Hi Gadgetman
If it is of assistance in writing your letter here are the statutory requirements. (This may also be of assistance to anyone else who may face these issues.
The Sale of Goods Act 1979 was amended by The Sale and Supply of Goods to Consumers Regulations 2002 (S&SoGtCR) by the insertion into the 1979 Act of new sections 48 A-F. So if you ever refer to the SOGA in your letter always add "(as amended)"...maybe even "as amended by The Sale and Supply of Goods to Consumers Regulations 2002)" . The dealer may choose to take legal advice and it helps if their lawyer sees a letter that properly quotes the law.
It is section 48B which gives you the choice of repair or replacement when the goods (caravan) does not conform to your contract for purchase. Under the terms of the SOGA that contract, as I said, I my first post, requires the caravan to be of satisfactory quality, sufficiently durable and free from any defects. Your letter may say something like "As damp has been found within less than six months of the date of purchase then, by no stretch of the imagination can a van be described as “free from defects” or of “satisfactory quality” as required by the Sale of Goods Act 1979 (as amended".
Section 48A (3) indicates that where this kind of defect is found within six months of delivery of the caravan to you then the law deems that defect to have been in place on the date you contracted to buy it.
If you elect to have the caravan repaired, then by virtue of section 48B of the SOGA (as amended by the S&SoGtCR) the dealer has to comply with two statutory obligations:-
- to undertake the repairs within a reasonable period of time, and
- without causing significant inconvenience to the you
If the caravan is not useable at the moment then delaying those repairs to the manufacturers timetable will cause a significant inconvenience to you. That would then tend to undermine any argument from the dealer that you should wait until the van can get into the Swift workshop. However, if the van can reasonably be used the dealer is not breaching that second obligation by making you wait. Question here is whether it can be used for human habitation with that level of damp. This is important in any argument with the dealer over whether there should be a delay over the repairs.
If you elect to have a replacement, and remember the choice is yours, you cannot do so if that request is impossible to perform or disproportionate to the repair remedy. This is covered by section 48B (3) (a). You say that the model you purchased was a dealer special model and that a similar van is no longer available. The dealer may be able to obtain one from another dealer or perhaps Swift. If Swift were to make one just for you I would suggest that that would be “disproportionate”. So, ask the dealer if he can obtain one from somewhere else. Now, you need to bear in mind the “significant inconvenience” issue. If the dealer can show that you would suffer a far greater “significant inconvenience” by waiting for a replacement rather than for the repair to be done, the dealer can say that you should wait for the repair.
You can argue that the dealer should provide an equivalent caravan if it cannot provide the same model. The law requires the dealer to put you into the position you would have been in if there had been no breach of contract. Giving you an equivalent caravan, which cost considerably more, maybe due to a higher spec, is not doing that, and so the dealer could ask you to pay the difference. Section 48B(4) applies. You say that the dealer has offered this way forward which, to be fair, is reasonable.
Under section 48C you can, as a last resort rescind the contract and the dealer has to give you your money back. However, you can only rescind if it is impossible to repair or replace without significant inconvenience or such repair/replacement is disproportionate or at an additional cost to the dealer (48B (3) issue above). Again this comes down to whether you can use the van whilst waiting for repairs. So, rescinding the contract has difficulties, if the dealer sticks to the letter of the law. Anyway, you will have paid interest on your loan which you could not, strictly, recover from the dealer, so rescinding may not be attractive.
The above assumes that you did not purchase using HP.
So, if you want a replacement, your letter needs to argue that
The van cannot be used for human habitation whilst damp.
The delays in effecting any repairs are a significant inconvenience
The dealer must provide the same model or equivalent asap.
The onus is then on the dealer to look at the Act to see what options it may have to avoid a replacement in order to try the repair route.
I can understand your nervousness. Its not easy but just remember that the law is on your side. You are in the driving seat
The none legal argument to the dealer is "Pull your finger out and get it sorted!"
All the best
Phil
------------- If you're not on a fell your wasting your feet and for 2014 it's.......Feb Castleton Mar North Yors Moors; Apr Sutton on Sea; May Thirsk; Jun Clapham/Riverside (Lakes); July Wharfedale; August Crakehall; Sept Knaresborough; Oct Wirral Park/Clitheroe
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