Car salesman fined for dodgy vehicle sales

A SECOND-hand car salesman in South Yorkshire has been ordered to pay more than £1,500 for selling dodgy cars.

Brian Cliff, who traded as Northern 4×4 from Providence Street, Rotherham, admitted a number of offences, including selling a car with a false service history and failing to tell a buyer that a vehicle had been written off.

The prosecution was brought by Derbyshire County Council’s trading standards team following complaints from two Derbyshire buyers.

Appearing at Rotherham Magistrates Court, Cliff pleaded guilty to three charges under the Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008 and one charge under the Road Traffic Act 1988.

The charges related to two sales made by Cliff in October 2015.

In the first, Cliff sold an Audi A2 to a buyer from Bolsover. Offences included placing a misleading Auto Trader advert for the car which claimed it had a ‘full Audi history’. The service history had been falsified. He also failed to tell the buyer that the car he was being sold was a Category D write off. Category D write offs can be repaired and re-sold as long as the customer is told about the vehicle’s history.

In the second, Cliff sold a Fiat Punto to a buyer from Dronfield Woodhouse and less than two months after the sale of the car, the suspension wishbone collapsed as it was being driven.

Inspection by an auto engineer found that corrosion in the vehicle’s suspension was so advanced that it must have been present at the time of sale − meaning it was dangerous and not roadworthy.

The sale of a car which is not roadworthy is a criminal offence under the Road Traffic Act 1988.

Cliff was given a combined penalty for the offences and was ordered to pay £500 in compensation to the buyer of Audi and £659 to the buyer of the Fiat.
He was also ordered to pay £400 towards our costs, a £15 victim surcharge and handed a 12 month conditional discharge.

Councillor Dave Allen said:”Buyers quite rightly expect to get the vehicle they think they are paying for and for it to be roadworthy and safe.

“Both of these buyers bought the cars in good faith but were left out of pocket.

“The Fiat Punto was in such a bad state, its suspension collapsed while the buyer’s son was driving it. Fortunately, he was on a quiet road at the time and not on a motorway, otherwise the consequences could have been very serious.

“The prosecution shows how seriously we take these offences. Misleading buyers of second hand cars and placing them in danger will simply not tolerated.”

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