Hi,
I am looking for some ideas as to how to settle a dispute
Back in June I took a premium sports car to my main dealers for a B service. In the carrying out of the service they have broken a key component of the engine and rendered my car underivable for the past several months. I am in the process of suing them for the damage caused but the law of Betterment has come up and I am trying to understand what position it leaves me in.
When the car was damaged the dealership refused to accept liability but offered to take the part off the car and to then let me pay to have it welded and then replaced.
They refused to pay for any of the the work and only offered the idea as a paid for by me non warranted repair. I refused their kind offer
The situation is that the part that was broken is not sold as a separate item and as a result the engine must be removed for the larger component to be replaced. The car is 6 years old but extremely low mileage and of a complexity and type that relatively few mechanics would want to work on I had tried other non main dealership garages they did not want to do the work.
My solicitor is saying that that is definitely a case for breach of contract but is also suggesting that the cost of the repair could be limited to using a second hand part but the only place I have found that can work on the car will not use secondhand parts
How could a court case restrict the payout if the matter is not settled before it goes to court?
Would it be strictly the difference in costs for the part or would it restrict the cost of labour too?
any thought would be good
I am looking for some ideas as to how to settle a dispute
Back in June I took a premium sports car to my main dealers for a B service. In the carrying out of the service they have broken a key component of the engine and rendered my car underivable for the past several months. I am in the process of suing them for the damage caused but the law of Betterment has come up and I am trying to understand what position it leaves me in.
When the car was damaged the dealership refused to accept liability but offered to take the part off the car and to then let me pay to have it welded and then replaced.
They refused to pay for any of the the work and only offered the idea as a paid for by me non warranted repair. I refused their kind offer
The situation is that the part that was broken is not sold as a separate item and as a result the engine must be removed for the larger component to be replaced. The car is 6 years old but extremely low mileage and of a complexity and type that relatively few mechanics would want to work on I had tried other non main dealership garages they did not want to do the work.
My solicitor is saying that that is definitely a case for breach of contract but is also suggesting that the cost of the repair could be limited to using a second hand part but the only place I have found that can work on the car will not use secondhand parts
How could a court case restrict the payout if the matter is not settled before it goes to court?
Would it be strictly the difference in costs for the part or would it restrict the cost of labour too?
any thought would be good
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