The way I see it, the seller has proof that he has shipped the item, the purchaser has proof that the item was not delivered due to faulty addressing. If the return address is not on the package or the package is not returned, a refund to the purchaser would be the ultimate outcome. If the package IS returned to the seller and indeed it is the sellers fault that the address was not complete or illegible, it should be shipped again at n/c. If it can be determined that the seller DID use the full address provided by the purchaser but that address as supplied was not complete then the purchaser should be willing to pay the additional shipping costs for the second go around. And lastly, if the package was correctly and fully addressed in a legible manner and USPS screwed it up... then.....sigh.... the fairest settlement would be a 50/50 split on the new shipping costs.

The only thing I did not account for would be if it were shipped with no insurance at the request of the purchaser in which case all risk of loss would be transfered to the purchaser, seeing the seller can prove that it was sent as requested.

Hopefully the razor will turn up in short order.... I've never lost one yet.

Regards

Christian