Hello everyone
I've read a few similar cases to mine on this forum and now thought I'd ask the community for some specific advise on my case.
Four months ago I bought a second hand car for my wife. The car cost £7.5k and was bought at a distance, so delivered by trailer to me. Intially the car ran well and seemed in great condition. The dealer was also very helpful during the purchase and delivery. Importantly the car came with a six months warranty.
A few weeks later the car started to develop a fault whilst driving, within a week or so the car was undriveable. I called the dealer and asked for the details of the warranty to be passed on. At this point he advised me that he had 'forgot' to purchase the warranty and instead would pay for any repairs after I've intimated the work to completed at a local garage.
After a few months (we're up to the present day), both the local garage and the main suzuki garage are at a loss to what's causing the problem. Suzuki have advised that further investigation will start to get very expensive. At this point I've paided around £950 in repairs.
I passed all this information back to the dealer with my suggestion that we reverse the trade. My argument is that if he has the car returned he can fix the car more cheaply locally and I can be rid of it. I've requested full refund of £7,500 plus the £950 in repairs.
Initially the dealer was non committal but receptive to the idea and said he'd discuss with the garage owner and get back to me. I've had to chase several times, the last time I got through he made some vague excuse about his delivery driver being on holiday and Covid restricts. Manifestly very obvious attempts to delay the process.
Now we're up to today. It's occurred to me that I can't force the dealer to accept the car, not can I necessarily make a small claims court claim for the entire amount (car value and repairs) since I am still in possession (I may well be wrong about this). So far as I can see my only practice option is to continue with the repairs till the car is fixed then send the bills over, cross my fingers for payment, then proceed to make a claim assuming payment is not made.
I sent the dealer an email and text message this morning saying that I can no longer chase him via the phone and that if I hadn't heard from him by the end of today to arrange a return, I would continue with the repairs and provide a bill. The dealer's last instructions to me was to get the repairs done and charge (we talked about returning the car, but never agreed). So my logic is that I am still acting under the dealer's instructions as no subsequent agreement has been.
One of my concerns is that, apart from the recent text messages, all this has been conducted via phone calls, so there is no record - since we were in good terms, there didn't seem to be a reason to do otherwise. I do have a copy of the advert with the 6 month warranty.
I summary I'm looking for advice regarding how I should proceed with the car repairs. As I mentioned before, the car presently doesn't run, so I don't see an option other than to continue with the repairs.
Also, if this does progress to a court claim I want to position myself as favourable as possible and not trip up somewhere. So any help on this front would be great.
Any help would be really appreciated. Thank you for reading so far!
I've read a few similar cases to mine on this forum and now thought I'd ask the community for some specific advise on my case.
Four months ago I bought a second hand car for my wife. The car cost £7.5k and was bought at a distance, so delivered by trailer to me. Intially the car ran well and seemed in great condition. The dealer was also very helpful during the purchase and delivery. Importantly the car came with a six months warranty.
A few weeks later the car started to develop a fault whilst driving, within a week or so the car was undriveable. I called the dealer and asked for the details of the warranty to be passed on. At this point he advised me that he had 'forgot' to purchase the warranty and instead would pay for any repairs after I've intimated the work to completed at a local garage.
After a few months (we're up to the present day), both the local garage and the main suzuki garage are at a loss to what's causing the problem. Suzuki have advised that further investigation will start to get very expensive. At this point I've paided around £950 in repairs.
I passed all this information back to the dealer with my suggestion that we reverse the trade. My argument is that if he has the car returned he can fix the car more cheaply locally and I can be rid of it. I've requested full refund of £7,500 plus the £950 in repairs.
Initially the dealer was non committal but receptive to the idea and said he'd discuss with the garage owner and get back to me. I've had to chase several times, the last time I got through he made some vague excuse about his delivery driver being on holiday and Covid restricts. Manifestly very obvious attempts to delay the process.
Now we're up to today. It's occurred to me that I can't force the dealer to accept the car, not can I necessarily make a small claims court claim for the entire amount (car value and repairs) since I am still in possession (I may well be wrong about this). So far as I can see my only practice option is to continue with the repairs till the car is fixed then send the bills over, cross my fingers for payment, then proceed to make a claim assuming payment is not made.
I sent the dealer an email and text message this morning saying that I can no longer chase him via the phone and that if I hadn't heard from him by the end of today to arrange a return, I would continue with the repairs and provide a bill. The dealer's last instructions to me was to get the repairs done and charge (we talked about returning the car, but never agreed). So my logic is that I am still acting under the dealer's instructions as no subsequent agreement has been.
One of my concerns is that, apart from the recent text messages, all this has been conducted via phone calls, so there is no record - since we were in good terms, there didn't seem to be a reason to do otherwise. I do have a copy of the advert with the 6 month warranty.
I summary I'm looking for advice regarding how I should proceed with the car repairs. As I mentioned before, the car presently doesn't run, so I don't see an option other than to continue with the repairs.
Also, if this does progress to a court claim I want to position myself as favourable as possible and not trip up somewhere. So any help on this front would be great.
Any help would be really appreciated. Thank you for reading so far!
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