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Couple sell new $135k Mercedes back to dealer at huge loss after seatbelt breakages

Author
Kirsty Wynn,
Publish Date
Sat, 18 Mar 2023, 3:10pm
Photo / Supplied
Photo / Supplied

Couple sell new $135k Mercedes back to dealer at huge loss after seatbelt breakages

Author
Kirsty Wynn,
Publish Date
Sat, 18 Mar 2023, 3:10pm

A couple who bought a seven-seater Mercedes-Benz for $135,000 felt they had no choice but to sell it back to the dealership at a huge loss after ongoing seatbelt issues.

The Dunedin couple, who do not want to be named, lost 鈥渁 significant amount鈥 and felt they had to accept the wholesale offer because the car was due for a warrant of fitness, had persistent seatbelt issues and they believed the three-year warranty was about to expire.

The couple鈥檚 2020 Mercedes-Benz GLS 400d is identical to that of Auckland woman听听who returned her $175,000 Mercedes-Benz to the repair shop 20 times in two years.

The seatbelt in Feng鈥檚 third-row seat has also broken three times and is currently awaiting repair.

The couple, with four children aged under 8, were shocked to read of听听in the听Herald on Sunday听last week and said it 鈥渨ound us up completely because it was exactly what we went through.鈥

鈥淲e bought the seven-seater because we were expecting our fourth child but we ended up having to drive two cars everywhere to fit in four child seats.鈥

The first two times the seatbelt broke, the rear seat was unusable until the part arrived around two months later. The third time was the catalyst to sell the car back to the dealership, the couple said.

The car was due for a warrant of fitness and as far as the couple knew the three-year warranty was also about to expire.

They said the part was expected to arrive after the car was due for a warrant.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 want to be stuck with a car with no warranty, couldn鈥檛 get a WOF with ongoing seatbelt issues,鈥 the woman said.

The couple bought the car from Armstrong Mercedes-Benz in February 2022. It had been traded in and was 18 months old.

The Mercedes-Benz bought by the Dunedin couple was sold back to the dealership because it had ongoing seatbelt issues and they thought it was coming out of warranty and was uninsurable. Photo / Supplied

The Mercedes-Benz bought by the Dunedin couple was sold back to the dealership because it had ongoing seatbelt issues and they thought it was coming out of warranty and was uninsurable. Photo / Supplied

鈥淲e got it home, folded up the rear seat and found one of the clickers on the left-hand side where you put the seatbelt in was crushed,鈥 the woman said.

Fast forward a year and the couple said the seatbelt fitting had been crushed twice more.

They tried to figure out what was causing the damage and watched as the seat went up and down.

On one side the buckle would move with the seat in the seatbelt path but the side that was damaged wouldn鈥檛 move and was squashed in the folding mechanism.

鈥淚t was like metal on car seat.鈥

The car was also part of a recall from Mercedes-Benz involving the third-row seat - the same third-row seat as the broken buckle.

The recall saw at least 60,000 of the SUVs recalled because of a manufacturing defect in the third-row seat鈥檚 locking mechanism.

A spokesperson for Mercedes-Benz said both Ms Feng and the Dunedin couple鈥檚 cars were inspected as part of the recall but were not faulty.

Ms Feng鈥檚 Mercedes-Benz has been plagued with mechanical issues, including the same ongoing seatbelt issue faced by the Dunedin couple. Photo / Michael Craig

Ms Feng鈥檚 Mercedes-Benz has been plagued with mechanical issues, including the same ongoing seatbelt issue faced by the Dunedin couple. Photo / Michael Craig

After a year of ongoing issues, the Dunedin couple decided to sell the car before the warranty expired.

罢丑别听Herald on Sunday听has since discovered the car had a two-year certified warranty added to the car鈥檚 history electronically, which meant it was covered until March 2025.

The couple said they were never made aware of this and had even been offered an extended warranty for $1800 from the dealership.

They told the dealership that part of the reason for selling the car was that the warranty was due to expire.

鈥淚f we had known it was still covered we wouldn鈥檛 have sold it to the dealership in such a hurry and for such a loss,鈥 the woman said.

Ms Feng's seatbelt buckle awaiting repair. The Dunedin couple said the damage to theirs was comparable but "more squashed".

Ms Feng's seatbelt buckle awaiting repair. The Dunedin couple said the damage to theirs was comparable but "more squashed".

Armstrong Mercedes-Benz bought the car back from the couple for a lower wholesale price.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 even want to say what we lost because that was hard enough but it was a significant amount,鈥 the woman said.

鈥淭he next day it was on Trade Me for $116,000, we couldn鈥檛 quite believe it.鈥

鈥淔or us selling it to them wasn鈥檛 a resolution, it was an absolute nightmare.鈥

The couple spoke to a lawyer about options but said it was too stressful and 鈥渉ad robbed us of peace for months鈥.

鈥淲e just needed to move on and we also needed the money to buy another car.鈥

After the sale, the couple purchased a Toyota Landcruiser, the same model of car they owned before the Mercedes-Benz.

鈥淚t鈥檚 an eight-seater and we have not had one issue with it at all.鈥

A spokeswoman for Mercedes-Benz said the company was committed to ensuring the safety of its customers and takes compliance very seriously.

鈥淲e are aware of this customer鈥檚 experience and each of their issues were addressed and rectified,鈥 the woman said.

鈥淲e have conducted an investigation into the separate issues that these customers have experienced, including what may have caused the external damage to the respective seatbelt buckles.

鈥淲e are satisfied we have acted appropriately and in the customer鈥檚 best interests, given what occurred to the seatbelt buckles was not considered to be the result of any material or manufacturing defect.

鈥淲e can confirm that the vehicle remains under warranty until February 2025.鈥

Armstrong Mercedes-Benz Dunedin apologised to the couple for the confusion over the warranty expiry date.

The company said there was 鈥渘o specific customer documentation provided to confirm the March 2025 warranty expiry date鈥 but instead the two-year warranty was loaded electronically to the car鈥檚 history.

The spokesman said the information provided 鈥渇alls short of the customer service standards we set ourselves and as a result we are reviewing some of our customer communications鈥.

Armstrong Mercedes-Benz Dunedin also said it has no record of the third breakage in the service history.

However, the听Herald on Sunday听has viewed a text message from the couple to Armstrongs - dated a month after they said it broke the third time - asking about the arrival time for the seatbelt part.

Jessica Walker, from Consumer NZ, said both Ms Feng and the Dunedin couple are protected under the Consumer Guarantees Act. Under this act goods, including cars, must be fit for purpose,acceptable in appearance and finish, free from minor defects, safe and durable.

鈥淕iven the ongoing problems with the Mercedes-Benz, it鈥檚 clear these guarantees haven鈥檛 been met, so the buyer is entitled to a refund, repair or replacement,鈥 Walker said.

鈥淗owever, if the defect can鈥檛 be repaired or is substantial, they鈥檙e entitled to reject the car and insist on a refund.鈥

Consumer NZ said despite selling the car to the dealership, the Dunedin couple could still make a claim at the Motor Vehicle Disputes Tribunal for the difference between what the dealer paid them for the car and what they originally paid for it.

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