So I purchased a vehicle from a used car dealership in 2022 and sold it to me with “95,000”on the odometer. I didn’t know about Carfax at the time and later discover the car actually had 275,000 miles and they altered it. I unfortunately like a idiot purchased this. I tried to sell it a year later and the guy who was buying it did Carfax and was calling me a scammer but I was not aware. Long story I didn’t sell it. Now vehicle doesn’t run due to engine issues….

I can’t sell it because the miles are wrong and I am aware of this now.

I filed a fraud claim with DMV fraud division since they are a dealer and provided the contract of purchase showing miles I received and the Carfax showing the change under their ownership

My questions are

  1. would they actually investigate this or just brush it off?

  2. if they investigate and claim it was fraud would I be able to sue in civil court for my money back in exchange for the non working vehicle now ?

I’m kind of out $8,200 bucks now because of their fraud and feel stuck.

  • blakef223@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    See Carfax comment above. This is a shady dealership and their reviews speak for themselves.

    I believe the car was used for Uber or ride share of some sort which is why one owner put so many miles on it before selling the car.

    Okay, and none of that matters when it comes to getting your money back.

    The miles were clearly changed. Wether they changed odometer or rolled back. The car shouldn’t have had the miles changed. It’s true miles are over 300,000 now after the 20K+ I put on.

    This is the part that matters. If you can PROVE that they rolled it back or knew it was rolled back then its time to talk to them about getting all of your money back in exchange for the car. If they won’t agree to that then it’s time for small-claims court, if your still in NV then the limit is $10k which you would fall under.

    You should 100% report them to NHTSA/DOT but I’d try to get the money from them first because this is likely a LLC that will dissolve and you’ll be trying to get blood from a rock.

    I’ve had to repair vehicle with several parts since purchasing.

    Again, not really relevant especially since in this price range we’re probably talking about something 10+ years old right?

    • Current_Road_5179@alien.topOPB
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      Got it. I’m having my cousin who is attorney send a demand letter tomorrow with request for money in exchange for vehicle or a resolution or else taking them to court while the fraud with the DMV is reviewed

      The history of vehicle is clear. They have been in business long enough to know how to change miles and what the miles on vehicle was when they purchased it. I assume used car dealers aren’t buying cars without some research to probability. They held onto car for 6 months before reselling.

      I guess if they want to lie about it then we will go to court and have a judge determine it.