mharvey
ClioSport Club Member
Hi all.
Just after a quick bit of advice on where I stand and what's the best approach for this situation.
After my girlfriend recently crashed my cup I needed some bodywork on the car.
Bought replacement parts and had them sent to the body-shop, they gave me a great quote but was cash in hand.
Went to pick up the car today and the car was outside on the yard, had been in the rain and had water beading on so was a little hard to inspect closely, looked great though.
I drove the car home and on arrival the water had dried off. On close inspection I have notice a lot of small light scratches over the bumper and a bit of overspray on the bonnet. Then noticed they have opened the doors on to a wall and damaged the edge of the bump-strip.
Now my worries are that there were marks on doors and bump-strips anyway (just nowhere near as severely) so he may deny that he caused these and while the overspray is quite obviously his mistake he may say the scratches were since I left.
How would people approach this and where do I stand. Should it have been presented better (ie in the dry) or should I have refused to take it till I'd seen it better??
Thanks and apologies for such a long post
Just after a quick bit of advice on where I stand and what's the best approach for this situation.
After my girlfriend recently crashed my cup I needed some bodywork on the car.
Bought replacement parts and had them sent to the body-shop, they gave me a great quote but was cash in hand.
Went to pick up the car today and the car was outside on the yard, had been in the rain and had water beading on so was a little hard to inspect closely, looked great though.
I drove the car home and on arrival the water had dried off. On close inspection I have notice a lot of small light scratches over the bumper and a bit of overspray on the bonnet. Then noticed they have opened the doors on to a wall and damaged the edge of the bump-strip.
Now my worries are that there were marks on doors and bump-strips anyway (just nowhere near as severely) so he may deny that he caused these and while the overspray is quite obviously his mistake he may say the scratches were since I left.
How would people approach this and where do I stand. Should it have been presented better (ie in the dry) or should I have refused to take it till I'd seen it better??
Thanks and apologies for such a long post