Question:

Sold a car to a 18 year old now his father is calling me stating he wants his money back the son bought it?

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sold a car to a 18 year old guy who came to check it out monday this week spent about 2 hours checkng it out with two of his buddies ,, he got underneath the jeep wrangler to check out the frame checked the oil in the motor i told him the minor knick knacks it needed and the pro's and con's of the jeep.. the jeep on the dash said it had 155,000 the title said 200010 miles .. before he paid me on tuesday that tuesday he checked everything out again! with the same 2 guys he originally came with . before he bought it he asked to see the title i showed him he compared the vin number on title to the vin number on the dash everything i told him about the vehicle odometer discrepancy .. and everything his father now calls me after he allowed his son to drive the jeep home 65+ miles home with no registered plates or insurance .. the father states i misrepresented the car to his son and that he wants the money back .. i didnt sell the car to the father the son is 18 of legal age and had a lic.

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6 ANSWERS


  1. The father has no legal rights but he might try to make your life miserable and could even take you to Small Claims court, although he wouldn't win. Buyer's remorse is very common in the used car market. Happens every day.


  2. tell him to beat off...the son was 18 and of legal consent... the car was AS IS...do not give the money back

  3. Well, if you signed over the title to the kid, then its a done deal. He's 18, he signed for the car, even drove it home. It's his car, his dad cannot demand money back if his son signed it. He should have come with his son to check the car out. So assuming the son paid and you signed the title over to him, its his car. If the father doesn't like it, he'll have to deal with it because his son legally owns the car now.

  4. Posting the same question 10 more times will not help you much, talk to a lawyer.

  5. As far as im concerned he is of legal age. So that means that it is now his problem. Once you sign and give the title that means it his vehicle. I wouldn't worry about his father because there is nothing much that he can do now. It is there problem now. If the father is so upset then why didn't he go with his son to look at the vehicle that would have solved the whole problem.

  6. They knew that the title and license were conflicting and he still bought it. The father could take no legal action, he has no laws backing him up. Plus if anything in the car brakes down, any sale of a car with over 100,000 miles is as-is and he will get no money back.

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