From the pictures posted at the start of the thread, I think NewCorollaOwner has a case and hope something gets resolved.
You can't really go by the pictures Scott posted off the Internet, though.
I can't tell you how many times when we were used car shopping for my son, I would find cars that looked perfect in terms of finish, and when we drove out to look at the car, there were dings/scratches/peeling - but the angle was right to hide those. Or the car looked like it had blemishes and it ended up just being reflections in the paint ...
OTOH - I've walked the Toyota dealerships and seen maybe a FEW cars with orange peel - but by no means the majority and generally not as bad as the pictures at the start of the thread ...
Anyway ...
I agree. Internet pictures, even if you could establish that they haven’t been photoshoped, don’t prove much. Furthermore, using them would only make you enter in the dealer game by debating
his argument (all Toyotas are like that) instead of yours. So what if all Toyotas are like that? It would be a defect nonetheless. Stay focused!
For what it is worth, I would say to
newcorollaowner :
You also have to be focused on what you are complaining about: poor quality paint. When you state that you want to be put in the car you “wanted in the first place”, that would arguably be a different complaint: that you were more or less scammed by the dealer to choose this particular unit. Otherwise it could be interpreted against you as more of a buyer remorse case than a paint case (although a decent dealer would have accommodated you on this sole motif, albeit at some losses for you). Don’t hesitate to make two complaints eventually, and use one as a lever for the other.
What you actually want is 100% reimbursement for the car, as a simple paint correction would devaluate it and they already refused it anyway (don’t insist on that one since they could end up offering that, which is not what you necessarily want). The “100%” won’t happen, as you have already used the car, but later in the process you could “kindly” accept a reasonable % of credit toward a new unit. But the most focused way to proceed is asking for reimbursement. You could take care of any car you want after that!
I don’t think you’ll go far with BBB, as they merely relay responses between business and customers. In the worst case for the dealer, he loses some BBB ratings, granted he is a member in the first place. It was a necessary step though, but you need to keep building your case further, as if you were ready to go to court (even if you’re not) and deal with Toyota directly:
-You have to document your paint case: get 2-3 independent body shops reports on its condition (not evaluations to repair it).
-Be prepared to answer questions (better, forward the information):
-
When and how you noticed the paint defect after delivery of the car;
-When did you first complaint to the dealer, what was the answer;
-Other requests (when? what?) you made to the dealer about that issue, what were the answers;
-And the killing one, which is bound to happen:
why didn’t you notice it at delivery (that’s where a complaint about undue pressure from the dealer might come handy!)
So stay focused: it’s not that you don’t like the car anymore, it’s that you want to be reimburse for an unsatisfactory defective product. Of course all this is a RPA (royal pain in the…) process, but you might end up successful and happier!