Hello,
Sorry for the long post but this has been going on a while and i'm not sure what details are relevant!
I bought a car from a dealer for just under £10k at the start of the year, 2017 reg and about 50k mileage. A couple of weeks later the check engine light came on and its engine was missfiring, The dealer sent me to their warranty folk, who refused to take it as I had felt some shuddering a few times since buying the car and sp they assumed it was a pre-existing fault.
The dealer then attempted a repair themselves and returned it - but the engine light came on on again the same day. They tried again with a partner garage - but 3 weeks later the engine light and missfiring came back again. The dealer advised I go through the warranty company this time (asking that I not mention the repairs that they had done..?) so I do, but my local mechanic returns it after diagnostic saying he'd rather not work on it as it could be many things and he isn't sure he can fix it.
At this point i start calling citizens advice, and send a "letter to complain about faulty goods" template they have, and request a refund under the consumer rights act (this is 3 months after the purchase date). The dealer refuses saying that the current issue isn’t related to the first problem, and that it's just wear and tear. I reply I don't think it has to be the same problem, and that (according to the mechanics i had spoken to at least) it's not wear and tear and ask again from a refund minus cost of mileage.
They refuse again but offer to repair it, or purchase at a reduced cost, but no to a full refund minus mileage, as it's outside their 30 day cooling off period. I send a letter before court action from the citzens advice website. They reply with the same offer.
I... chicken out and bring it to another mechanics for repair, but they also return it saying the indicated faulty part is working correctly and they don't know what the problem is.
I email the dealer once more with an update regarding this mechanic visit, and they reply still refusing a refund, and withdrawing the previous offers as it’s now been more than 6 months since purchasing the car.
So now I've put in an MCOL claim, and i'm about to fill out the Directions Questionnaire for the small claims track.
So... Does it need to be the same problem like they say? And they mentioned wear and tear, does that matter or is any check engine light issue enought to make it 'not fit for purpose'? Should I try to get an expert written report of some kind? Also, I have some audio recordings of some phone conversations with them, can i submit that as evidence in small claims court?
Thanks for any advice you can offer - really feeling in over our heads with this!
Sorry for the long post but this has been going on a while and i'm not sure what details are relevant!
I bought a car from a dealer for just under £10k at the start of the year, 2017 reg and about 50k mileage. A couple of weeks later the check engine light came on and its engine was missfiring, The dealer sent me to their warranty folk, who refused to take it as I had felt some shuddering a few times since buying the car and sp they assumed it was a pre-existing fault.
The dealer then attempted a repair themselves and returned it - but the engine light came on on again the same day. They tried again with a partner garage - but 3 weeks later the engine light and missfiring came back again. The dealer advised I go through the warranty company this time (asking that I not mention the repairs that they had done..?) so I do, but my local mechanic returns it after diagnostic saying he'd rather not work on it as it could be many things and he isn't sure he can fix it.
At this point i start calling citizens advice, and send a "letter to complain about faulty goods" template they have, and request a refund under the consumer rights act (this is 3 months after the purchase date). The dealer refuses saying that the current issue isn’t related to the first problem, and that it's just wear and tear. I reply I don't think it has to be the same problem, and that (according to the mechanics i had spoken to at least) it's not wear and tear and ask again from a refund minus cost of mileage.
They refuse again but offer to repair it, or purchase at a reduced cost, but no to a full refund minus mileage, as it's outside their 30 day cooling off period. I send a letter before court action from the citzens advice website. They reply with the same offer.
I... chicken out and bring it to another mechanics for repair, but they also return it saying the indicated faulty part is working correctly and they don't know what the problem is.
I email the dealer once more with an update regarding this mechanic visit, and they reply still refusing a refund, and withdrawing the previous offers as it’s now been more than 6 months since purchasing the car.
So now I've put in an MCOL claim, and i'm about to fill out the Directions Questionnaire for the small claims track.
So... Does it need to be the same problem like they say? And they mentioned wear and tear, does that matter or is any check engine light issue enought to make it 'not fit for purpose'? Should I try to get an expert written report of some kind? Also, I have some audio recordings of some phone conversations with them, can i submit that as evidence in small claims court?
Thanks for any advice you can offer - really feeling in over our heads with this!
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