- Jul 18, 2017
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This was highlighted on another caravan forum and are not my words. Very interesting and something I did not know. They were successful with taking the dealer to court!
In straightforward cases , members are well-acquainted with the Consumer Rights Act 2015 [CRA2015] /Sale of Goods Act 1979. However, what happens legally if (as in our case) an inadequate caravan repair (paid for solely by the manufacturer) is done by the supplying dealer shortly before the caravan is 6 yrs old (assuming bought new) & that repair fails spectacularly just after this 6 year deadline – so out of time under the CRA2015/Sale of Goods Act? (Limitation requires cases generally to be started before 6 yrs).
One answer is that the courts recognise that the repair itself is a new (i.e. 2nd) contract (between dealer & manufacturer) to which the caravan owner has 3rd party rights as the prime beneficiary of that contract (via the Contract (Rights of 3rd Parties) Act 1999). Thus, if this repair is an abject failure, as in our case, the caravanner can as a last resort take legal action against the repairing dealer under this 2nd ("repair") contract providing the case is brought to court within 6 yrs of the “botched” repair work (which helpfully, by definition, will be later than the “sale contract” time limits).
This is an important extra protection for all caravan/motorhome owners, which they may be pleased to know about
and was successful in our case.
In straightforward cases , members are well-acquainted with the Consumer Rights Act 2015 [CRA2015] /Sale of Goods Act 1979. However, what happens legally if (as in our case) an inadequate caravan repair (paid for solely by the manufacturer) is done by the supplying dealer shortly before the caravan is 6 yrs old (assuming bought new) & that repair fails spectacularly just after this 6 year deadline – so out of time under the CRA2015/Sale of Goods Act? (Limitation requires cases generally to be started before 6 yrs).
One answer is that the courts recognise that the repair itself is a new (i.e. 2nd) contract (between dealer & manufacturer) to which the caravan owner has 3rd party rights as the prime beneficiary of that contract (via the Contract (Rights of 3rd Parties) Act 1999). Thus, if this repair is an abject failure, as in our case, the caravanner can as a last resort take legal action against the repairing dealer under this 2nd ("repair") contract providing the case is brought to court within 6 yrs of the “botched” repair work (which helpfully, by definition, will be later than the “sale contract” time limits).
This is an important extra protection for all caravan/motorhome owners, which they may be pleased to know about
