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#1
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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." |
#2
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I hope that this is a good lesson to those in the industry.
Lying about the condition of a boat you sell may not produce the intended results. I'll bet that MarineMax thought that they had just clipped another pigeon. It looks like the pigeon won the battle in the end. Chuck, I know you are in the industry. The title of the thread seems to indicate that you think that this was excessive. What makes you feel that way? |
#3
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#4
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#5
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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." Chuck, could you share a link to that story either here or via email? I need to send it to an acquaintance and I cannot locate the full story on google. Thanks! Jim |
#6
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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)? |
#7
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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." The court case was apparently last year. I wonder if MarineMax wrote the check as declared in the judgement or strung the poor guy out even further with an appeal. |
#8
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#9
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![]() JimH wrote: 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." Chuck, could you share a link to that story either here or via email? I need to send it to an acquaintance and I cannot locate the full story on google. Thanks! Jim Check your AOL account. This information came to me by email from one of the attorney's involved in the case. The judge's decision and the court order are attached to the email. |
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