On 28/9/23 I bought a van from a dealer for £10,995. It was 10 years old and had done 92k miles. It was advertised by the dealership as good condition and supplied with a new MOT.
On 28/10/23 the gearbox broke so the van was not drivable, I had only driven 300 miles in it. I reported this to the dealer who arranged for a mechanic to look at it. The mechanic inspected the vehicle on 31/10/23 and told me to reject the vehicle. I rejected the vehicle via email and the dealer replied that a refund was not an option but that he would repair the vehicle if I shipped it back to him at my own expense.
On 7/11/23 I shipped the van back to the dealer who then became very non-communicative. He eventually got back in touch to say it would be ready for collection on 5/1/24, two months later. I caught the train to the dealership and drove the van back.
On 8/1/24 the gearbox failed again after just three days. I reported this to the dealer and he didn't respond so the following day I wrote again requesting a refund.
On 19/1/24 the dealer sent a letter from his solicitor stating that I was not entitled to a refund as it was a van for commercial purposes. I explained that I had not bought it for commercial purposes but for camping. He revealed a checkbox on the sales contract that I had not noticed which he ticked that states the van was bought for commercial purposes.
On 12/2/24 the dealer sent another letter from his solicitor stating that if I return the vehicle to him again at my own expense he will consider a form of 'sales contract rewind'.
I have asked him to clarify what he means by a 'sales contract rewind' and stated I will accept £10k refund to allow for some wear and tear. I am not confident that shipping the van back to him again at my expense will solve the problem. He will then have the vehicle and my money and I don't trust him. I have since bought another vehicle so I no longer want this van and would like my money back. Any advice would be very welcome.
On 28/10/23 the gearbox broke so the van was not drivable, I had only driven 300 miles in it. I reported this to the dealer who arranged for a mechanic to look at it. The mechanic inspected the vehicle on 31/10/23 and told me to reject the vehicle. I rejected the vehicle via email and the dealer replied that a refund was not an option but that he would repair the vehicle if I shipped it back to him at my own expense.
On 7/11/23 I shipped the van back to the dealer who then became very non-communicative. He eventually got back in touch to say it would be ready for collection on 5/1/24, two months later. I caught the train to the dealership and drove the van back.
On 8/1/24 the gearbox failed again after just three days. I reported this to the dealer and he didn't respond so the following day I wrote again requesting a refund.
On 19/1/24 the dealer sent a letter from his solicitor stating that I was not entitled to a refund as it was a van for commercial purposes. I explained that I had not bought it for commercial purposes but for camping. He revealed a checkbox on the sales contract that I had not noticed which he ticked that states the van was bought for commercial purposes.
On 12/2/24 the dealer sent another letter from his solicitor stating that if I return the vehicle to him again at my own expense he will consider a form of 'sales contract rewind'.
I have asked him to clarify what he means by a 'sales contract rewind' and stated I will accept £10k refund to allow for some wear and tear. I am not confident that shipping the van back to him again at my expense will solve the problem. He will then have the vehicle and my money and I don't trust him. I have since bought another vehicle so I no longer want this van and would like my money back. Any advice would be very welcome.
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