Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#23
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
To buy or not to buy...
On 2/13/2019 8:07 AM, John H. wrote:
On Wed, 13 Feb 2019 07:29:58 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 2/13/2019 6:55 AM, John H. wrote: On Tue, 12 Feb 2019 20:03:41 -0500, Alex wrote: True North wrote: The John flushes his head - show quoted text - "I'lll pick it up Thursday. Don't be too jealous, Donnie. Here, you can look and eat your little heart out. Let Lora see it too! https://allentown.craigslist.org/mcd/d/coopersburg-2010-honda-silverwing-600/6812030435.html" John, I think I recall reading that you said you put a deposit on the Silverwing to "hold" it and if you decided against purchasing after seeing it your deposit would be returned. That's fine if the seller agreed but it's something I never really understood about deposits, especially those made sight unseen. Why should a seller agree to hold an item, making it unavailable (lost opportunity) to other potential buyers and then return the good faith deposit if the buyer changes his/her mind. I always treated a deposit made under that kind of circumstance as being subject to forfeit if the buyer changed his/her mind. Happened a few times when I had the guitar shop. Guy would come in, fall in love with a guitar but didn't have the $$ to purchase at the time. If he put a deposit on it, I'd agree to hold it for a specific period of time (usually no more than a week or two) after which it would be made available for sale again to anyone. If the buyer decided *not* to purchase after the time period I said I'd hold it, his deposit was subject to being forfeited, depending on my mood at the time and his reason. I had one situation where a guy put $100 down on a $2,800 guitar and showed up *six* months later to complete the purchase. The guitar was long gone by then and the guy *demanded* his $100 back. Told him to take a hike, mostly because of his attitude, not the $100. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com I expect you're right, there's really no reason for the dealer to return my deposit. It's just a matter of trust. I asked him if I could change my mind and get the deposit back if there was something I didn't like or if it didn't 'fit'. He said there'd be no problem. I agree that if he changed his mind, I'd lose the deposit. But, I'm not worried about it. The main thing I wanted was for him to hold the bike until I got there. The guy I talked with is the owner of the dealership, and sounded trustworthy. (And my have things like Google reviews, Yelp, Facebook, etc. on his mind!) Like you, there are a few trustworthy folks who sell stuff! Besides, I can't imagine not liking the bike. I've been looking at them for several years now, and this is the nicest one with the lowest mileage I've seen. Yeah, the Silverwings are hard to find. I looked also last summer. My comments were not about *your* arrangement with the dealer; they were more general in nature regarding deposits. If he agreed, no problem exists. There are a lot of people who put down a small deposit on something and then expect to get it back if they change their mind. That's not fair to the seller unless he/she agrees to it. Selling on Craigslist was a pain in the ass for me and I stopped using it because people would schedule a visit and then never show up. For the short period of time I tried using Craigslist I made it clear that it was "first come, first served". |