well get rid of the car and cut your losses
2006-08-29 14:58:39
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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in case you hit a take care of rail that changed into at streetlevel because of an before coincidence that must be coated lower than your coverage as a highway threat. because the truck driving force did not hit you he's now to not blame on your damages that's why you weren't given his coverage thoughts. It would not look honest because the truck changed into indirectly to blame on your harm notwithstanding that's the regulation. If it were diverse genuinely each body must be suing for each thing from he compelled me off the line to the wind from the truck pushed my automobile. He ought to make contact with you or he's now to not blame on your coincidence. The broking is in simple terms to blame for mechanical breakdowns, not injuries. in case you do not have highway threat coverage coverage you've to pay for the upkeep your self. you may really communicate to an lawyer yet when there is in simple terms harm for your automobile hiring an an lawyer to report more beneficial healthful will probably cost more beneficial than the upkeep.
2016-11-23 13:44:45
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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If it's a licensed shop...a new car dealer is!!...then file a complaint with your local DMV(dept of motor vehicles) or whoever issues the license.
Around here, if DMV gets a complaint about fraudulent repairs, they act quick and take the necessary action
2006-08-29 15:12:26
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answer #3
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answered by Imerc 3
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must not be a very good dealer. i've been in dealership for ten years, and i'm the one that gets to fix the ones nobody else can. i haven't found a car i couldn't fix yet
2006-08-29 16:29:05
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answer #4
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answered by plymouthfurysport68 3
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yes, contact your state's attorney general office and the local better business bureau. Those two options can offer you good backing and information. You may have a claim with the lemon laws, too.
Good luck with your issue
2006-08-29 14:58:42
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answer #5
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answered by pukcipriavroc8v 4
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if your state has a ''lemon law'', i would suggest filing under this law. if not, you can park it in a highly seen area of town with a few choice words about the dealership written in big letters all over it. this usually hurts them worse. good luck.
2006-08-29 15:05:24
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answer #6
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answered by briggster15 1
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get it out of there and get it fixed somewhere else.If they havent fixed it in 8 months they are not going to fix it.
2006-08-29 22:04:28
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answer #7
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answered by frank m 5
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SORRY BUD YOU JUST GOT A LEMON AND THERE ARE LAWS THAT PROTECT YOU FROM THEM. CONTACT BEST CONSUMER AFFAIRS.
2006-08-29 15:10:04
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answer #8
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answered by woodtigerdp 3
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