milkman636
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2010
- Messages
- 1,482
- Location
- Palm of the Right Hand
- Tractor
- Bobcat CT335 + John Deere 1023e (former owner of Kubota BX2370-1, John Deere 5210, and Ford 2000)
Rolandman,
Seems like the dealer may be caught in the middle here since he delivered the tractor and now your holding the tractor and the financing company may be holding back part of the payment to him/Bobcat. It would be interesting to hear how this turns out.
It seems like the obligation would have been on your dealer to understand how the financing that he was offering you worked, and to prepare the paperwork properly. Your acceptance of delivery on the tractor was based on the terms you were presented at the time of sale. If he agreed to pay your taxes with financed money in the contract and now he is not, he may be considered to be breaching the sales agreement.
He should be the one in the hot seat on this, not you. I'd push back firmly and make them sweat. I wouldn't want to hang the guy for a mistake, but I would sure expect them to pony up a little and share the pain if a mistake was made.
After I recieved a new loan agreement with lower payments reflecting both party's contributions, then I would be willing to write a check for the taxes.
Seems like the dealer may be caught in the middle here since he delivered the tractor and now your holding the tractor and the financing company may be holding back part of the payment to him/Bobcat. It would be interesting to hear how this turns out.
It seems like the obligation would have been on your dealer to understand how the financing that he was offering you worked, and to prepare the paperwork properly. Your acceptance of delivery on the tractor was based on the terms you were presented at the time of sale. If he agreed to pay your taxes with financed money in the contract and now he is not, he may be considered to be breaching the sales agreement.
He should be the one in the hot seat on this, not you. I'd push back firmly and make them sweat. I wouldn't want to hang the guy for a mistake, but I would sure expect them to pony up a little and share the pain if a mistake was made.
After I recieved a new loan agreement with lower payments reflecting both party's contributions, then I would be willing to write a check for the taxes.