Tranona
Well-Known Member
Thanks Rotrax. I believe i shall.
You are wasting your time going that route. As I said Consumer Rights Act does not cover a private transaction. So merchantable quality and fitness for purpose don't apply. Your only chance is misrepresentation as a number of earlier posts have explained.
To do this you need to first collect your evidence of what was claimed about the engine by the vendor and the broker that convinced you their claim was valid and that your purchase decision was based on that claim. Then you need a comprehensive engineer's report to show that no work was done that could justify that claim. Your big problem is that it is now a year on and the evidence you need about the engine is its condition a year ago.
Once you have this evidence, present it to the vendor and the broker together with your claim for your loss, such as an estimate for the cost of bringing the engine up to a condition that would meet the description on which you relied. Do not mention taking legal action until you have a response. Give a time frame such as 30 days for a response. What you do then depends on the response or lack of. If the latter then start the court proceedings.
I have been successful with the Small Claims procedure. To get the court on your side you need both a well prepared case with all the evidence that you can get, and importantly be able to show that you have tried to resolve the issue through negotiation, arbitration etc and that taking it to court is a last resort.
As already suggested speak to the RYA legal department and if the broker is a member of the YDSA or BMF then contact them.