Nope. Not in the way you mean. If you think about it, you already know why such a claim is silly. Go ahead and read through the UCC on rejection and such and see what the law envisions.
For the court issue, you've got it backwards. OP goes in and rejects car as tendered. Dealership will have to sue for breach. OP says damaged. Dealership says not. OP wins because a "dealership" has no personal knowledge of it NOT being damaged and it would not get in. We have to get some chain of custody for the time and then some testimony from someone(s) with direct knowledge. Think in terms of admissible evidence. Who will have a harder time and more of a hassle "proving" their position? Does that mean it is not possible? Of course not. But, it is not going to be the night watchman saying he didn't see anyone damage the car.
sorry T but no, I don't have it backwards. The plaintiff (seller) is suing for the money so all they have to prove is they have a valid claim for it. The contract is evidence of that. If the buyer wants to put forth a defense, then they must prove their defense. Arguing anything else would be the downfall of our courts. I can see it now:
plaintiff; defendant owes me money as proven by this contract
defendant: nope, they said I didn't have to pay it if I didn't want to
judge: well, I guess you can't prove the defendant owes you the money. You lose.
Dealership will have to sue for breach.
Yep. Here is the contract. We had the car there. Buyer refused to pay the money they agreed to in the contract. Judge to defendant: did you give them the money? Defendant: nope.
breach proven
The perfect tender is an argument to rescind the contract so in that, the defendant becomes the defacto plaintiff. In their defense they are effectively suing to rescind the contract and as such, must prove their claim.
OP wins because a "dealership" has no personal knowledge of it NOT being damaged and it would not get in.
What? Absolute horse****. You cannot prove a negative. He can testify that there is no additional damage than when the buyer accepted the contract though.
We have to get some chain of custody for the time and then some testimony from someone(s) with direct knowledge. Think in terms of admissible evidence
BSBSBSBSBSBSBS. dealer can testify it is in the same condition as when the contract was struck. Buyer has to prove otherwise because they are making the claim it is altered.