It never stops in Yeezy world..
The Fashion Blog reports…
Forget Yeezy’s multi-faceted fight with Walmart for a minute. Kanye West’s brand is now facing off against the State of California, too, thanks to a new lawsuit that accuses the “high-end sneaker and retail clothing business” of violating state consumer protection laws that require online orders to be shipped within a certain time frame unless otherwise specified. According to a newly-filed complaint, a handful of California District Attorneys claim on behalf of the people of California that Yeezy Apparel, which sells “shoes and other apparel over the Internet via their website, www.yeezvsupply.com,” has repeatedly run afoul of California law by “failing to ship items within 30 days and failing to provide adequate delay notices to California consumers, or provide [them with] an offer of a refund.”
Setting the stage in the complaint, which was filed in the Superior Court of California, County of Los Angeles on October 22, the California state plaintiffs assert that “a variety of consumer protection statutes govern sales made to consumers in the State of California on the basis of orders placed over the Internet, including Business and Professions Code section 17538,” which requires that orders for goods or services placed over the internet “be shipped within 30 days [of that order being placed].” Should a company fail to meet that shipping deadline, the law mandates that the company must either: “provide a refund, send equivalent or superior replacement goods, or provide the buyer with a [specific] written notice regarding the delay,” with that notice containing information, including “the expected duration of the delay and an offer of a refund, upon request,” among other things.