repairs and carfax

P

Passenger

Seems to me, repairing damages to your car prior to selling is
counterproductive. Why? A savvy car buyer will purchase a Carfax
report and STILL try to low ball. Opinions?
 
I got a refund from Carfax when I bought my '95 Civic EX. It was
listed as one owner when it fact I was buying it from the third owner.
They snidely asked me if I didn't think the report was worth *anything*
and I replied that since I couldn't trust the info, no. So they refunded
my fee.

How did you find out it had had three owners before you?

I hear autocheck.com is better than carfax.com
 
How did you find out it had had three owners before you?

I hear autocheck.com is better than carfax.com


The guy I bought it from had bought it from his uncle three years
earlier. Same last name, different first. The owner's manual had the
name of a third person written in it, and the kid (a college student
moving back out West - I got a good deal because it was a risky sale but
the car was rust-free and under book, with a new clutch and
transmission) confirmed that his uncle had bought it slightly used. So
Carfax had no excuse for calling it a "One Owner!" car.
 
Leftie said:
The guy I bought it from had bought it from his uncle three years
earlier. Same last name, different first. The owner's manual had the name
of a third person written in it, and the kid (a college student moving
back out West - I got a good deal because it was a risky sale
but the car was rust-free and under book, with a new clutch and
transmission) confirmed that his uncle had bought it slightly used. So
Carfax had no excuse for calling it a "One Owner!" car.

The question is - how carfax can know if you buy a car from family
relative and do not change the plates or pay taxes?? People often
avoid doing paperwork to save themselves the money related to
the name flip. So if he did not re-register the car after the transaction
within the family, carfax was not wrong saying 1-owner.

The owner's manual in my car has a third party name in it, because
I have lost the original one and purchased my replacement from eBay.
The memory of this college student can be fuzzy after many years,
or he simply did not know the truth. I would not rely on such statement.

Your "proofs" are not convincing to me that carfax was wrong in this case.
And it was dishonest to ask for the fee back after you checked dozens
of cars using your 30-days access to the site... Bad, bad girl, Leftie ;-)
 
The question is - how carfax can know if you buy a car from family
relative and do not change the plates or pay taxes?? People often
avoid doing paperwork to save themselves the money related to
the name flip. So if he did not re-register the car after the
transaction within the family, carfax was not wrong saying 1-owner.



If one family member "buys" the car from another member but never changes
the legal ownership, it is NOT a legal ownership transfer. The car is still
legally owned by the person shown on the ownership papers, whom the family
now considers the "previous" owner.

The family may consider the car "owned" by the current "owner", but the
government and insurance company most certainly will not accept that as
legal if the legal papers are in the "previous" owner's name.

If there is in fact a LEGAL transfer of ownership, the the ownership papers
will reflect that fact, showing the name of the new owner. This may also
entail tax payments, new plates and other such. Some jurisdictions (such as
mine) waive the sales tax when a car is sold from one family member to
another, provided a sworn affidavit is made that the car has been
transferred as a gift, without payment.

However, Carfax must be TOLD of any ownership changes, insurance claims,
emissions failures, etc. If nobody tells, Carfax doesn't know.
 
Tegger said:
If one family member "buys" the car from another member but never changes
the legal ownership, it is NOT a legal ownership transfer. The car is still
legally owned by the person shown on the ownership papers, whom the family
now considers the "previous" owner.

The family may consider the car "owned" by the current "owner", but the
government and insurance company most certainly will not accept that as
legal if the legal papers are in the "previous" owner's name.

If there is in fact a LEGAL transfer of ownership, the the ownership papers
will reflect that fact, showing the name of the new owner. This may also
entail tax payments, new plates and other such. Some jurisdictions (such as
mine) waive the sales tax when a car is sold from one family member to
another, provided a sworn affidavit is made that the car has been
transferred as a gift, without payment.

However, Carfax must be TOLD of any ownership changes, insurance claims,
emissions failures, etc. If nobody tells, Carfax doesn't know.

Who is it who is supposed to "tell" Carfax? I assumed it was Carfax
getting the info from government sources. Otherwise, with only passive
data collection, they have no basis at all to make the claims that they
make.

And just to clarify what should already be clear: the car was
registered under the student's name. It had previously been registered
under his uncle's name. Does anyone really think that Carfax would have
declined to defend their claim if they had any basis to do so...? They
had clearly checked, found that it was indeed a "three owner car!" and
offered only the lame justification that *some* of the information they
provided was true.
 
Who is it who is supposed to "tell" Carfax? I assumed it was
Carfax getting the info from government sources.




Collision info goes to no government. Only the insurance company knows. And
even then they know only if a claim is made and/or if a police charge is
laid.

As for ownership changes and emissions failures, those could only come from
the government agencies that administer those things.


Otherwise, with only passive data collection, they have no basis at all
to make the claims that they make.



That's what I gather from what I've been able to discover.
 
Tegger said:
However, Carfax must be TOLD of any ownership changes, insurance claims,
emissions failures, etc. If nobody tells, Carfax doesn't know.

Exactly my point. Carfax can collect data available in databases, but
if the info is not in the database how can you collect something like this?
 
Leftie said:
Who is it who is supposed to "tell" Carfax?

The seller and buyer, both indirectly "tell" Carfax by registering
the transaction, paying taxes, geting new plates, etc.
I assumed it was Carfax getting the info from government sources.

But if we get the situation where the car transfer was not registered
than government source did not have the info.
Otherwise, with only passive data collection, they have no basis
at all to make the claims that they make.

Do they claim actively persue collecting data? Where?
And just to clarify what should already be clear: the car was
registered under the student's name. It had previously been
registered under his uncle's name.

:) Right. I guess we have to believe your word...
Does anyone really think that Carfax would have declined to defend their
claim if they had any basis to do so...? They had clearly checked, found
that it was indeed a "three owner car!" and offered only the lame
justification that *some* of the information they provided was true.

Somehow I doubt it...
They would not waste their time checking this for $40.
They just give the money back because you called and cry about it.


Do I understand correctly that you will never purchase Carfax again?
 
Pszemol said:
The seller and buyer, both indirectly "tell" Carfax by registering
the transaction, paying taxes, geting new plates, etc.


But if we get the situation where the car transfer was not registered
than government source did not have the info.


Do they claim actively persue collecting data? Where?


:) Right. I guess we have to believe your word...


Somehow I doubt it...
They would not waste their time checking this for $40.
They just give the money back because you called and cry about it.


Do I understand correctly that you will never purchase Carfax again?


Yes. Further, you're just a troll who's going in my filter. Say
hello to all the other teenaged boys in there. Ah, usenet...
 
Collision info goes to no government. Only the insurance company knows. And
even then they know only if a claim is made and/or if a police charge is
laid.

As for ownership changes and emissions failures, those could only come from
the government agencies that administer those things.


That's what I gather from what I've been able to discover.

"'CarFax gets reports from 22,000 sources,' said company spokesman
Larry Gamache. He said CarFax has more information than any other
provider of car history data but said it doesn't have access to all
information."
http://www.courant.com/business/cus...int-watchdog-go.artapr05-col,0,1031345.column
 
Leftie said:

Good. That would be consistent with your complaint.
Further, you're just a troll who's going in my filter. Say
hello to all the other teenaged boys in there. Ah, usenet...

Why would I care ?
Why would anybody care here who do you read and who you dont?
It is your personal choice.
 

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