mikehibb
Well-Known Member
This is the way that it happened with our boat.
Boat advertised for a price, we made a lower offer subject to survey.
Vendor accepts the offer subject to survey and requested a deposit on the subject to survey terms.
Note deposit is just to reserve the boat for yourself subject to survey within reasonable time, in our case we arranged survey one week later.
Deposit was returnable if the survey showed major defects, the vendor also offered to rectify all reasonable faults found on survey at their own cost or alternatively renegotiate new price based on price reduction for my cost to rectify the faults.
There were a couple of faults that I had not spotted (that is why I paid for a surveyor) problems wth damage to rudder and corrosion on keel, these were only apparent on lift out, I had instructed my surveyor to attend this any way on my behalf.
Vendor accepted surveyors report and agreed to fix at their cost to my surveyors satisfaction and further inspection
Sounds too good to be true, but that is what happened.
The Vendor was infact a well know and much ridiculed (on this forum) charter company.
I found then to be true to their word all the way through the process, maybe this is because they buy and sell over 100 boats every year and know that that it is easier in the long run to keep a good name, rather than have 100 complaints.
My fender neighbour also has an ex charter boat, from the same company and runs a sailing school.
Boat advertised for a price, we made a lower offer subject to survey.
Vendor accepts the offer subject to survey and requested a deposit on the subject to survey terms.
Note deposit is just to reserve the boat for yourself subject to survey within reasonable time, in our case we arranged survey one week later.
Deposit was returnable if the survey showed major defects, the vendor also offered to rectify all reasonable faults found on survey at their own cost or alternatively renegotiate new price based on price reduction for my cost to rectify the faults.
There were a couple of faults that I had not spotted (that is why I paid for a surveyor) problems wth damage to rudder and corrosion on keel, these were only apparent on lift out, I had instructed my surveyor to attend this any way on my behalf.
Vendor accepted surveyors report and agreed to fix at their cost to my surveyors satisfaction and further inspection
Sounds too good to be true, but that is what happened.
The Vendor was infact a well know and much ridiculed (on this forum) charter company.
I found then to be true to their word all the way through the process, maybe this is because they buy and sell over 100 boats every year and know that that it is easier in the long run to keep a good name, rather than have 100 complaints.
My fender neighbour also has an ex charter boat, from the same company and runs a sailing school.