tony17112acst
Junior Member
State = PA: I'm hoping this is the correct sub-forum.
My wife hit a concrete divider in very light snow on the road, moving very slowly, driving an All Wheel Drive (AWD) SUV we just purchased a few months ago (used) from a new car dealer. After coming to a stop, the SUV would just slip and slide sideways just trying to start moving again. When coming home, the AWD SUV couldn't even climb the light grade on the public road our home is located on (which my front wheel drive minivan handled).
After some testing in the snow, we have found that the front wheels are not driving at all, and the rear wheels only are spinning. We also found that this is a common problem with this vehicle.
I plan to contact the dealer and asking for our money back since it was clearly advertised with AWD (assuming we have it checked out and it is indeed not working correctly). I'm sure they will say "no," but can I use as leverage that we'd win a civil case against them if we had to sue since the AWD isn't working AND it very likely resulted in the crash itself?
In other words, is it likely that we have a good case if we had to sue to get our money back with nothing more than broken AWD, a crash in light snow, and the inability to drive up a light grade in light snow without sliding off the road?
Thanks in advance. -Tony
My wife hit a concrete divider in very light snow on the road, moving very slowly, driving an All Wheel Drive (AWD) SUV we just purchased a few months ago (used) from a new car dealer. After coming to a stop, the SUV would just slip and slide sideways just trying to start moving again. When coming home, the AWD SUV couldn't even climb the light grade on the public road our home is located on (which my front wheel drive minivan handled).
After some testing in the snow, we have found that the front wheels are not driving at all, and the rear wheels only are spinning. We also found that this is a common problem with this vehicle.
I plan to contact the dealer and asking for our money back since it was clearly advertised with AWD (assuming we have it checked out and it is indeed not working correctly). I'm sure they will say "no," but can I use as leverage that we'd win a civil case against them if we had to sue since the AWD isn't working AND it very likely resulted in the crash itself?
In other words, is it likely that we have a good case if we had to sue to get our money back with nothing more than broken AWD, a crash in light snow, and the inability to drive up a light grade in light snow without sliding off the road?
Thanks in advance. -Tony