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You bought a five year old vehicle that was advertised online, as is, without test driving it, and sight unseen, from a place you had never dealt with before? Did you check out the dealership references, or just put your faith in their BMW sign?
Sounds like they didn't treat you very well, but I am sorry to say, you appear to have painted a target on your back. |
Shouldn't there be a lemon law that applies to this?
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I know its somewhat true, however I expect the big dealers to aspire to a higher level of quality. That's why you pay the higher prices. If I were to buy a car at distance from a Dealer I would expect them to represent it perfectly. If they pulled these kinds of scams then they compromise that sales avenue. Clearly they don't care because you can't hurt them from far away. |
I asked all the right questions, checked the vehicle history and based on all of the info i had i made a decision. Unfortunately, the info I was given by this dealership proved to be grossly inaccurate. Yes, I did put some faith in the fact that it's a BMW dealership and they wouldn't lie to me over and over about their product. I've purchased 6 cars on the internet in the last 5 years and this is the first time I've encountered such dishonest people. And here's the kicker: it's the first time I bought from the actual dealership and not an independent seller. Maybe I do have it backwards. I guess the independent sellers have to care since they don't do the volume these large dealerships do, but that being said why would a large dealership need to screw a customer. The bottom line is that it's bad business. I was flat out lied to initially and they won't even try to correct this. It's sickening. And it's no wonder when you search this dealership it's nothing but nightmare stories and bad reviews. I'm always very thorough in my car searches and this is the one time I was pressed to buy something quick. The money isn't even what bothers me, it's the people at this dealership so willingly lying and ignoring what they've done. I just wouldn't expect this from a high end dealership, regardless of brand. period
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Do you have 'written' confirmation from Momentum that the vehicle is in 'perfect' condition?
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... buying a car, horse, house, land, collectible gun, et al, sight unseen by someones eyes, is tantamount to an open door. Sorry that dlr screwed you. Just because it was a BMW dlr, or MB dlr, or P Car dlr, doesn't mean a thing, imo. You were 'remote', they moved a 'unit' off the lot. Caveat emptor. Find a good local dlr, or better yet, find a good local Indie and get some things fixed that makes the sumbitch run. Then, maybe toss it... GL, mD |
I had a similar experience but ate the costs not wanting to deal with the hassle, but I think your situation is worse. Based on what I've read and since you didn't pick up the car in Texas, you might have some options of interstate fraud. If you have enough info in writing (I didn't), you can use that your advantage. I would seek advise from a lawyer.
Also, they would be able to subpoena the vehicle's service history records. If it was ever in for the sunroof, or tranny issue and they knew about it then...and was in the service records, they flat out lied to you. There's gotta be a lawyer on here that can validate/invalidate any of my comments. If you need a TX lawyer to represent you, I would hit the bimmerfest fourms and try and find a bmw driver that would help you out. I'm sure they picked it up from an auction and realized it was a piece of junk and tried to unload it as easy as they could. |
Yea, I'll probably need to find a TX lawyer to educate me on TX laws and what my options might be. What a sh*tty situation!
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I must admit i could have gotten cought in this situation too because i would expect better from a high end dealership. my eyes are now open and will definately keep away from MOMENTUM BMW. thanks for the heads up.
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If it was misrepresented by the seller (and it appears it was) then that is the avenue that the purchaser has to resolve the situation. The sad part is that the OP reported that he has nothing in writing, it was all by telephone. That doesn't remove the obligation of the seller to be truthful, but it does make it very difficult to prove anything. On the upside, and it is a small upside, there is one CPO 4.8is on the BMWNA web site that has similar miles. It is listed at $36,000. This one sold for $27,000. So, $10k in repairs puts the two vehicles in the same ballpark. The OP would have been better off to buy a CPO vehicle, and do his homework, prior to purchasing, but he appears to have bought it cheaply enough to fund some repairs. |
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