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Faulty gas cooker
baxy
Posts: 50 Forumite
Gas cooker been faulty since before Christmas. It turns itself off when turned down to low. I reported it on 21st Dec.
repair man been out twice now and problem still exists.
It was 1 yr and 3 months old when reported.
It has two year guarantee can I reject it as not fit for purpose.
repair man been out twice now and problem still exists.
It was 1 yr and 3 months old when reported.
It has two year guarantee can I reject it as not fit for purpose.
0
Comments
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'Reject' has a particular meaning in the Sale of Goods Act, and you have a short while after the sale to confirm the goods conform to the contract. You are too late to reject the goods.Gas cooker been faulty since before Christmas. It turns itself off when turned down to low. I reported it on 21st Dec.
repair man been out twice now and problem still exists.
It was 1 yr and 3 months old when reported.
It has two year guarantee can I reject it as not fit for purpose.
You can of course continue to seek a remedy which could be a repair, replacement or a refund.
Who are you currently dealing with?
All your statutory rights are with whoever sold the cooker to you, but I guess the guarantee you mention is with the manufacturer.0 -
I am dealing with the manufacturer. I believe the sale of goods act says an appliance should last a reasonable time which in England is 6 years.
The repairs have not been successful and and this has been going on for so long I can't carry on trying to use this cooker so gonna order a new one.0 -
Then perhaps you should get the seller involved.... unless you bought directly from the manufacturer?I am dealing with the manufacturer.
No, that is not what The sale of Goods Act says.I believe the sale of goods act says an appliance should last a reasonable time which in England is 6 years.
Yes, it effectively says the goods should last a reasonable time, but it does not say that amount of time is six years.
It gives you upto six years to seek a remedy from the seller, but that isn't the same.
One needs to take other things, like amount paid, into account.
For example, it might be reasonable to expect a £1000 oven to last longer than a £100 one.
As said, get onto the seller... that's where your statutory rights are.The repairs have not been successful and and this has been going on for so long I can't carry on trying to use this cooker so gonna order a new one.0 -
Bought cooker from our local community warehouse which is more like a charity shop but does deal with new white goods.
Don't really feel like loading my problem onto them.0 -
OK, that's fine.Bought cooker from our local community warehouse which is more like a charity shop but does deal with new white goods.
Don't really feel like loading my problem onto them.
But back to your original question "can I reject it as not fit for purchase"?
Even if you could reject it, that would be with the seller, not the manufacturer.
There is no way that a manufacturer would refund the purchase price. Think about it, it is probably fair to assume that the manufacturer did not get all of the purchase price... the seller made a profit on the sale surely.
Good luck with whatever you decide.0
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