CarlJStoneham
Member
State: TX
I'll try to present the facts with as much honesty as possible.
Feb 10, 2005. On the way to closing on a house, a truck ahead of us has a large piece of fiberglass fly out of the bed and hit the front of our Toyota Highlander. We flag the driver down, stop and after surveying the mostly superficial damage, he agrees to pay for the damage out of pocket instead of filing an insurance claim. I agree (dumb idea, I know, but we're in a hurry to close). During this exchange, my wife stays in the car (I assume this would preclude her fromt estifying that he agreed to pay).
About 3 weeks later, I finally got around to calling him with a quote we had been given by the dealership for the repairs. After leaving several messages over the course of 2 weeks, I finally got in touch with him (he claimed that all of my messages had broken up) and gave him the quote then offered to take the SUV in for an estimate at a body shop he chose. he said he would call back the next day. After a week, I called him again and, as of today, have called approx 10times (including twice to the business he owns). He has yet to return any of my calls (the only time I've spoken to him since the accident was the day I got lucky and he answered his phone).
The damage is about $500, so I'm inclined to take him to Small Claims Court for the damages. My questions:
1. Can I sue him for the estimate (I'd hate to pay for the repairs and then have him back out (since they're cosmetic)).
2. Does my wife staying in the car mean I'm the only witness to the verbal contract?
2b. If she calls him and he agrees to get back to us with the number for a body shop, does that make her a second witness?
3. What proof am I lacking (I should be able to get the phone records)?
4. Any other suggestions? Storng case? Weak case? etc
Thanks in advance.
I'll try to present the facts with as much honesty as possible.
Feb 10, 2005. On the way to closing on a house, a truck ahead of us has a large piece of fiberglass fly out of the bed and hit the front of our Toyota Highlander. We flag the driver down, stop and after surveying the mostly superficial damage, he agrees to pay for the damage out of pocket instead of filing an insurance claim. I agree (dumb idea, I know, but we're in a hurry to close). During this exchange, my wife stays in the car (I assume this would preclude her fromt estifying that he agreed to pay).
About 3 weeks later, I finally got around to calling him with a quote we had been given by the dealership for the repairs. After leaving several messages over the course of 2 weeks, I finally got in touch with him (he claimed that all of my messages had broken up) and gave him the quote then offered to take the SUV in for an estimate at a body shop he chose. he said he would call back the next day. After a week, I called him again and, as of today, have called approx 10times (including twice to the business he owns). He has yet to return any of my calls (the only time I've spoken to him since the accident was the day I got lucky and he answered his phone).
The damage is about $500, so I'm inclined to take him to Small Claims Court for the damages. My questions:
1. Can I sue him for the estimate (I'd hate to pay for the repairs and then have him back out (since they're cosmetic)).
2. Does my wife staying in the car mean I'm the only witness to the verbal contract?
2b. If she calls him and he agrees to get back to us with the number for a body shop, does that make her a second witness?
3. What proof am I lacking (I should be able to get the phone records)?
4. Any other suggestions? Storng case? Weak case? etc
Thanks in advance.