Jump to content
  • GUESTS

    If you want access to members only forums on HSO, you will gain access only when you Sign-in or Sign-Up .

    This box will disappear once you are signed in as a member. ?

  • 0

Warranty repair denied


Pherris

Question

I find myself in an odd position. I have a 2010 Opti Pro X/S that I brought in to have it winterized and asked the dealer to also check into an issue of a knocking sound that the motor was making. After about 2 weeks the dealer called and said my boat was ready for pick up. When I picked up my boat they said the knocking sound was a result of a bad lower unit and they replaced it and it was covered by my Merc warranty. So today I get a call from the shop that did the repair telling me the warranty claim was denied because the lower unit issue was a result of direct impact to the lower unit. The dealer said I should call my insurance company and file a claim or pay the $4200 or bring the boat back and they would put my old lower unit back in. I have never hit anything and even the dealer said there was no visible damage that would indicate hitting something but Mercury said they determined from internal examination that the issue was the result of impact so would not be covered. I called my insurance agent and he said it would be highly unlikely the insurance would pay for repairs that have been completed and were not approved and I should tell the dealer he should have never done any work on the motor without authorization from Merc and to tell the dealer to take it up with them. I am of the same opinion but wondered if anyone else has had an issue like this or how you would handle it at this point.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Answers 70
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters For This Question

Recommended Posts

  • 0

I find myself in an odd position. I have a 2010 Opti Pro X/S that I brought in to have it winterized and asked the dealer to also check into an issue of a knocking sound that the motor was making. After about 2 weeks the dealer called and said my boat was ready for pick up. When I picked up my boat they said the knocking sound was a result of a bad lower unit and they replaced it and it was covered by my Merc warranty. So today I get a call from the shop that did the repair telling me the warranty claim was denied because the lower unit issue was a result of direct impact to the lower unit. The dealer said I should call my insurance company and file a claim or pay the $4200 or bring the boat back and they would put my old lower unit back in. I have never hit anything and even the dealer said there was no visible damage that would indicate hitting something but Mercury said they determined from internal examination that the issue was the result of impact so would not be covered. I called my insurance agent and he said it would be highly unlikely the insurance would pay for repairs that have been completed and were not approved and I should tell the dealer he should have never done any work on the motor without authorization from Merc and to tell the dealer to take it up with them. I am of the same opinion but wondered if anyone else has had an issue like this or how you would handle it at this point.
Sounds like their problem.. If they did the work without asking you then telling you it is covered by warranty.

They should have contacted you giving you a quote and saying it looks to be covered by warranty but will have to file a claim to make sure and let you know that it was possible that it would be denied and you would have a bill.

It seems as if someone messed up on this one... I wouldn't give them a dime

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

Tell 'em to take a hike. If they did not inform you of the problem, and went ahead and corrected it, and NOW they tell you AFTER the fact that YOU must pay for it, that's their loss. Tell 'em to take you to court...which will be Conciliation Court, as it is under $15G, which is still the Minnesota limit, and where no lawyers are allowed. As a dealer, they represent Mercury, and miscommunication between them and Mercury is not your concern, it's theirs. One/both of them is going to be responsible for that bill. After many years in the legal field, that one is a hands down win for you, IMO. Make sure you have all documentation/signed agreements/call records on hand. Good luck. wink

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

Well they probably still have the boat so his bargaining position is a bit weak. I had a similar problem with a cracked block on a 60 Merc that was 2 months out of warranty had less than 50 gallons of gas having gone through it. Merc denied the claim as it was out of warranty and the work wasn't done by an authorized dealer. Clearly an instance of a bad casting on the head but that wasn't enough.

I suggest that you try and negotiate with the dealer. Merc will just keep on telling you to drop dead.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

He said he picked up the boat and they called him later saying they owed him money. From what it seems he was all free and clear and because the shop made a mistake they are trying to recoup their money.

The fact that they gave you your boat back without you paying shows you something. Shops don't just go here have your boat back and if we can't get it under warranty then you come back and pay us. They should have told you that you could be paying and that they had to submit a claim.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

Thanks for the replies. I have the boat and receipt that shows there is no balance due. I had the boat home about a week before I got the call yesterday. I am going to follow up with the dealer and let him know I have no intention to pay and tell him to take it up with Mercury. My only fear is that they will just charge my credit card I used to pay for the winterizing. We will see and I will post as things progress. (On a side note in researching the issue it seems that Mercury denies many claims for lower unit warranty claims. But in all of the cases the work had not been done)

As Caveman mentioned I will be finding another dealer too.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

Call your credit card company and block any charges coming from that dealer.

