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Terms of Service


These Terms of Service (“Terms”) apply to your use of the John Mitchell website and all transactions. By using the site, you agree to these Terms.
  1. Acceptance
Creating an account or making a purchase means you accept these Terms and any future updates.
  1. Legal Capacity
You must have the legal right to enter contracts. Minors need parental/guardian consent.
  1. Term Updates
We may revise Terms anytime. Continued use after updates means you accept the new terms.
  1. Account Security
You’re responsible for your password. Notify us immediately of unauthorized access.
  1. Product Info
We aim for accurate product details but don’t guarantee error-free, current, or complete information.
  1. Intellectual Property
All site content (text, images, logos, etc.) is our property. No use/copy/distribution without written permission.
  1. User Content
You own your uploaded content but grant us a perpetual, royalty-free license to use it for business purposes (ads, promotions, etc.).
  1. Prohibited Acts
No unauthorized access, reverse-engineering site software, or unapproved commercial use.
  1. Order Acceptance
Your order is an offer—we accept only when we ship and send confirmation. We may cancel/modify orders before shipping.
  1. Pricing Errors
We reserve the right to cancel orders with incorrect prices (typos, system errors) and refund payments.
  1. Canadian Imports
Canadian customers pay all import duties/taxes (not included in checkout).
  1. 30-Day Guarantee
Regular-priced items can be returned for a refund within 30 days (see Refund & Return Policy).
  1. Service Disclaimers
We don’t guarantee 24/7 site availability. We may suspend services without notice and aren’t liable for related damages.
  1. Damage Limitations
We’re not liable for indirect, special, or consequential damages (e.g., lost profits, inconvenience).
  1. Disputes
Disputes are resolved via AAA arbitration—no litigation unless allowed by AAA rules or law.
  1. Governing Law
Texas (U.S.) law applies, regardless of conflict-of-law rules. Statutory consumer rights can’t be waived/limited where prohibited.