Quote:
Originally Posted by big daddy
I've been reading all the post and asked James a couple questions about it this morning at the gym.
-He said the car had custom rims and they didn't even notice - he received a call a couple days later and they asked if he had the stock wheels
-he bought the Vet and had to pay $2500 over sticker, he didn't even have the Z there with him when he signed the papers and drove the car home. He had to turn it in the next morning, they were in his wife's car and they stopped to look at it.
- dealer called him about the cats about a month later and he went there with his wife and offered to 1. Return the vet. 2. Buy the Z back 3. Take the car back to shop and return it to stock and have it back same day.
THEY CHOSE OPTION 4: TOld him only Chevy mechanic could
Do it now and it would cost $$$$ and he needed to pay half.
He is retired military like me and the military attorney told him they are just trying to screw him. They are submitting a response now.
According to Texas law all he has to verify was the mileage, which he did.
Some dealers are cool and some are POS
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the 3rd option should have been what was done before he even signed paperwork and the texas state law on selling a vehicle (which is technically what he did when the dealership effectively bought it from him) is in the link i already provided in a previous post which as said before, states that you can not sell a vehicle without emissions equipment in place. i'm not a lawyer or an attorney, but that part of that website seemed pretty cut and clear to me at least, but then again there could be other loopholes that your friends attorney could exploit that i'm not aware of. all i know is that bad choices were made on both the dealers and your friends part and we will see how it turns out i guess.