Does a bill of sale used in a private vehicle transaction hold up in court?
Asked on Aug 27th, 2012 on Criminal Law - New York
More details to this question:
I sold a car to a person and created a bill of sale myself. The buyer, a witness and myself signed the bill of sale (2 copies: one for both parties) which indicated that no returns were to be accepted, that the car carried no warranty, and that I as the seller was no longer responsible for the car after the transaction was complete. The following day, the buyer wants a refund and claims that the car is not working. Would this bill of sale hold up in court, or do I stand a chance at losing if I do not refund the amount paid to me? I allowed for a test drive and for the buyer to examine the car without me present before they agreed to purchase the vehicle. The bill of sale included the VIN# and clearly stated the terms listed above.
This a contract case and not a criminal law case. Without seeing the contract, it's hard to judge if it will hold up in court, but what you described has the potential to be upheld.
This is not a criminal issue, but unless you knew of a major problem which would cause the car not to work and you did not disclose the problem, you should be ok.
That would certainly hold up unless the buyer alleges you hid a defect, which is fraud. Otherwise, yes, it was an as is transaction and you handled the paperwork correctly.
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