Hi all,
Hoping I can get some advice on my situation.
In 2014 (March I believe) I put my car into a garage to look at it. It was drivable but I had blown the engine.
I was given a quote of about £1500 for the work. I said I would get back to them.
I had previously had about £1000 worth of work done at same garage in the preceding 6 months.
At the time I was suffering from mental health issues and really lost control of my affairs. I didn’t get back to the garage and they didn’t get back in touch with me. At no point where they given consent to carry out any work on the car.
As time passed I just assumed they had broken the car for parts and I had missed notification from the DVLA. As I never received any annual reminders to SORN the car this only strengthened by assumptions.
About a year ago I went to go see the garage on the off chance they may still have the car (I wasn’t hopeful) but they had ceased trading.
Fast forward to a couple of weeks or so ago and I see the car is for sale at a completely different garage. The engine has been fixed.
I contact DVLA who tell me I’m still the registered keeper
I check and the car hasn’t been MOT’d or driven anywhere since I had it (mileage etc checks out)
I contact the seller and he tells me the garage sold the car to his mate about 3 years later to cover storage costs and for work carried out and he purchased it in good faith and that was that.
So firstly the garage did not get in touch with me to say they were selling the car to cover any costs or give me an opportunity to do so. I’ve lived in the same house for the last 21 years with the same phone number and as I had work done there before they knew how to get hold of me
After my contact a “third party” called me and we spoke. I said that I was not unreasonable and would agree to pay repair costs and indeed some level of reasonable storage costs. They were going to get back in touch with me with what that looked like but never did.
I have spoken with two solicitor firms. Both have said that the car is mine. But trying to get a solicitor firm to act on my behalf is surprisingly difficult.
My home insurance won’t cover this type of contractual dispute but there advice line said things like “tort of interference of goods act”, “tangible goods”, “conversion of goods”, and that the bailee had to take reasonable care.
In all honesty my head was spinning with it all. I just want the car back, I loved that car (it’s rare but not super valuable ~£7-10k). All I want guidance on is a) is it correct that the car is mine. And if so what do I do about it? I don’t know if I should just issue court proceedings but I suspect a judge wouldn’t look favourably on me going straight to court? In an ideal world a solicitor would sort this all out for me (write to the garage selling it, making my offer of reasonable costs covered, and then issue a court summons if need be - where I would withdraw my offer of reasonable costs and let a judge decide) I don’t mind paying but the first solicitors were concerned about the costs and being equitable. I’m don’t mind paying but I suppose they have a duty to be equitable?
I’m happy enough to do the leg work but it doesn’t seem this is something a non-legal bod like myself can get to grips with.
All help and guidance very much appreciated.
Hoping I can get some advice on my situation.
In 2014 (March I believe) I put my car into a garage to look at it. It was drivable but I had blown the engine.
I was given a quote of about £1500 for the work. I said I would get back to them.
I had previously had about £1000 worth of work done at same garage in the preceding 6 months.
At the time I was suffering from mental health issues and really lost control of my affairs. I didn’t get back to the garage and they didn’t get back in touch with me. At no point where they given consent to carry out any work on the car.
As time passed I just assumed they had broken the car for parts and I had missed notification from the DVLA. As I never received any annual reminders to SORN the car this only strengthened by assumptions.
About a year ago I went to go see the garage on the off chance they may still have the car (I wasn’t hopeful) but they had ceased trading.
Fast forward to a couple of weeks or so ago and I see the car is for sale at a completely different garage. The engine has been fixed.
I contact DVLA who tell me I’m still the registered keeper
I check and the car hasn’t been MOT’d or driven anywhere since I had it (mileage etc checks out)
I contact the seller and he tells me the garage sold the car to his mate about 3 years later to cover storage costs and for work carried out and he purchased it in good faith and that was that.
So firstly the garage did not get in touch with me to say they were selling the car to cover any costs or give me an opportunity to do so. I’ve lived in the same house for the last 21 years with the same phone number and as I had work done there before they knew how to get hold of me
After my contact a “third party” called me and we spoke. I said that I was not unreasonable and would agree to pay repair costs and indeed some level of reasonable storage costs. They were going to get back in touch with me with what that looked like but never did.
I have spoken with two solicitor firms. Both have said that the car is mine. But trying to get a solicitor firm to act on my behalf is surprisingly difficult.
My home insurance won’t cover this type of contractual dispute but there advice line said things like “tort of interference of goods act”, “tangible goods”, “conversion of goods”, and that the bailee had to take reasonable care.
In all honesty my head was spinning with it all. I just want the car back, I loved that car (it’s rare but not super valuable ~£7-10k). All I want guidance on is a) is it correct that the car is mine. And if so what do I do about it? I don’t know if I should just issue court proceedings but I suspect a judge wouldn’t look favourably on me going straight to court? In an ideal world a solicitor would sort this all out for me (write to the garage selling it, making my offer of reasonable costs covered, and then issue a court summons if need be - where I would withdraw my offer of reasonable costs and let a judge decide) I don’t mind paying but the first solicitors were concerned about the costs and being equitable. I’m don’t mind paying but I suppose they have a duty to be equitable?
I’m happy enough to do the leg work but it doesn’t seem this is something a non-legal bod like myself can get to grips with.
All help and guidance very much appreciated.
Comment