Judge has ruled if it was alright during inspection, it should be alright and Lemon Law would not apply.
Judge has ruled if it was alright during inspection, it should be alright and Lemon Law would not apply.
Where is the sauce?
U post so many i also duno where u read from
I remembered your thread on taking the dealer to court, was this the quote that the judge said for your case?Judge has ruled if it was alright during inspection, it should be alright and Lemon Law would not apply.
1st & foremost, thanks for sharing aka reminding all drivers with this piece of inportant information with a good intention for sure.After passed inspection, dealer can take out things that he has put in to pass the test and may, also, damaged parts while doing so.
You do not have possession of the car until he handover to you which may be days or weeks later.
Lemon Law says it take effect from date of delivery.
See feedback and response item 10.
https://www.mti.gov.sg/legislation/Documents/Response to Public Feedback on Lemon Law.pdf
"This, the Plaintiff argued, was proof that the Vehicle was not of satisfactory quality. However, I noted that the Vehicle was sent to Vicom for inspection, and that it had passed the said inspection."
From what I understand, dealer normally top up air-con, radiator, etc before sending the car for inspection and make sure it can pass the test for the day.
Better to pass the word around that car buyer should not send car for pre-sales inspection. This can save alot of heartache later.
Even can, dealer can still pull a few stunts as TS mentioned about the air con.another way is to send the car for inspection on the day you pay or give cheque. Send for inspection, pass, then hand over the $$, and drive the car home. Don't know if thats allow..LOL
From what I understand, dealer normally top up air-con, radiator, etc before sending the car for inspection and make sure it can pass the test for the day.
Judge has ruled if it was alright during inspection, it should be alright and Lemon Law would not apply.