment was accepted and the transaction was closed, thereby making the failure to deliver the headphones — or Barnes & Noble’s unilateral cancellation of the contract — a breach.”

There have been several well-publicized cases based around this issue of consumer protection and breach of contract.

In 2016, Starbucks agreed to a $365,237 settlement after it was discovered that the company was misleadingly advertising the prices of two of its breakfast sandwiches as 25 cents lower than the actual price charged for the sandwiches in the state of California. The 25 cents per sandwiched added up to over $300K in reported overcharges for Starbucks, according to Law360.

KFC experienced its own coupon debacle in 2009, after Oprah promoted an online KFC coupon for a free grilled chicken meal on her popular talk show. News of the promotion quickly spread across the country, and due to the volume of customers using the coupon, some KFC franchises reportedly refused to honor the coupon. There was a subsequent class action lawsuit, and in 2011 KFC finally agreed to a $1.575 million settlement, according to Consumerist.

Did Your Beats by Dre Headphones Order Get Canceled?

If you ordered Beats by Dre headphones through Barnes & Noble College with the promo code “MACBEATS,” only to have your ordered canceled, please fill out the form on this page to receive updates about the ongoing #MACBEATS situation.

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