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wrote in message ups.com... MarineMax of Ohio, Inc., the world's largest marine retailer, must pay a Columbus man $2.5 million for selling a yacht with a hull that had been severely damaged while saying only minor repairs had been made to it -- and then refusing to take it back for the purchase price. State Judge Paul C. Moon of Ottawa County, Ohio awarded triple and punitive damages, attorneys fees, pre-judgment interest and costs to Doug Borror, said Borror's attorney, Jim Arnold of Clark Perdue Arnold & Scott in Columbus. Arnold filed the case under the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act. Judge Moon called MarineMax's sale in 2002 of a 51-foot 2001 Sea Ray yacht to Borror for $780,000, "conscious, deliberate, malicious, deceitful and particularly gross and egregious." MarineMax of Ohio is located in Port Clinton, Ohio: http://www.yachtworld.com/marinemaxohio/ Official site: http://www.marinemax.com/ The official Findings of Fact and Conclusion court document: http://tinyurl.com/nq6wh I know Greg Group, surveyor, who discovered the damage. He surveyed 3 of my boats. I wonder why the damage and subsequent repairs were not discovered during the initial survey (prior to the purchase)? |
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