PaulMass;2841439]If advice from an attorney means diddlysquat, that makes the advice received here worth less than diddlysquat.
the point wasn't that neither was worthless. It's just that until a court determines you win, it is an opinion.
The senior members here have stated that failing to replace the timing belt immediately upon purchase of the vehicle constitutes negligence. My attorney does not agree.
Then go with his advice and drop the car off at the sellers house and start the process of getting your money back.
You have stated that I am under some obligation to report back after my case is decided. I am under no such obligation.
of course you aren't. Not sure how such an obligation would be enforced but obviously, there isn't one to enforce.
I have offered to post back if (and only if) someone posts any case in the US where failure to immediately replace a timing belt upon purchase of a used vehicle constitutes negligence.
Failure to maintain a vehicle as specified by the manufacturer is negligence. If you believe otherwise, try ignoring the maintenance schedule and make a warranty claim from the manufacturer for a damaged engine or some other item that has a scheduled maintenance period. You will be soundly rebuffed.
My point is: if the belt had not been changed within the time specified by the manufacturer, that is negligent. If there is damage caused by a failure of the belt, it is due to negligence.
and let's make this clear; I believe I am the only one really standing on this point. Others have clearly rejected my position. My point is; if I was the seller, here is what I would argue:
the car worked fine when I sold it. It would have passed inspection when I sold it. Only due to actions by the buyer was it damaged. There is no way to prove you abused the vehicle but the fact it was running just fine when you purchased it and there is obviously no proof the seller acted to commit fraud by hiding some defect, the resulting damage was caused by the buyers actions, or lack of i.e. negligence.
Failing to put oil in the car would be no less negligent, in my opinion. It's easier to check the oil but you still know it is required to make the car operate properly. Since you did fail to inspect the timing belt for wear (not suggesting you tear down an engine just to do so), once you accept the car as ok to purchase, the maintenance requirements are now on you and a failure to provide proper maintenance is negligent.
Honestly, I don't know if you would win or not in court. If the seller disagrees with your position, that's where it will end up though.
and back to my argument about you being liable for the engine:
even if you may be able to reverse the sale, you still caused damage to the engine. The seller did not sell it to you with a damaged engine. At most, he sold it to you with a worn out timing belt. Your use caused the damage and as such, you cannot simply rescind the sale. You are liable for the damages you caused.
again, that is the tack I would take if defending myself as a seller. Whether it flies or not would be up to a court because I would not refund the money without a courts order to do so.