Hi everyone,
We bought a one year old car from a local main dealership back in June 2018 on pcp finance.
The car was spotless when we first viewed it but there were scratches on both offside doors when we collected it a few days later.
Dealership made 3 attempts to repair the doors but the results were really bad (smart repairs carried out in the carpark!) and just made it worse.
We made a written complaint to the dealership manager in December 2018 - no response.
A written complaint to the head office of the dealership in July 2019 - they say they will repair it in their body shop.
Heard nothing else from them so made a complaint to the Motor Ombudsman in October 2019.
No response from the ombudsman for a year but was then told that the dealership was offering a "goodwill payment of £200" for us to get the doors fixed ourselves.
A local body repair company viewed the car a few days ago and estimates the work at around £500 - £800.
A data access request to the dealership and ombudsman shows that the operations director stated to the ombudsman that we had refused to let them fix the doors!!
Obviously, covid has delayed things but we are nearly at the 4 year point of owning the vehicle and it's still not been repaired.
Couple of points that I am scratching my head about -
The operations director made a defamatory statement to the ombudsman which appears to have influenced the decision of the ombudsman - breach of data protection act?
I believe that we are entitled to a repair under the consumer rights act so offering to pay for the repair and calling it a goodwill payment is misleading us into accepting the offer?
We have now paid off the pcp finance in full so the car belongs to us - we have had to pay the amount owed on a car in excellent condition, not the damaged condition it is in.
We have got in contact with the manufacturer who has provided somebody from the executive's office (we emailed the ceo) to act as a go-between. We have said that we would accept a full repair to the doors carried out at another dealership and a goodwill gesture of £300 to end the matter but the dealership is not responding.
Any suggestions on what to try now?
Thank you.
We bought a one year old car from a local main dealership back in June 2018 on pcp finance.
The car was spotless when we first viewed it but there were scratches on both offside doors when we collected it a few days later.
Dealership made 3 attempts to repair the doors but the results were really bad (smart repairs carried out in the carpark!) and just made it worse.
We made a written complaint to the dealership manager in December 2018 - no response.
A written complaint to the head office of the dealership in July 2019 - they say they will repair it in their body shop.
Heard nothing else from them so made a complaint to the Motor Ombudsman in October 2019.
No response from the ombudsman for a year but was then told that the dealership was offering a "goodwill payment of £200" for us to get the doors fixed ourselves.
A local body repair company viewed the car a few days ago and estimates the work at around £500 - £800.
A data access request to the dealership and ombudsman shows that the operations director stated to the ombudsman that we had refused to let them fix the doors!!
Obviously, covid has delayed things but we are nearly at the 4 year point of owning the vehicle and it's still not been repaired.
Couple of points that I am scratching my head about -
The operations director made a defamatory statement to the ombudsman which appears to have influenced the decision of the ombudsman - breach of data protection act?
I believe that we are entitled to a repair under the consumer rights act so offering to pay for the repair and calling it a goodwill payment is misleading us into accepting the offer?
We have now paid off the pcp finance in full so the car belongs to us - we have had to pay the amount owed on a car in excellent condition, not the damaged condition it is in.
We have got in contact with the manufacturer who has provided somebody from the executive's office (we emailed the ceo) to act as a go-between. We have said that we would accept a full repair to the doors carried out at another dealership and a goodwill gesture of £300 to end the matter but the dealership is not responding.
Any suggestions on what to try now?
Thank you.
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