I live in North Carolina.
While my partner and I were at a dealership where she ultimately purchased a car, I had plugged in my Mustang Mach E to one of the dealership's charging ports. At some point, I got a notification the car had stopped charging; I made the assumption another person or employee had simply plugged in another car. 15 minutes later while waiting on paperwork we go outside and I notice that the car was unplugged and the charge port door cover (a piece that looks like it simply clips on over the black plastic that is the door itself) was missing. It wasn't on the ground under or around it either, and a Tesla belonging to the dealership was plugged in instead.
I told a sales manager about it, and he said someone would help. Another employee came outside, took pictures, asked if I was sure it was on before we came, and ultimately said he would take care of it. Unfortunately I didn't get that specific "deal" to replace the part in writing. However, we exchanged numbers and I have all text records.
I have now texted him 5-7 days apart for 30 days asking for updates. Not once did he offer an update on his own. His first response was that he was sick for a week, the next time he asked for my VIN and said he was waiting on parts. Third, he confirmed that the part was ordered and on its way and would take five days, maybe one more for painting (so while i don't have docs saying he would specifically replace a part, he has talked about a part being ordered for me on record). I have now texted twice more since then and received no response any longer.
I have now been trying to contact the General Manager of the dealership, which is an entirely different story on its own and has been a pain, but so far have been unsuccessful, though I do have an employee that stated she would send my request to her manager with the request that it go to the General Manager.
My question is this; if I'm unable to get ahold of the General Manager or if they are unable or unwilling to fix the situation, should this be reported to the police? Or should that be skipped (maybe because I've waited too long?) and should a lawyer be involved?
Thank you,
Kyle
While my partner and I were at a dealership where she ultimately purchased a car, I had plugged in my Mustang Mach E to one of the dealership's charging ports. At some point, I got a notification the car had stopped charging; I made the assumption another person or employee had simply plugged in another car. 15 minutes later while waiting on paperwork we go outside and I notice that the car was unplugged and the charge port door cover (a piece that looks like it simply clips on over the black plastic that is the door itself) was missing. It wasn't on the ground under or around it either, and a Tesla belonging to the dealership was plugged in instead.
I told a sales manager about it, and he said someone would help. Another employee came outside, took pictures, asked if I was sure it was on before we came, and ultimately said he would take care of it. Unfortunately I didn't get that specific "deal" to replace the part in writing. However, we exchanged numbers and I have all text records.
I have now texted him 5-7 days apart for 30 days asking for updates. Not once did he offer an update on his own. His first response was that he was sick for a week, the next time he asked for my VIN and said he was waiting on parts. Third, he confirmed that the part was ordered and on its way and would take five days, maybe one more for painting (so while i don't have docs saying he would specifically replace a part, he has talked about a part being ordered for me on record). I have now texted twice more since then and received no response any longer.
I have now been trying to contact the General Manager of the dealership, which is an entirely different story on its own and has been a pain, but so far have been unsuccessful, though I do have an employee that stated she would send my request to her manager with the request that it go to the General Manager.
My question is this; if I'm unable to get ahold of the General Manager or if they are unable or unwilling to fix the situation, should this be reported to the police? Or should that be skipped (maybe because I've waited too long?) and should a lawyer be involved?
Thank you,
Kyle