With your receipt showing a zero balance and no further authorization from you, if they charge against your account it becomes fraud in their part.

Exactly. Call them now and alert them to deny any charges. You're totally in the clear.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

I would call the dealer, talk to the manager/owner of the store, not the service manager, explain to him the situation, and that you would have never approved the work have you known you were liable for the bill. If the owner/manager of the store values their customers, and doesnt want a bad word of mouth, they will take care of the bill without you involved. If this is the case, I would continue your business with them as usual. If the owner/manager says that you are liable for the bill, tell him they will have to take you to court to collect the money for a bill that you did not authorize. More then likely a rational owner will value the customer, and take care of the bill. Mistakes happen, it doesnt sound like they tried to screw you at all, and they called to inform you that the repair wasnt covered, and that you would just say, ok, bill my card. Give them a chance to make things right, before assuming they are crooks, and are out to screw you.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

I would ask to speak to the manager of the business and make sure he fully knows the situation... I'd do this in person. I'd want to find out:

1) How mercury knows the internals were damaged; did they ship them the lower unit and they inspected it?

2) How / why they have the "damaged" lower unit back... mercury tore it down, found that it was damaged, then put it all back together and shipped it back to the dealer? Doesn't sound normal...

marine_man

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

I'd like to see a copy of the Claim denial from Merc. Could it be the dealer is trying to double dip?

Good dealers will have leverage with the mfgr and would be able to influence/appeal decisions like this.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

2) How / why they have the "damaged" lower unit back... mercury tore it down, found that it was damaged, then put it all back together and shipped it back to the dealer? Doesn't sound normal...

marine_man

This was my original thought. Suppose possible, but??? How long from when it was done till you got the call?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

very interesting thread. Good info in the previous post, except I can't agree with the last paragraph; the dealer needs to discuss a repair of that magnitude with the customer BEFORE preceding, warranty or not. If my mechanic, for instance, did 4 grand worth of work without my OK I think we'd have a problem.

I feel the dealer put himself on the hook here by not involving the customer in the process before preceding.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

I've been following this thread pretty close too.I have to agree with traveler,if a shop did any extra repair without discussing it with me I would be very PO.At the very least they shoild take the time to make a phone call.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

very interesting thread. Good info in the previous post, except I can't agree with the last paragraph; the dealer needs to discuss a repair of that magnitude with the customer BEFORE preceding, warranty or not. If my mechanic, for instance, did 4 grand worth of work without my OK I think we'd have a problem.

I feel the dealer put himself on the hook here by not involving the customer in the process before preceding.

Based on what we've been told (which, BTW, is only 1/3 side of the story) the dealer believed (or maybe assumed is better in this case) it was going to be covered by warranty. Why would they authorize a "free" repair with the customer?

Not that it matters to the outcome, but I'm curious to know if this is a pretty new dealer.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

I would ask to speak to the manager of the business and make sure he fully knows the situation... I'd do this in person. I'd want to find out:

1) How mercury knows the internals were damaged; did they ship them the lower unit and they inspected it?

2) How / why they have the "damaged" lower unit back... mercury tore it down, found that it was damaged, then put it all back together and shipped it back to the dealer? Doesn't sound normal...

marine_man

This is probably the best way to handle it but my time is valuable and I wouldn't waste any of it on these guy's double talk.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

I read that the dealer is willing to put the old bottom end back on . I think they should be expected to do that for free but dont think they should have to go good for a new unit. The fight is between Merc and the boat owner , the dealer should fight for the customer but not be expected to be out thousands of $ . In this case I would expect the dealer to replace the bottom end at cost and the customer keep the defective part . Customer can then go after Merc or insurance independently. I realize the customer will have a hard time against a company but it is not the dealers fault either .

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

You have all winter for this to get figured out before you need your boat this Spring.

A mistake was made by the dealer and yes there are 3 sides to this. You didn't occur any damages by that mistake and you won't occur any damages if ordered by the court to return the lower unit and have your old one put back on. The dealer doing that swap on their dime since it was their mistake. That would be worse case scenario on your part plus the headaches associated with going to court. Best case is you keep the lower unit at no cost.

I would not expect a free lower unit because of the dealers mistake. If it were me I'd work something out with the dealer. Probably 1st would be asking the dealer to see what they can do with Merc. If that is a no go then at the least would be have the dealer knock off labor and any mark up the new lower unit. I'm curious what the cost of parts are to repair your old lower unit.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now ↓↓↓ or ask your question and then register. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Answer this question...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.



×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.