Good afternoon all,
I'm looking for some advice on a dispute I'm currently having with a used car dealer.
In summary:
Car was a distance purchase, a 2016 Suzuki Baleno bought for £7k + £200 for delivery. The advert said it was in "excellent condition". Before purchase, I specifically asked whether the car was in good condition. The dealer told me by email it was in "fantastic condition". The car was delivered on 21st Jan 2021 and all seemed well...for a few weeks. I then discovered the air con wasn't working.
I notified the seller. He asked me to take the car to a local dealer. I booked it in. Before the time came, I discovered the horn was working only intermittently. I informed the seller of this. When the garage looked over the car, they said it was heavily corroded. This was why the horn was faulty and they suspect also why the air con's not working. I got them to fix the horn. They said the air con fix could cost £300-600. They also pointed out excessive corrosion to other components under the body, including brake pipes, suspension components, and subframes. They asked if the car had been kept near the sea, and my own digging proved they were right. I spoke to the previous owner (usefully, the seller had left his name and address in the document pack) and he turned out to live 400m from the coast - in fact he decided to get rid of the car because of how much it was corroding and got around ~£4200 for it from the seller in part exchange.
I informed the seller. They essentially said it was my problem as the car was fine when it left them. I reminded them of the CRA and the 6 month period. They handed the case over to a law firm. The law firm wrote to me saying (in summary) it was my problem as the car was fine when it left the showroom - they said the seller had inspected it, and hadn't seen any of the problems I was now pointing out. They also pointed out it had passed an MOT back in October 2020, with no advisories.
By this point I had decided I didn't want the car - the garage who looked it over recommended I reject it as the level of corrosion indicated future problems. I wrote back to the law firm stating that the seller had been wrong to say the condition was fantastic and excellent and arguing that these terms implied the car was in "better than expected" condition, whereas in reality it was in "worse than expected" condition. As the car was "not as described" I requested they refund the purchase price + what I'd spent on repairs (minus an allowance for fair use) and take the car back.
I also pointed out that two bodywork inspections had been missed and that the anti-perforation corrosion warranty was now void. I argued that this meant the car didn't have a "full service history" because those inspections are part of the service schedule.
They wrote back asking for pictures which I provided. They said the corrosion looked normal to them, but offered to pay for a new MOT. I said I didn't see the point as it would probably pass, but that wouldn't prove the car was in "fantastic condition".
They have now written back claiming again that the corrosion is "superficial, at best" and that the words "fantastic" and "excellent" with respect to the condition "appear to be little more than 'puffery'." They have offered £500 "without admission of liability and as a gesture of goodwill", as long as I don't tell anyone, ever. I am not minded to accept. This will likely cover the aircon to be fixed, but will still leave me with a heavily-corroded car when I paid for a car in fantastic condition.
I did pay about half by credit card so I can go down the S75 route - my question is, is "puffery" a real thing?! I have looked it up and it seems to be "a promotional statement or claim that expresses subjective rather than objective views, which no "reasonable person" would take literally" (according to Wikipedia!).
Are they right? Are they just trying it on? Surely it can't be ok for a dealer to say "this car is in fantastic condition", and then when it turns out to be in substandard condition, simply say "we didn't really mean that literally"?
Any advice would be much appreciated.
Many thanks
Peter
I'm looking for some advice on a dispute I'm currently having with a used car dealer.
In summary:
Car was a distance purchase, a 2016 Suzuki Baleno bought for £7k + £200 for delivery. The advert said it was in "excellent condition". Before purchase, I specifically asked whether the car was in good condition. The dealer told me by email it was in "fantastic condition". The car was delivered on 21st Jan 2021 and all seemed well...for a few weeks. I then discovered the air con wasn't working.
I notified the seller. He asked me to take the car to a local dealer. I booked it in. Before the time came, I discovered the horn was working only intermittently. I informed the seller of this. When the garage looked over the car, they said it was heavily corroded. This was why the horn was faulty and they suspect also why the air con's not working. I got them to fix the horn. They said the air con fix could cost £300-600. They also pointed out excessive corrosion to other components under the body, including brake pipes, suspension components, and subframes. They asked if the car had been kept near the sea, and my own digging proved they were right. I spoke to the previous owner (usefully, the seller had left his name and address in the document pack) and he turned out to live 400m from the coast - in fact he decided to get rid of the car because of how much it was corroding and got around ~£4200 for it from the seller in part exchange.
I informed the seller. They essentially said it was my problem as the car was fine when it left them. I reminded them of the CRA and the 6 month period. They handed the case over to a law firm. The law firm wrote to me saying (in summary) it was my problem as the car was fine when it left the showroom - they said the seller had inspected it, and hadn't seen any of the problems I was now pointing out. They also pointed out it had passed an MOT back in October 2020, with no advisories.
By this point I had decided I didn't want the car - the garage who looked it over recommended I reject it as the level of corrosion indicated future problems. I wrote back to the law firm stating that the seller had been wrong to say the condition was fantastic and excellent and arguing that these terms implied the car was in "better than expected" condition, whereas in reality it was in "worse than expected" condition. As the car was "not as described" I requested they refund the purchase price + what I'd spent on repairs (minus an allowance for fair use) and take the car back.
I also pointed out that two bodywork inspections had been missed and that the anti-perforation corrosion warranty was now void. I argued that this meant the car didn't have a "full service history" because those inspections are part of the service schedule.
They wrote back asking for pictures which I provided. They said the corrosion looked normal to them, but offered to pay for a new MOT. I said I didn't see the point as it would probably pass, but that wouldn't prove the car was in "fantastic condition".
They have now written back claiming again that the corrosion is "superficial, at best" and that the words "fantastic" and "excellent" with respect to the condition "appear to be little more than 'puffery'." They have offered £500 "without admission of liability and as a gesture of goodwill", as long as I don't tell anyone, ever. I am not minded to accept. This will likely cover the aircon to be fixed, but will still leave me with a heavily-corroded car when I paid for a car in fantastic condition.
I did pay about half by credit card so I can go down the S75 route - my question is, is "puffery" a real thing?! I have looked it up and it seems to be "a promotional statement or claim that expresses subjective rather than objective views, which no "reasonable person" would take literally" (according to Wikipedia!).
Are they right? Are they just trying it on? Surely it can't be ok for a dealer to say "this car is in fantastic condition", and then when it turns out to be in substandard condition, simply say "we didn't really mean that literally"?
Any advice would be much appreciated.
Many thanks
Peter
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