Aug-17-2018 09:13 PM
Sep-02-2018 09:57 AM
Greene728 wrote:
Wow. The same can’t be said for you IMHO.
Sep-02-2018 05:36 AM
Greene728 wrote:
Wow. The same can’t be said for you IMHO.
Sep-01-2018 09:12 PM
Sep-01-2018 05:19 PM
Sep-01-2018 03:02 PM
Sep-01-2018 12:20 PM
Aug-29-2018 09:57 AM
mich800 wrote:
So why the deposit? Seems like a lot of wasted transactions and money changing hands.
Aug-29-2018 06:31 AM
jfkmk wrote:JALLEN4 wrote:jfkmk wrote:
A friend of mine just put a deposit on a car. It is completely refundable, non binding pending his daughter taking a look at it. As I mentioned before, most of the time these token deposits are fully refundable.
As for the person who replaces the fuel after a test drive, you gotta be the only one on the planet who does this.
Your friend with the non-binding deposit, what would he say if he takes his daughter back and it is sold since it was non-binding?
This is a VERY common way for car dealers to do business. They aren't going to hold the car for weeks, just one day or two. Sheesh.
Aug-29-2018 05:02 AM
JALLEN4 wrote:jfkmk wrote:
A friend of mine just put a deposit on a car. It is completely refundable, non binding pending his daughter taking a look at it. As I mentioned before, most of the time these token deposits are fully refundable.
As for the person who replaces the fuel after a test drive, you gotta be the only one on the planet who does this.
Your friend with the non-binding deposit, what would he say if he takes his daughter back and it is sold since it was non-binding?
Aug-29-2018 04:08 AM
jfkmk wrote:
A friend of mine just put a deposit on a car. It is completely refundable, non binding pending his daughter taking a look at it. As I mentioned before, most of the time these token deposits are fully refundable.
As for the person who replaces the fuel after a test drive, you gotta be the only one on the planet who does this.
Aug-28-2018 03:22 PM
1ed wrote:There's definitely a principle involved, but it's not what you're thinking. You asked them to replace it and committed to buying if they did. You were the one who didn't keep their word. It's not for the dealer to eat the cost of dishonest and unreasonable customers. It's good consumer practice to not make commitments which aren't going to be kept.
Thanks for all your replies . The deal was for a 2004 vehicle with 160.000 miles and the seal was in stock and you could see where the seal had been leaking from the stain on the carpet.
I will move on but it just seems there is a principle involved and it would be a good business practice to eat the cost of the rubber.
Aug-28-2018 03:05 PM
Aug-28-2018 12:11 PM
Aug-25-2018 07:20 PM
mich800 wrote:captnjack wrote:
Your word may be YOUR bond but what about the other guy's word? Are you ready to trust HIM? Going through life on a handshake could cost you tons of lost money. Sad but true state of the world today. Plus, the world changes. Can't do anything about it. Keep up or step off.
Who said it was a bad idea to put pen to paper? In fact, this is a classic example where the dealer probably should have done so to protect themselves from a purchaser that was just window shopping. Written agreements are to protect and give remedies when one party will not fulfill their "word".