Hello. I ordered a new Hyundai i10 in April 2017 for delivery on September 1. The car is white and I said I wanted a red interior (choice was black, blue or red). I discovered that the car was no longer equipped with a red interior, and that I am equipped with a black interior. I didn`t want a black interior in April and I still don`t want one, so I`m entitled to a $1,000 deposit? Although the car works exactly the same way, I consider it to be a fundamental change to my specification, which appears on the order form. Thank you. Ian One of your previous posts said that you paid more than $3,000 in installment to the dealer – once you handed over your deposit, you bought the car. You can`t continue to haggle after you buy it. I`m not sure what advice you`re looking for, because you don`t want to cancel your purchase and there`s no way a dealer will deconstruct the vehicle after the purchase. We have informed him that our circumstances have changed and we would like to cancel and refund the down payment for the construction drivers (US$1000.00 – VAT for which we have not yet received a receipt). He says the deposit can`t be refunded at the moment, but if we don`t like the vehicle for some reason and are not satisfied, then the construction slot depot will then be returned? Good morning, David. If the agreement has been subject to an AA review and the vehicle has passed this test satisfactorily, then your contract is valid and the dealer is right to expect you to continue. They do not need an AA inspection to find that there was a seven-month gap in the road use tax.
There may be a reason that has nothing to do with damage to the vehicle (perhaps the previous owner lost his job/business, or he was sick and not mobile, or for some other reason), but even if the vehicle was involved in an accident and repaired, it is not a good reason to terminate the contract, unless the dealer lied to your direct questions about the vehicle`s history. Hello. I put a $500 down payment on a car after the dealer agreed that it would be fully refunded if I decided not to continue with the car. There were body repairs that needed the merchant to say he was going to abolish it, but if I had left a deposit, he would do the job more quickly. I would see the car to decide if I was happy to buy the car. A few days later, after reflection, I decided that I did not want to consider that the car is repaired and asked or recovered my deposit. The dealer doesn`t refuse to pay my deposit because he says he paid to fix the car. It was a job he should have done anyway, so I`m not happy that he`s keeping my bail.
Honestly, I don`t think he had any real expenses out of his pocket.