FordFirst

SHOtimes List Archive

DEALERSHIP TRANSACTION: LIFE LESSON OR IS

. Become a Supporting Member to hide the ad above & support a small business
mailbot Avatar
mailbot Mail List Archive Bot
., Online, USA   USA
This read-only message was archived from a public mail list.
Mail From: "Koll" <(email redacted)>

Jim,

Sorry about the issue surrounding the purchase of the car.

A couple of observations.

The dealer is under no obligation what-so-ever to buy the car back. They are
approaching this like a spot-cash-sale. If you walk up to a dealer and say.
Here's a car. I need cash, you'll always get this kind of offer. They're
not in the business to take on inventory of older cars that are out of sync
with what they public is trending towards. That is, small efficient cars.
They would rather not own the car at all. Their price was them telling you
"no way".

I did the same thing in reverse on a dealer. I needed to get out of a
Lincoln Mark VII LSC back when I was a punk. I went to a dealer and told
them my story of desperation. I'll take anything. They pointed to a
Pontiac 2000 and I said OK. It was the nicest car on their lot (Ford
store). I took it in the shorts at first. Getting nothing on my LSC and
paying full boat for the J-car. But, I drove back by that lot 9 months
later and they were STILL trying to get rid of that car. Could they come
back to me and say... We want our Pontiac back?

I just ran a 99 T-C with 122K on the clock through Edmunds...

Trade in: $6,353 Private sale: 7,407 Dealer retail: 8,505.

Sounds like they're a little high, but even if they're 25% high, selling it
private party is the best way to recoup the money. Take a deep breath. The
last thing you want to do is get on a first-name basis with some lawyer over
this. Be cool, smart and patient and you should loose very little money on
this. You'll be laughing about it next year.

Good luck,

Koll

----- Original Message -----
From: <(email redacted)>
To: <(email redacted)>
Sent: Wednesday, August 16, 2006 2:26 PM
Subject: [Shotimes] DEALERSHIP TRANSACTION: LIFE LESSON OR IS RECOURSE
POSSIBLE? (sorta long, but quick read)


> Hello everyone,
>
> My mom bought a b99 Lincoln Town Car Signature Edition (excellent
> condition,
> $6,500) with 122K on it while I was at the SHO convention. (That was her
> first
> mistake, doing this while the bcar guybbmebwas outta town!) She
_______________________________________________
Shotimes mailing list
(email redacted)
team.net/mailman/listinfo/shotimes


Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
mailbot Avatar
mailbot Mail List Archive Bot
., Online, USA   USA
This read-only message was archived from a public mail list.
Mail From: Jon Heese <(email redacted)>

Only one problem (unless I misread the original post): she already sold
the car back to the dealer.

Regards,
Jon Heese

Koll wrote:
> Jim,
>
> Sorry about the issue surrounding the purchase of the car.
>
> A couple of observations.
>
> The dealer is under no obligation what-so-ever to buy the car back. They
> are approaching this like a spot-cash-sale. If you walk up to a dealer
> and say. Here's a car. I need cash, you'll always get this kind of
> offer. They're not in the business to take on inventory of older cars
> that are out of sync with what they public is trending towards. That
> is, small efficient cars. They would rather not own the car at all.
> Their price was them telling you "no way".
>
> I did the same thing in reverse on a dealer. I needed to get out of a
> Lincoln Mark VII LSC back when I was a punk. I went to a dealer and
> told them my story of desperation. I'll take anything. They pointed to
> a Pontiac 2000 and I said OK. It was the nicest car on their lot (Ford
> store). I took it in the shorts at first. Getting nothing on my LSC
> and paying full boat for the J-car. But, I drove back by that lot 9
> months later and they were STILL trying to get rid of that car. Could
> they come back to me and say... We want our Pontiac back?
>
> I just ran a 99 T-C with 122K on the clock through Edmunds...
>
> Trade in: $6,353 Private sale: 7,407 Dealer retail: 8,505.
>
> Sounds like they're a little high, but even if they're 25% high, selling
> it private party is the best way to recoup the money. Take a deep
> breath. The last thing you want to do is get on a first-name basis with
> some lawyer over this. Be cool, smart and patient and you should loose
> very little money on this. You'll be laughing about it next year.
>
> Good luck,
>
> Koll
>
> ----- Original Message ----- From: <(email redacted)>
> To: <(email redacted)>
> Sent: Wednesday, August 16, 2006 2:26 PM
> Subject: [Shotimes] DEALERSHIP TRANSACTION: LIFE LESSON OR IS RECOURSE
> POSSIBLE? (sorta long, but quick read)
>
>
>> Hello everyone,
>>
>> My mom bought a b99 Lincoln Town Car Signature Edition (excellent
>> condition,
>> $6,500) with 122K on it while I was at the SHO convention. (That was
>> her first
>> mistake, doing this while the bcar guybbmebwas outta town!) She
> _______________________________________________
> Shotimes mailing list
> (email redacted)
> team.net/mailman/listinfo/shotimes
_______________________________________________
Shotimes mailing list
(email redacted)
team.net/mailman/listinfo/shotimes


Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
. Become a Supporting Member to hide the ad above & support a small business

Sorry, you can't reply to this topic. It has been closed.

Having trouble posting or changing forum settings?
Read the Forum Help (FAQ) or click Contact Support at the bottom of the page.



. Become a Supporting Member to hide the ad above & support a small business


Join The Club
Sign in to ask questions, share photos, and access all website features
Your Cars
1929 Ford Model A
Text Size
Larger Smaller
Reset Save