ari
Well-Known Member
The contract is not between equals. Far from it. The seller may not disclose defects and the broker acts purely on behalf of the seller - caveat emptor. So the purchaser has to incur costs - lift out and survey (let's face it, most people would not buy a boat over, say, £10K without a survey). It is only at this point that the buyer really knows the boat's worth to him. There is nothing equal about that.
Which is precisely why the offer is made subject to survey and sea trial. SO that if the survey shows up something that affects what the boat is worth then it is possible to re negotiate.
Let's put this on the other foot. You have it your way, don't put down a deposit. Pay for a lift out, have a survey, and the broker says to you "oh, sorry, just taken a deposit from another buyer, boat is now off the market".
And/or you travel down, stay in a hotel perhaps, have your trial and like it and the next day same thing happens, broker tells you boat now under offer elsewhere.
And why shouldn't he? He has absolutely zero commitment from you.
That will be ok will it?
Or are you going to say that's unfair too, you shouldn't have to make a commitment (deposit) but the broker should commit to selling you the boat.
You seem to want an awful lot of things your way.
As has been said, the current system works perfectly. You agree to buy assuming all is well. You place a deposit on that basis and that holds the boat for you whilst your survey and trial are arranged and completed. Then, if there is material reason or if you really don't like the boat on trial, you re-negotiate or you pull out. If all well (or re-negotiation successful) you complete.
What could be simpler?