![]() |
Quote:
this is dangerous advice my friend |
Quote:
|
And in about my 50th repeat on the theme:
If you are ever, even slightly, for one second considering taking any form of legal action against anybody do not post anything on a forum or social media about the issue. Do not say one freakn' word about it. Not one. You may feel you are anonymous but it isn't hard for the lawyer's experts to pin point you in any form of social media. In the mean time you have handed all of your facts, thoughts, plans and arguments to them on a golden platter. When it is all over and done with then we would all love to hear the story but talking about it before hand is just the same as playing poker with your cards face up and theirs hidden. |
The title of this post is very misleading... they DID disclose that it was in an accident.. you failed to ask more questions and blindly bought a wrecked car.
|
Looks like they preyed on you, my comrade. I know we are in the "should've/could've" phase now so I'll add this: should've brought your parents or a trusted friend/other family member along who has past experience in buying cars.
I brought my parents along more as morale support than anything else. Still asked for their advice regarding numbers and looking over the contract. Would a second pair of eyes have helped you here? Who knows. But now you learned your lesson. Life experiences! :) To parrot what others have said here, if the car works fine now, keep it. I know you want something else but a potentially costly court battle vs selling vs keeping the car - which one be more wallet sucking for you? Quote:
|
Just tried this and it totally worked for all of our cars.
Quote:
. |
Sell it yourself instead
Why can't you get more for it with a private sale. I'm sure it could gather an extra few thousand, if not more. A dealer is going to sell the car for 19k probably. Making 7k off of you seems strange, but what do I know about cars that have been in accidents.
|
Sorry, did not read this but was the title a rebuilt or salvage title, or clean?
Based on the trade-in value from the other dealer I assumed salvage? |
It's actually clean.
|
Quote:
As others have said, feel free to talk to a lawyer but I don't see that the dealer did much wrong here. They clearly told you about it so at that point you should have had it inspected elsewhere if it was a concern. |
Quote:
That said, you learned a few lessons here. The first being never go upside down on a trade-in. It's just a really bad place to be with cars. The second is don't ever trust the dealer especially when buying a used performance car that lots of people drive hard and have been known to mod. Always have a trusted mechanic look over the car. Carfax is useful but even then you can't trust it. There are plenty of wrecked used cars out there that were never reported on Carfax. And you just can't trust dealers. Especially with used cars. Even though they told you the car was wrecked so they were not totally lying, that should have been a huge red flag to you. At this point you can get lawyers, etc. Or you can just keep the car, drive it, and enjoy it. Pay it down over time and at some point put yourself in a position to buy a different car if it bothers you that much. Do not go even more upside on another car though. That's just a really bad cycle to be in. |
Oh, and I will give you $12,500 for it :)
Not kidding.... |
Quote:
Do you remember who you worked with? I remember seeing that car on lot back in 2014 before I got my whiteout. The person I talked to did mention a problem with this car regarding an engine issue but not the bumper replacement. That's when I backed up and looked somewhere else when he mention that the car is basically "new" after informing me about the damages. That crap aint new lol. As for the documents, sorry to say but you're not going to get any documents Unless you bother them everyday by actually driving there. You got ripped off on this one and there's really not alot you can do if you signed off on a damage car sale. You might be able to get them on falsifying information overall good luck! If you want me to go yell at them with you hmu! |
The best advice I can give you is go enjoy your car and move on. Car dealers do this shit all day long, everyday. Anyone who has ever watched peoples court knows how this turns out.
You allowed a financial decision to become an emotional decision. The dealership showed you the pathway to have the car of your dreams and once it became attainable common sense went out the window. Consider this a learning experience. Your young, you will make many more bad decisions The path your going down now is not productive, it will continue to aggravate you while you pay the next higher scumbag on the financial scam ladder good money to fight a case he has no chance of winning. By all means, if you can get a free hour consultation with a reputable attorney to discuss the merits of your situation , do so. But honestly there isn't enough money involved for a reputable lawyer to give a shit about it. What's really happening is the car dealer sees another sucker coming in to by another used car he can't really afford and he's setting you up to pay the most amount of money possible and give you as little as possible for your trade, using your emotions yet again. He senses that you want out of the car and into something different and he just planted the it's been wreked so it aint worth much seed to lock you into that mindset. Cars get wrecked everyday, they also get fixed. So what if it's been wrecked. It took you going to a dealer to trade it in to figure it out. It's got a new motor, that's a good thing. Does it drive straight? Can it be aligned to spec. Does it have any major issues? Sell your car outright. Personally I'm surprised they offered you that much. There are new '13,s ,14's and 15's sitting on lots here with 16's showing up already. Yeah, it sours the experience to find that out, but I suspect emotionally you have already moved on and see yourself driving a different car. This time just make smarter decisions and do your research before rather than later. Most car dealers lie. Not all of them, but most. |
| All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:42 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
User Alert System provided by
Advanced User Tagging v3.3.0 (Lite) -
vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.