Please clarify how he is wrong? I'm unaware of any state that will allow the "reversal" of a title transfer.
I'd like to see how this would work as well.
Please clarify how he is wrong? I'm unaware of any state that will allow the "reversal" of a title transfer.
Decision analysis?
I'd like to see how this would work as well.
Legally extorting someone over an honest mistake.
I don't think you understand what extortion is. Consequences of honest mistakes are reimbursed by cash all the time. That's what car insurance is, for example.
If someone accidentally dings my car, the insurer can pay to repair the damage, or I can choose to not repair it and settle for a cash sum. This is no different.
The dealer already agreed to bear a cost, this would be an alternative settlement that costs the dealer less than what it already agreed to absorb.
This transaction actually maximizes the mutual benefit to the customer and the dealer, since no additional tax and title costs to the pair would be incurred.
He probably thinks that people who "cash out" when their car gets wrecked are "extorting" the insurance company, that the only way to fairly handle damaged to a car after a car accident is to ALWAYS repair the vehicle.
Negative. I disagree because the dealer already stated how they preferred to deal with the situation. For whatever reason they felt a buyback was in their best financial interest. That is their prerogative.
The buyer bears partial liability as well - all the information he needed was available to him at the time of purchase.
Finally, the dealership likely bears no legal responsibility for two reasons:
A) the contract is written for a specific vehicle based on VIN. Not a list of options.
B) even if somehow the buyer was able to make a case that he was shorted the bigger engine, their liability would be the difference between the price paid and the prevailing price for that spec car. Since the OP stated he paid the 1.6 price, that number would be at or close to $0.