Tranona
Well-Known Member
Apparently not sorted, we are clearly going round in circles. I lost interest in this thread about 10 pages ago but do want to pick up on this statment
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The law places the responsibility on you to satisfy yourself that you are prepared to buy the boat before you enter into the contract
</Quote>
The boat buying process or model does not allow you to fully satisfy yourself before entering into contract - in the views of many here. The contract makes provision for for some of the issues that can arise, such as material defects should they be found, but whether you are fully satisfied in all areas. Now having been through this I shall have a better idea of what to negotiate on before entering in to the next contract.
That is merely an everday statement of "caveat emptor". In other words the vendor is offering no warranty so therefore it is the buyer's responsibility to satisfy himself that he is making an offer he is prepared to complete - subject to the conditions of the contract.
In other words don't enter into the contract unless you want to buy the boat. The conditions are normally only to cover establishing whether the boat is as described, not whether you like it or not - unless you agree with the vendor otherwise.
This whole argument is whether a vendor should be forced to allow you try his boat before you commit to buying it - and the general conclusion is that is not a good idea - forcing a vendor to offer it, not that the trial is a bad idea.