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Old 08-29-2006, 09:02 PM   #22
MNBoxster
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Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
Posts: 3,308
Quote:
Originally Posted by blkboxster
well the guys being an ass so im going to get my car back give him his money i know it the stupidst thing to do. ill take the car to my cousin to repair (he owns a pretty good repair place and fix it and ill just have to pay for the labor.and ill put my car out for sale again. and hopefully someone else buys it.

but THANKS ALOT for all the advice

Hi,

Absolutely not! Worst case, give him the $5k. Buyer's Remorse isn't something you should be responsible for at all.

I was surprised you got the money you did (didn't want to say anything negative at the time), it's waay too high for a '99 (at least $5k too high - the same amount as the needed repairs, coincidence...???)

My suspiscion is that the guy, driven by emotion or impulse, jumped at a car too highly priced, regardless of mileage (unusually low mileage on a sports car isn't an asset so far as I'm concerned anyway) and has since become educated as to his mistake (he may even be lurking this list) and is now the Poster Child for Buyer's Remorse.

If not supported by State Consumer Law, you're the second dumbest guy on earth (next to him for paying too much to begin with) if you give him anymore than a partial refund (which you are under no obligation to do). It's his problem, not yours.

You wanna be a nice guy? Donate the $5k to Habitat for Humanity in His name so you can sleep at night. If not, what are you going to do with the next buyer when they experience remorse?

Remember, it's Caveat Emptor (Buyer Beware), not Caveat Exigo (Seller Beware)...

Happy Motoring!... Jim'99

Last edited by MNBoxster; 08-29-2006 at 11:40 PM.
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